UN declares access to clean water a human right

Gerard Aziakou for AFP

UNITED NATIONS — The UN General Assembly on Wednesday recognized access to clean water and sanitation as a human right, a move hailed by water advocates as a momentous step toward a future treaty.

After more than 15 years of contentious debate on the issue, 122 countries voted in favor of a compromise Bolivian resolution enshrining the right, while the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and 37 other nations abstained.

The non-binding text “declares the right to safe and clean drinking water and sanitation as a human right that is essential for the full enjoyment of the right to life.”

It expresses deep concern that 884 million people lack access to safe drinking water and that more 2.6 billion do not have access to basic sanitation.

It notes that roughly two million people die every year from diseases caused by unsafe water and sanitation, most of them small children.

And it points to the pledge made by world leaders in 2000 as part of the poverty-reduction Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to reduce by half, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and sanitation.

The resolution urges states and international organizations to provide financial and technological assistance to help developing countries “scale up efforts to provide safe, clean, accessible and affordable water and sanitation for all.”

“This is a historic day for the world, a big step in the right direction” toward the distant goal of a water treaty, Canada’s leading water activist Maude Barlow told AFP.

“It is going to mean a huge amount to our movement around the world, to local community groups fighting for water rights, water justice against governments, corporations which are not respecting their rights.”

Barlow, a former senior adviser to the UN General Assembly on the water issue, said some wealthy countries abstained out of fear “that they are going to be asked to pay the price tag” or that the resolution would give “tools to their own people to use against them.”

She welcomed the fact that major countries such as China, Russia, Germany, France, Spain and Brazil backed the resolution.

Of her country’s abstention, she said: “We are terribly disappointed.”

She said Canada’s conservative government wants the right to sell water.

“They know that if they say it is a human right it will be a contradiction to want to turn it into a commodity,” she added.

The resolution also welcomes the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council’s request that Portugal’s Catarina de Albuquerque, the UN Independent Expert on human rights obligations related to access to safe drinking water, report annually to the General Assembly as well.

De Albuquerque’s report is to focus on the key challenges to achieving the right to safe and clean drinking water and sanitation, as well as on progress towards the relevant MDGs.

Germany’s UN Ambassador Peter Wittig also hailed the resolution, although he said he would have preferred language with “a clearer message on the primary responsibility of states to ensure the realization of human rights for all those living under their jurisdiction.”

And he disagreed with those member states that voiced concern about the impact of the resolution on the Geneva process led by de Albuquerque.

“We see the resolution as a complement to the ongoing process on water and sanitation in Geneva,” he noted.

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Three State Aquifer In Jeopardy

BY JEFF MONTGOMERY of The News Journal

Tainted groundwater is spreading across thousands of acres in northern Delaware and has reached the Potomac Aquifer, which supplies drinking water to people across much of Delaware, Maryland and New Jersey.

In some areas of the upper Potomac near Delaware City and New Castle, concentrations of benzene, vinyl chloride and chlorinated benzenes are so high that exposure poses an immediate health threat. Elevated levels of these industrial byproducts significantly increase the risks of cancer. Sustained exposure could kill.

Northern Delaware is home to some of the worst chemical dumping grounds in America, a legacy of broken promises and corporate misdeeds. Regulators working for Delaware and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have long claimed that the deep clay layers above the aquifer protected it from the foul waters discharged by chemical and petroleum manufacturers.

Those assurances have proved false.

The protective layer over the aquifer, scientists now say, is full of holes.

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Flood Disaster in Pakistan

By RIAZ KHAN and ROSHAN MUGHAL (AP)

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Boats and helicopters struggled to reach hundreds of thousands of villagers cut off by floods in northwest Pakistan on Friday as the government said 430 people had been killed in the deadliest such disaster to hit the region since 1929. View The Guardian’s photo gallery here

The flooding capped an already deadly week in Pakistan, which is no stranger to calamities, natural or otherwise. A passenger jet flying in bad weather slammed into hills overlooking the capital, Islamabad, on Wednesday, killing all 152 people on board.

