The Harsh Economics of the Global Water Crisis: “water is the oil of this century”
by Julie Chowdhury
- Sweden -
Every morning when you wake up and perform what you may perceive as insignificant chores, you might not realize that for 2.6 billion people around the world, your morning shower or just one flush of the toilet is the essence of luxury. The United Nations has declared that every human being is entitled to 20 liters of safe water every day. In Europe, we have the privilege of using 200 liters per day, while in the US, the average person uses up to 400. The average person in the developing world tries to manage on less than 10 liters of contaminated water to do all their daily chores.
Twenty percent of the world’s population faces water shortages and lives without sustainable access to safe drinking water. At a time of worsening food crises, water resource disputes and global climate change, they further endure poor health due to poor sanitation. The overall water balance has been tipped, resulting in a multitude of conflicts. Estimates show that that global water consumption is increasing at twice the rate of population growth. As Andrew Liveris, CEO of Dow Chemical Company has pointed out in his work, “Water is the oil of this century but the key difference is, water has no substitute.”
• World Water Week featured scores of displays on the latest advancements in water and sanitation. Photograph by Julie Chowdhury. •
In 2002 the United Nations set a Millennium Development Goal to halve the number of people without access to sanitation and water by 2015. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon declared 2008 as the year to combat the global sanitation crisis and has labeled the securing of safe water and sanitation for all as “one of the most daunting challenges faced today.” However, with the current slow rate of progress, this global target will not be met in our lifetime. As an example, Sub-Saharan Africa will not meet these goals anytime before 2076. Reviewing progress against the goals set in 2002, it is saddening to witness that six years later 55 nations are failing dreadfully to reach their water related targets.
The economic impact of poor sanitation is shocking. The most recent report by the Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP) revealed that in 2006, the impact of dire sanitation cost Indonesia $6.3 billion, or 2.3% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Additional findings by the WSP found that in Africa, an estimated 5% of the continent’s GDP is lost to illness and death caused by unsafe water and the absence of sanitation facilities. According to the Asian Development Bank, “it is more costly to not care about sanitation than to do something about it.”
With all the technological innovations available and money spent on the Water Week event, I found myself wondering how the global water and sanitation problem has escalated to this level of a disaster? With only $9.5 billion a year, or just one-third of the annual global spending on bottled water, the world could meet the MDG sanitation target by 2015 and provide everyone with a toilet by 2025.
The truth of the matter is that even though investment in sanitation is still considered unaffordable, it’s not. According to Water Aid’s Chief Executive Barbara Frost it’s just not as “politically sexy” - there is enough money around, “but the key issue is how to direct it.” So while water continues to be seen as a political priority, sanitation is not. Amy Leung, an urban development specialist from the Asian Development Bank explains, “Health doesn’t cut it. It’s all about the money, and sanitation is definitely not on the top agenda. But we aim to prove to governments that it’s costing them economic growth. We want to argue that sanitation is a good investment and we should approach the ministers of finance rather than health.”
• Gender Water Alliance says that "gender is a key variable in all water sectors". Photograph by Julie Chowdhury. •
It always seems so easy to quantify what the developing world needs, but as a spectator at Water Week, I couldn’t help but wonder why the voices of the people who are actually affected by the harsh water resource cycles were not included. Why are people who live with these struggles not here to share their needs and thoughts about these issues? I highly doubt that any of the week’s attendees have ever experienced the harshness of water shortage or lack of sanitary facilities. Have any of them ever had to defecate out in the open and quench their thirst from the same pond?
The water crisis is driven by many factors such as inequality and poverty, where the burden falls most heavily on women. At a seminar produced by Safer World and Gender Water Alliance (GWA), the water conflicts in Uganda and Sudan were presented and discussed. In Uganda, the competition for water resources can resurrect historical animosity and cause conflicts between communities. Issues also arise as a result of disagreements over whether the water should be utilized for domestic or agricultural purposes.
• In many countries, the burden of sanitation and water collection falls on women and girls. Photograph by Julie Chowdhury. •
According to GWA, gender is a key variable in all water sectors. They say research and practical experience demonstrates that effective, efficient and equitable management of water resources is only achieved when women and men are equally involved in the consultation processes as well as in the management and implementation of water related services.
Safer World suggests a “conflict sensitive approach” as a solution to sustainable water resources management and water conflict resolution. They revealed that communities in Uganda appreciate this approach because it creates a platform for both men and women to discuss ways to minimize the negative impacts of community conflicts and inequalities.
The UN’s Declaration of Human Rights states that every human being has the right to life. Water is the essence of life yet nobody seems to respect its importance as such. At the end of the World Water Week, I had reached the conclusion that in order to change the world we really need to start by talking about the silent dilemmas around us. It is important to realize that this global crisis cannot be solved with a “quick fix.” Access to safe drinking water or sanitation facilities should not be a luxury, nor an act of charity, but an obligation by the global community to ensure that no person is denied this right. I believe that in order to address the needs of billions who live without proper water and sanitation we need strong leadership because as the great human rights lawyer Parul Sharma once said, “it is more difficult to combat the poverty of the mind than material poverty.” We need to overcome the stigmas related to the sanitation crisis and educate all people of its critical consequences.
