

Op-ed by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon: Water is Life
(New York, 20 March 2008) - At the United Nations, March 22 nd is World Water Day. We don’t expect people to stop what they are doing and observe a moment of silence – but maybe they should. Every 20 seconds, a child dies from diseases associated with a lack of clean water. That adds up to an unconscionable 1.5 million young lives cut short each year.
More than two and a half billion people in the world live in the
most abysmal standards of hygiene and sanitation. Helping them would do more than reduce the death
toll; it would serve to protect the environment, alleviate poverty and promote development. That’s
because water underpins so much of the work we do in these areas.
Water is essential to survival. Unlike oil, there are no substitutes. But today, fresh water resources are stretched thin. Population growth will make the problem worse. So will climate change. As the global economy grows, so will its thirst.
As with oil, problems that grow from the scarcity of a vital
resource tend to spill over borders. International Alert has identified 46 countries, home to 2.7
billion people, where climate change and water-related crises create a high risk of violent
conflict. A further 56 countries, representing another 1.2 billion people, are at high risk of
political instability. That’s more than half the world.
This is not an issue of rich or poor, north or south. China is
diverting hundreds of millions of cubic meters of water to drought-prone Beijing ahead of the
Olympics, but shortages are expected to persist for years to come. In North America, the mighty
Colorado River seldom reaches the sea. Water stress affects one third of the United States and one
fifth of Spain.
The water system of Lake Chad, in central Africa, supports some 30
million people. Yet over the past 30 years, it has shrunk to one-tenth of its former size, thanks
to drought, climate change, mismanagement and over-use. Visiting Brazil this fall, I had to cancel
a trip down a major tributary of the Amazon. It had dried up.
I have spent the past year beating the drum on climate change. We’v
e seen the results in the “Bali Roadmap,” which charts a course for negotiations on a legally
binding treaty limiting greenhouse gas emissions to take over when the Kyoto Protocol expires in
2012. This year, I will make a similar effort to raise public awareness about the Millennium
Development Goals.
Among other things, the so-called MDGs set a target of cutting by
half the number of people without safe access to water by 2015. This is critically important. When
you look at the health and development challenges faced by the poorest of the world’s population—d
iseases like malaria or TB, rising food prices, environmental degradation—the common denominator
often turns out to be water.
This September, I will gather top-level officials from across the
world at a summit in New York on how to reach the Goals, particularly in Africa. In the meantime,
we need to begin thinking about better strategies for managing water—for using it efficiently and
sharing it fairly. This means partnerships involving not just governments but civil society groups,
individuals and businesses.
We are at the early stages of this awakening. But there are some
encouraging signs, especially in the private sector. Corporations have long been viewed as
culprits. The smokestacks from power plants pollute our air, the effluents from industry spoil our
rivers. But this is changing. More and more today, businesses are working to become part of the
solution, rather than the problem.
Earlier this month, members of the UN Global Compact, the world’s
largest voluntary corporate citizenship initiative, gathered in New York for a meeting on water.
The companies in that room had a total worth of about half a trillion dollars with employees in
some 200 countries.
The main theme: moving beyond the mere use of water to
stewardship. This translates into a commitment to engage with the United Nations, governments and
civil groups to protect what is becoming an increasingly scarce resource and ensure that local
communities benefit.
Every journey is comprised of myriad small steps, and they spoke
about those, too. A major textiles company told how it was working with local governments and
farmers to conserve watersheds in growing cotton. A jeans designer is planning to change its
labels, calling for washing in cold and hanging dry as a step to save water.
A drop in the bucket, yes. But I see it as the first wave in a
tide of change.