Three days of heavy monsoonal rains across the northwest caused scores of rivers to burst their banks, tearing down 60 bridges and scores of roads and buildings. Hundreds of villages and towns, along with massive swaths of agricultural land, were under several feet of water.

Associated Press Television News footage showed a powerful torrent running through the center of Mingora town in the Swat Valley, carrying debris and trees with it. Hundreds of residents trudged through flooded streets as rescue officials used loudspeakers to urge them to evacuate homes in low-lying areas.

An AP reporter traveled in an army helicopter dropping tents and food supplies to stricken communities in the northwest. He flew over around 150 villagers that were inundated close to the border with South Waziristan. The three major roads in the region were all blocked.

“This is a natural calamity, and we will do whatever is possible to reach the flood-affected people and to help them,” said Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister for Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa province. “We appeal to the world community to help us. We need a lot of assistance.”

The United Nations said it and other international bodies were looking at ways to help the region, parts of which have also seen operations by Pakistan’s military against Islamist militants over the last two years. Hundreds of people have been killed in bombings and other attacks by the insurgents.

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Texas Tech University: Micropollutants Clearinghouse Project

The purpose of the Texas Tech University Micropollutants Clearinghouse project is to provide an on-line, publically accessible, research resource on the legal, regulatory, institutional, policy, and related scientific aspects of micropollutants in fresh water systems.

It is designed as a dynamic and robust database of documents, reports, information, analyses, articles, and other materials that: relate to micropollutants - such as pharmaceuticals, endocrine disruptors, and personal care products - that affect fresh water quality; address existing, proposed, and alternative legal, regulatory, and institutional mechanisms for dealing with water quality issues; present the scientific underpinning for existing, proposed, and alternative legal, regulatory, and institutional mechanisms for dealing with water quality issues; and address related decision-making mechanisms or processes.

The long-term objective of the Micropollutants Clearinghouse project is to continue building on the existing knowledge of information and to expand the contents available in the Clearinghouse on this important topic. This is critical for developing and evaluating water laws, regulatory actions, and policies relevant to the presence and effects of micropollutants in fresh water systems.

The expected audience that may be interested in and should benefit from the Micropollutants Clearinghouse include the general public, academic and industry researchers, legislators and legislatures, government agencies at all levels of civil society, and stakeholders involved in various decision-making scenarios related to micropollutants in fresh water systems. It should prove especially useful for individuals and groups involved in the development and implementation of water laws, regulations, and policies throughout the United States and internationally.

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Oil Spill Hits Michigan’s Kalamazoo River

By SHAWN McCARTHY of The Globe and Mail

Canada’s oil sands producers have suffered another black eye in the United States with the Enbridge pipeline break that has spilled some three million litres of crude into Michigan’s Kalamazoo River.

The high-profile accident and resulting political outcry comes at a sensitive time for the Canadian industry, which is looking to expand pipeline access and exports to the U.S.. Canadian officials have sought to quietly capitalize on BP’s catastrophic blowout in the Gulf of Mexico by positioning the oil sands as a greener, safer alternative to offshore crude.

But there is growing opposition to oil sands pipelines – whether Enbridge’s planned Northern Gateway project to the West Coast or Enbridge Keystone XL line to the U.S. Gulf Coast. And the Michigan spill, while small compared to the estimated 800 million litres that have spewed from BP’s well, provides fresh ammunition to the industry’s critics.

The U.S. State Department announced this week it would be delaying its ruling on the Learn more about Keystone XL application while it takes into account a highly critical submission from the Environmental Protection Agency that raised serious questions about the need for and the impact of the pipeline.

Environmental groups are now pointing to the Michigan spill as further evidence that crude pipelines pose serious threats, particularly when they cross fragile ecosystems or critical sources of fresh water.

Enbridge chief executive officer Pat Daniel was in Michigan on Wednesday to supervise the cleanup effort after Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm complained the company’s response had been “anemic.”

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