About the Author
Born and raised in Sweden, Bangladeshi Julie Chowdhury works for the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan. She holds a joint honors bachelor’s degree in Politics and International Studies and Development Studies. She is currently pursuing her Masters in Gender Studies.
Julie dreams of a world where people step out of their comfort zones to explore the hidden potential that we all carry and use it to contribute and create. She dreams of a world focused on increasing levels of humanity and compassion.
Devoted to covering human rights violations, Julie hopes to give a voice to the invisible.

Comments (7)
Julie,
how excellent to see your story! I've emailed you at least three times since our London event for Dr. Yunus and I thought your travels might have been too difficult for you...
Have a look at http://yunusphere.net and CONNECT again!
Well done for putting this story together!!!
Sabine
Posted by Sabine McNeill | September 12, 2008 7:39 AM
Your article is excellent, and I totally agree with your suggestions on how this dire problem might be resolved. It is a sad state of affairs when money has more value than human life; which is the case today in too many countries.
However, I do believe if more people who care about their fellow men became vocal and active in their concerns this would do a lot to speed up change. Vox populi, vox Dei.
Posted by scribe | September 16, 2008 10:31 AM
Your article is excellent, and I totally agree with your suggestions on how this dire problem might be resolved. It is a sad state of affairs when money has more value than human life; which is the case today in too many countries.
However, I do believe if more people who care about their fellow men became vocal and active in their concerns this would do a lot to speed up change. Vox populi, vox Dei.
Posted by scribe | September 16, 2008 10:31 AM
I could not agree more with the author’s point that access to water and sanitation should be an obligation of the international community. Even more so, it should be one of the essential strategies for a comprehensive approach to economic development and the advancement of the rights and wellbeing of women.
As founder of an organization, Global Grassroots, which supports social entrepreneurship among the most marginalized women in post-conflict areas of Africa, I have seen first-hand the horrifying and debilitating impact on women and girls of the lack of access to clean water and decent sanitation.
We work primarily in Rwanda, where women and girls rise every morning to begin the treacherous 3 to 4 hour round-trip journey down and back up steep hills to collect water from dirty creeks in the valleys. Not only does this mean young girls are missing out on a critical opportunity for education, as the author identified, but imagine the productivity gain if millions of women suddenly had an extra four hours every morning to attend to the myriad of other needs they and their family face.
In addition to the extensive health implications of drinking contaminated water, violence is often a more immediate risk facing women during this daily chore. Throughout rural areas of Rwanda, Sudan, Chad, Uganda and other regions of Africa, women risk sexual assault as they travel to remote water access points. And competition for resources further exacerbates this risk, by causing women to leave their homes in the middle of the night - sometimes at 2am or 3am - just to ensure they reach the water source first and do not have to spend subsequent hours waiting or fighting for the limited supply.
Even more horrifying is the alternative to this difficult journey. Some of the women we are working with in Rwanda, who are elderly, physically disabled or sick with HIV and too weak to make this daily journey must turn to buying water from delivery men who bring them water on bicycles. However, their inability to pay leaves them vulnerable to sexual exploitation to meet the basic needs of their family. As one woman told us: when your children are about to return from school for their primary meal of the day, and you have no water to cook rice – well, you do what you have to do to feed your children. Further, the inability to cook meals on time due to the water collection process is often a trigger of domestic violence within families where women are seen as not meeting the needs of their husbands in carrying out their primary duties.
The lack of proper sanitation facilities also often leads to violence, especially in primary and secondary schools where unisex latrines become a prime location for sexual violence against school children. Furthermore, when girls reach the age of menstruation, they often leave school permanently so as to avoid the embarrassment of utilizing unisex latrines, which also do not provide them with adequate sanitation facilities to take care of themselves.
What is remarkable is that these same women are initiating their own solutions to create safe alternatives for women and girls. Throughout Rwanda, groups of women are designing social-purpose water projects that allow them to provide water at no charge to vulnerable women, sustained by the sales of water to the remainder of the community. Other projects are educating villages about girls’ reproductive health and then working collaboratively to build girls’ latrines at schools. Global Grassroots has found that with less than $3000, a well-designed socially entrepreneurial venture can serve between 500 – 1500 members of its community. When you think about the large-scale development aid that has yet to successfully address this global issue, I propose we redirect even a small portion of this aid to support smaller-scale entrepreneurial endeavors that can begin to protect vulnerable communities immediately. These socially entrepreneurial projects – with the right training and advisory support – are demonstrating the opportunity for fostering systemic change from the grassroots level up.
Gretchen Wallace
Founder & President
Global Grassroots
www.globalgrassroots.org
Posted by gwallace | September 21, 2008 9:10 AM
Dear Julie,
congratulations to this remarkable article. Like you- Im also a friend of Parul Sharma- and I have been a constant reader of Parul's writings. I have met Parul few times and i must say that her honest style in speaking and writing really attracts me. She has become a mentor to me. You have a similar style- and your article is an honest attempt to change and awake.
Keep it up!!
JL
Posted by Johanna Lager | September 30, 2008 4:26 AM
Thank you very much for all the comments and your reflections upon this topic.
Warm regards
Julie
Posted by Julie | October 3, 2008 2:39 AM
oh and btw Johanna Lager... you just made my day!
Posted by Julie | October 3, 2008 5:37 AM