How Does Water Affect Our Life - A Fresh Look A Water!
Water is life, as the saying goes. We rely on water for our food, our health, our livelihoods, and for fun and leisure.
As Number 6 on the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, “Clean Water and Sanitation For All” is currently struggling. If we want to meet this goal by the deadline of 2030, the UN says we’ll need to double our current rate of progress. Only then can we ensure that there’s universal access to safe and affordable drinking water, adequate sanitation and hygiene resources, improved water quality, and restored water-related ecosystems. Here are 5 ways that water use affects our lives — and what we’re doing to help make clean water and sanitation for all a reality.
Concern has found solutions for many farming communities. In one Ethiopian community, for example, we provided the expertise and money needed to help build a 10-mile system of irrigation channels and reservoirs, bringing water from a nearby river across 200 acres to 140 farming families. That means bigger harvests to keep families fed — and incomes stable.
When lakes and rivers dry up, families are often forced to walk hundreds of miles to find water for their animals to drink. Or, they may lose their (literal) cash cows. A drought in the Turkana region of Kenya, that has now lasted for nearly 4 years, has meant that pastoralists like Ng’ikario Ekiru, a 37-year–old mother of 6, have gone from herds of 100 down to 5 (Ng’ikario, her family, and the flock all rely on the same source of food — a wild fruit that grows in the bush). Concern can’t refill dry rivers, but we can (and do!) truck water to the families and livestock that need it most.
2. WATER CAN HELP KILL GERMS — AND CURB PANDEMICS: Washing your hands doesn’t just get them clean — it can also save your life. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say that good hygiene is the best way to prevent infections and diarrheal diseases. As we’re currently seeing with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, handwashing is also one of the best things we can all do to curb the spread of a global health crisis.
In many of the countries where Concern works, these infections are a leading cause of illness and death. But a lot of the diseases and infections that affect the communities we work with are 100% preventable, and a little bit of soap and water go a long way towards that prevention. As part of Concern’s water, sanitation, and hygiene programming (WASH) we help provide clean water and teach people good habits so they can stay healthy.
WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL WITH HANDWASHING? You’ve heard so much about the importance of washing your hands at this stage that it’s probably becoming a little repetitive. For us, that point came a long time ago — we’ve been pushing this message around the world for over 50 years.
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How Does Water Affect Our Life - A Fresh Look A Water! |
WOMEN, WATER, & THE CYCLE OF POVERTY: Imagine balancing a 40-pound container on your head and walking three and a half miles home. Sound difficult? It’s the unfortunate daily reality of millions of women and girls around the world.
4. WATER MAY BE IN SUPPLY — BUT IT CAN ALSO BE CONTAMINATED: According to the World Health Organization, almost 400,000 children under the age of 5 die from diarrheal diseases every year. These infections are often caused by poor sanitation and water pollution.
You probably know that bacteria and chemical pollutants are bad news, but that’s not the only danger. For example, when fresh water sources are contaminated by salt (which can happen when ocean water surges into freshwater areas), the consequences can be devastating for the crops, livestock, and people. Rising sea levels in Bangladesh and Vietnam pose a threat to rice crops — more than 50% of Vietnam’s national rice production is centred in the coastal Mekong Delta region.
In the Bay of Bengal, Concern worked with communities to plant mangroves. This tree serves as a barrier to ocean waters, providing some much-needed protection and resilience. We also teach new agriculture techniques, like the use of salt-tolerant crops, in many of the areas where we work.
Severe drought in Kenya has forced Enow Wanyo and Budha Tura to gather water from a muddy puddle, 30 minutes from their village. People and animals are competing for water that is often contaminated. The concern is providing aqua tabs to sterilize the water. Photo: Jennifer Nolan
5. TOO MUCH WATER WASHES AWAY HOMES, FIELDS, AND JOBS: As the saying goes, you can have too much of a good thing. That’s also true for water. Flooding and severe storms can wash away communities and infrastructure in an instant.
We saw this happen last year with Cyclone Idai, which devastated communities in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. As part of our emergency response efforts, we delivered short-cycle crop seeds to the areas of Malawi and Mozambique that were hit hardest. Requiring less time than the average crops growing in the area, these were able to help offset some of the losses of that year’s harvest due to Idai.
Similarly, 2013’s Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines’ fishing community hard, with 70% of Filipinos in this line of work losing their income, and 65% losing key assets like boats. During this recovery period, Concern gave many fishermen training and jobs at boatyards, repairing boats for their fellow fishermen and rebuilding their own fishing businesses with boats provided by Concern.
CONCERN’S APPROACH TO WATER, SANITATION, AND HYGIENE (WASH): Health, food, gender equality, economic markets, and even education are adversely affected by water scarcity and restricted access to sanitation (which, for us, goes hand-in-hand with water).
Ensuring access to clean water and sanitation and providing hygiene information and training are key aspects of Concern’s work, with active water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) programs in 18 countries. We have dug, drilled, and bored thousands of wells in remote and disadvantaged communities across dozens of countries over the past 50 years and built countless latrines in their schools and health centres. The hours saved and the illnesses prevented to make it one of the most effective things we do. When drought or displacement prevents access to clean water supplies, we do what it takes to connect communities, including trucking water to temporary tanks and installing pumps in camps.
Most importantly, we work closely with communities to help them assess the longstanding challenges they face, change behaviours, and ensure water and sanitation infrastructure will be maintained for the long term. We foster a sense of ownership, build sustainable maintenance practices, and create transparent financial management systems that benefit the community.
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