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2007-08 Water Resource Group A Strategy to Bring Safe Water and Sanitation to Those in Need
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2007-08 Water Resource Group The Background: 1.2 billion people (one in five) lack access to safe water 2.5 Billion have no sanitation
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Water borne diseases have a major impact on the health of the world: 8000 people dying every day 250 children dying every hour Filling 50% of world’s hospital beds
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Economic consequences are equally serious: 40 billion hours spent, per year, in Africa alone collecting and hauling water Women and children (usually girls) spend up to 6 hours per day fetching water Families often spend up to 25% of their income to purchase water
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Water plays a critical role in sustaining life and livelihood: Population and family stability Gender equality Environment Work and income Education and literacy Human health Reducing conflict
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2007-08 Water Resource Group It was the only Millennium Development Goal (MDG) agreed on by all countries Goal #7 By 2015 reduce by 50% the proportion of people without access to safe water and sanitation.
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2007-08 Water Resource Group But the challenge is formidable; too many lack access: Sub-Saharan Africa 47% East Asia29% South Asia28% Middle-East18% Latin America18%
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2007-08 Water Resource Group And these averages conceal the reality, e.g. in Africa: Ethiopia78% lack access Somalia71% Chad66% Mozambique58% Guinea56% Congo54%
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Rotary’s Water Resource Group and WASRAG endorse the MDGs Every Rotarian to become aware of world water issues Every Rotary club to implement a water and/or sanitation project Implement major demonstration programmes
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Thousands of clubs are already engaged in water/sanitation projects: Drilling boreholes, digging wells Rainwater harvesting Purifying water: slow-sand filters Solar disinfecting Building dams and mini-pipelines Protecting Ponds
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2007-08 Water Resource Group They are often motivated by getting a matching grant: A club decides to “do” a water project It scans the list of clubs seeking help It selects a project, contacts host club Together they submit proposal to TRF Grant is approved; work proceeds Final report submitted to TRF???
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2007-08 Water Resource Group But this approach is causing concern among partners and some NGOs The resource may not be sustainable The technology may not be appropriate The people can’t maintain the service No provision for spare parts Minimal behaviour change There is no link to community health
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2007-08 Water Resource Group And it will no longer satisfy many Rotarians and/or funding partners: They don’t want the hassle of managing small projects They want projects having REAL impact on the community’s life and livelihood They want to leverage with major donors, foundations, corporations, NGOs They want active involvement in the project; not just raising funds
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Future success depends on Rotarians taking a fresh holistic approach: Focus on helping the community, not just supplying water Understand, build on, adapt to local culture Involve ALL the stakeholders—especially the women Encourage local buy-in/ownership, empower the local committee
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2007-08 Water Resource Group It also implies helping the local community and Rotary club to: Create a 3-5 year “vision” for the region showing linkages to schools, health, agriculture, economic activity Agree on the scale & scope of the project Bring in other partners, local NGOs etc Agree on respective roles/resources Prepare submission to TRF Prepare proposal to other funding agencies
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2007-08 Water Resource Group And also to: Choose appropriate technology: - Needs-driven, not supply-driven - Adequate supply chain - Within the capability of the community Include sanitation and hygiene Train and encourage behaviour change Implement systems to monitor progress and outcomes
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2007-08 Water Resource Group This approach implies a new strategy for most Rotary clubs: A 3-5 year commitment Multi-club/district partnering Alliances with other NGOs/agencies Empowering the local community Outside funding--$$$ millions
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2007-08 Water Resource Group WASRAG linkages (www.wasrag.org) will enable this new strategy: www.wasrag.org Access to NGOs operating in the area Sources of funding Access to resources and expertise Evaluation of technologies Best practices Training and behaviour change
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2007-08 Water Resource Group Success ultimately depends on your attitude towards your partners: Treat the “host” club as a true partner—not a lever to get funding Develop strong personal relationships Develop & maintain mutual respect Ensure free and open exchanges Seek win-win solutions - the 4-Way Test
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