ID :
297750
Tue, 09/03/2013 - 09:54
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/297750
The shortlink copeid
ADB, Gates Foundation Partner To Tackle Asia's Huge Sanitation Needs
SINGAPORE, Sept 3 (Bernama) -- The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation have formed a new partnership to expand and speed up
access to safe sanitation in Asia and the Pacific.
Director of the Urban Development and Water Division at ADB’s Southeast Asia
department, Amy Leung said: “Hundreds of millions of people suffer from poor
sanitation and ADB and the Gates Foundation share a common vision for improving
the health and dignity of all people in the region.
“This partnership will allow us to support testing and pilot implementation
of innovative solutions to deliver long lasting, quality sanitation services to
Asia’s urban poor," she said in a statement released by ADB.
Creation of a new Sanitation Financing Partnership Trust Fund will be
announced during World Water Week, held in Stockholm, Sweden until Sept 6.
An investment of US$15 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation into
the Trust Fund will leverage more than US$28 million in investments from ADB by
2017 to expand non-sewered sanitation and septage management solutions across
Asia.
The Trust Fund will pilot innovations in sanitation and septage management,
provide grant funds for innovations in ADB’s sanitation projects, and support
polices on septage management and sludge treatment to meet the needs of
low-income urban communities who lack access to piped networks or safe
wastewater disposal systems.
Brian Arbogast, Director of the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene team at
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, said: “Investing in solutions that help
bring safe sanitation to the billions people who don’t already have it leads to
healthier people and stronger communities.
“We are confident that this new partnership with ADB will help spur
government officials, city authorities, companies and civil society to apply
innovative thinking to the ongoing sanitation challenges in Asia," he said.
Currently, around 1.7 billion people in Asia and the Pacific have no access
to safe sanitation, and about 780 million still practice open defecation,
resulting in pollution and exposure to diarrheal diseases, the second leading
cause of infant and child deaths worldwide.
Sanitation problems are becoming increasingly acute in urban areas, with
tens of millions of people moving into Asian cities every year.
Many end up living in slums with little or no sanitation facilities. The
region needs investments estimated at US$71 billion to deliver improved
sanitation to all its citizens.
The Trust Fund will be part of ADB’s Water Financing Partnership Facility
(WFPF), an instrument which pools finance and knowledge from development
partners to support improvements in the sector.
ADB has lent a total of US$8.8 billion in water supply, sanitation, and
wastewater management projects since 2006. Of that, US$2.5 billion were
investments that benefited from WFPF support.
-- BERNAMA