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Sanitation in South Asia: Progress and Challenges Clarissa Brocklehurst Chief of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, UNICEF SACOSAN April 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Sanitation in South Asia: Progress and Challenges Clarissa Brocklehurst Chief of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, UNICEF SACOSAN April 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sanitation in South Asia: Progress and Challenges Clarissa Brocklehurst Chief of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, UNICEF SACOSAN April 2011

2 WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP) Mandated by the UN to monitor global progress towards the MDG water and sanitation target Use of national data sources: –National censuses –Household surveys (DHS, MICS, WHS, LSMS, CWIQ etc.) Use of standard definitions and indicators to ensure data are comparable between countries and over time

3 MDG definitions - sanitation Improved sanitation Flush/pour flush to: piped sewer system septic tank pit latrine Ventilated improved pit (VIP) latrine Pit latrine with slab Composting toilet Unimproved sanitation Pit latrine without slab/ open pit Bucket Hanging toilet/hanging latrine Flush/pour flush to elsewhere No facilities, bush or field (open defecation) Shared or public facilities An improved sanitation facility “hygienically separates human waste from human contact”

4 Year Coverage (%) Linear regression line

5 Improved Public or shared Unimproved Open defecation What do the data tell us about progress in sanitation in South Asia? Sanitation coverage in South Asia increased by 13 percentage points since 1990; from 22% to 35% open defecation rates decreased by a third; from 67% to 45%

6 UrbanTotalRural But stark differences remain between urban and rural figures Improved Public or shared Unimproved Open defecation

7 716 million people in South Asia practiced open defecation in 2008 (millions) India 638 million

8 Comparison with other regions

9 1990 2008 1990 2008 1990 2008 1995 2008 2000 2008 1990 2008 1990 2000 1990 2008 1990 2008 India Nepal Pakistan Afghanistan Bhutan Bangladesh Maldives Sri Lanka SOUTH ASIA Coverage (%) 37 98 36 22 33 62 14 45 39 74 13 18 15 51 29 54 31 69 10 28 53 65 91 70 18 25 35 47 16 27 2926 23 11 31 4 11 80 52 22 45 5 67 10 35 6 10 Improved Public or shared Unimproved Open defecation Significant variation across countries

10 Bad news In 2008 there were more people without access to improved sanitation than in 1990

11 South Asia is not on track for the MDG sanitation target 40? Required trend

12 Good news Open defecation rates have declined in all countries

13 EQUITY ANALYSIS

14 Equity – rural coverge still lags behind urban coverage

15 Poorest 2 nd 3 rd 4 th Richest Wealth Quintile Analysis: India

16 Poorest 2 nd 3 rd 4 th Richest Wealth Quintile Analysis: Nepal

17 Poorest 2 nd 3 rd 4 th Richest Wealth Quintile Analysis: Bangladesh

18 Overcoming obstacles: building demand for sanitation community-led models for building demand harnessing household investments changing social norms around open defecation

19 Overcoming obstacles: building political commitment for sanitation Xx South Asian countries are members of Sanitation and Water for All Engagement of Ministers of Finance Significant financial and institutional commitments have been made

20 Thank you


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