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2006: 14o Anniversary
of the Inter-American Water Day (IAWD)
Theme1 of
the IAWD 2006:
"Toward a New Culture of the Water"
By 2015, it is expected that the
countries of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) and
of the world in general to halve the proportion of people
without sustainable access to safe drinking water and
basic sanitation, as part of their commitment for the
fulfillment of Target
10 of the Goal Seven of the Declaration of the Millennium.
In LAC is estimated a population of approximately 536
million inhabitants 2, of which
60 million people have no access to improved drinking
water sources; of these, two thirds are rural populations.
On the other hand, 137 million people lack access to
improved sanitation facilities, of which a little more
than half are concentrated in rural populations. Of
the urban populations with access to sanitation facilities,
only 14% treat their effluents. The other 86% discharges
around 516 m3/s of wastewater without treatment to bodies
of surface water, polluting potential water sources
for the water consumption and degrading the aquatic
ecosystems.
In Latin America the growing demand for the drinking
water supply and the collection of the wastewaters have
postponed the attention of other stages of the water
management within the basin, such as its intake and
storage for human consumption and other uses, as well
as the treatment of the domestic wastewater and its
appropriate final disposal or use in productive activities
such as the agriculture, environmental services and
others.
This lack of wastewater treatment is constituted as
a danger for the health, where most of water-borne diseases
has relationship with the lack of drinking water, due
to the use of polluted waters and to the poor knowledge
on hygiene. The deficient management of the water resource,
including the wastewater discharges, together with the
limitations in the water treatment infrastructure for
human consumption, deteriorates the quality of the water
that is distributed to the users.
"To
improve the management and development of the water
resources is a critical factor to achieve the widest
execution in the group of Objectives of Development
of the Millennium… to reduce the infant mortality,
to improve the maternal health and to combat the main
diseases…"
"Health, dignity and development: what will it
take?"
Final Report of the Team of Work in Water and Sanitation
of the United Nations Millennium Project.
To reach an efficient management of the water resource,
a new paradigm of environmental and social sustainability
is proposed, that implies to promote deep changes in
our scales of values and in our model of life toward
a new culture of the water.
Note: The Inter-American
Water Day is a regional initiative, carried out together
with the Inter-American Association of Sanitary and
Environmental Engineering (AIDIS), the Caribbean Water
and Wastewater Association (CWWA), the Economic Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Organization
of the American States (OAS), Pan-American Health Organization/World
Health Organization (PAHO/WHO) and the Regional Office
for Latin America and the Caribbean of the United Nations
Environment Program (UNEP/ORPALC).
1Theme suggested by
consensus between SDE/CEPIS-BS and AIDIS, for this unique
year. We are been working in a coordinate proposal to
develop a strategy of long-term for the definition of
the topics of IAWD for a period of five year in harmony
with the Water International Decade: "Water for
Life 2005-2015” and in fulfillment of the Millennium
Development Goals 2000-2015 that will be consulted with
the countries.
2 Middle Term Evaluation of the
Joint Monitoring Program (JMP) for Water Supply and
Sanitation of the WHO and UNICEF - OMS/UNICEF, 2004.
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