The strategy involves ambitious targets such as:
- providing a further 25 million poor people with safe water
- reaching 100 million more people through a commitment to influencing the policies and practices of governments and service providers
WaterAid hopes to significantly extend its reach by aiming to work in 13 new developing countries.
The launch is accompanied by a new film, outlining in more detail the strategic aims:
The strategy also looks at some of the key challenges ahead for WaterAid, such as how to access socially marginalised groups within communities, rapid urbanisation, increasingly stressed water resources and a changing and unpredictable climate.
WaterAid’s UK Chief Executive, Barbara Frost, said: "These are challenging times for everyone, but communities in the developing world need help to break the cycle of poverty more than ever. It is simply unacceptable that 4,000 children continue to die on a daily basis because they don't have access to safe water and sanitation."
"WaterAid will continue to call for water and, in particular, sanitation, to be prioritised by decision-makers at all levels. With the right political will, we believe that our vision of a world where everyone has access to these basic human rights is achievable."
"Without them, many of the Millennium Development Goals set for maternal and child health, primary education and economic growth will fail. Such issues will become ever more relevant as the world’s population continues to grow, and there is increasing stress on global water resources."
"This, together with the threat of climate change, means that there is an increasingly urgent need to tackle the sanitation and water crisis."
WaterAid’s Four Strategic Aims:
- To promote and secure poor people's rights and access to safe water, improved hygiene and sanitation
- To support governments and service providers in developing their capacity to deliver safe water, improved hygiene and sanitation
- To advocate for the essential role of safe water, improved hygiene and sanitation in human development
- To further develop as an effective global organisation recognised as a leader in our field and for living our values.
Fast Facts:
- At least 4,000 children die every day as a result of diseases caused by unclean water and poor sanitation.
- 884 million people in the world do not have access to safe water. This is roughly one in eight of the world's population.
- 2.5 billion people in the world do not have access to adequate sanitation, this is almost two fifths of the world's population.
To find out more, visit www.wateraid.org.







1 comments:
The team at MoreEco are strong supporters of WaterAid. They in particular support the Ecover Wateraid campaign which is to provide clean water to 11 villages in Ethiopia. You can help this paticular campaign and join Www.moreeco.com today - use code 'wateraid' and MoreEco will make a donation.
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