Some principles
of water justice
Water is essential for the entire biosphere, not just humans.
Water is nature's
gift and cannot be owned and turned into a commodity.
Water is exhaustible.
It is our duty to conserve and use it sustainably. No-one has a right
to pollute it.
Water is a human
right. We need to work to guarantee a free basic provision of safe water
for all.
Efficient water management starts from the point of view of the most
disadvantaged - impoverished women in particular, who often bear the
burden of fetching water.
Democratic local community participation can ensure sustainable use
and equitable distribution.
Happening
this month
22 March is World
Water Day; 2003 is the International Year of Freshwater (www.wateryear2003.org).
The second UN Clean Water Decade begins this month. The previous one
(in the 1980s) failed due to the purse-pinching of donor countries and
the anti-poor economic agenda pushed by Reagan and Thatcher.
16-23
March, the Third World Water Forum takes place in Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka,
Japan. The previous Forum (held in The Hague, March 2000), dominated
by corporate lobby groups, gained notoriety for pushing the privatization
agenda under a cloud of development rhetoric.
Useful non-governmental
organizations
AOTEAROA/NEW ZEALAND
Water
for Survival
PO Box 6208, Wellesley Street, Auckland.
Tel:
09 528 9759 Fax: 09 528 9752
Email: johnwfs@clear.net.nz
Web:
www.lawas.co.nz/watersurv/
AUSTRALIA
The
Water Matters Campaign
co-ordinated by TEAR Australia
lobbies for safe water provision worldwide.
PO Box 164 (1/4 Solwood Lane), Blackburn VIC 3130.
Tel: (03) 9877 7444 or Toll Free: 1800 244 986
Fax: (03) 9877 7944
Email:
watermatters@tear.org.au
Web: www.watermattersaustralia.org
Oz
GREEN involves communities to care for rivers www.ozgreen.org.au
BRITAIN
WaterAid
Prince Consort House, 27 - 29 Albert Embankment, London SE1
7UB.
Tel:
020 7793 4500 Fax: 020 7793 4545
Email: wateraid@wateraid.org.uk
Web:
www.wateraid.org
Look out also for WaterAid and Tearfund's forthcoming report on
sanitation, 'The Human Waste'.
CANADA
WaterCan
321 Chapel Street, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 7Z2.
Tel:
(613) 230-5182 or 1-800-370-5658
Fax: (613) 230-0712
Email:
info@watercan.com
Web: www.watercan.com
INTERNATIONAL
www.oxfam.org Oxfam
works on a wide variety of projects but has a track record of securing
safe water for communities in distress.
United Nations
Various
UN agencies provide invaluable information on the state of water resources
and promote safe water and sanitation initiatives. However, be wary
of the 'public private partnerships' lurking within. In November 2002,
UNESCO announced the signing of a co-operation agreement with the transnational
water giant Suez. Recent declarations from Suez put the emphasis on
public service not the profit potential - just who are they trying to
fool?
www.unesco.org/water/wwap
Home of the World Water Assessment Programme, pooling the resources
of 23 UN agencies. See below to access the Programme's comprehensive
World Water Development Report presented at Kyoto in March 2003.
http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/wwdr/ex_summary/index.shtml
Executive Summary of the World Water Development Report.
http://www.wateryear2003.org/
The site for the International Year of Freshwater 2003.
www.unep.org/themes/freshwater/
Statistics from the United Nations Environment Programme.
www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/index.htm
The World Health Organization's health and sanitation database.
Anti-privatization
www.aidwatch.org.au/
Australian Right to Water campaign.
www.citizen.org/
US civil-rights group Public Citizen.
www.canadians.org
Visit the Blue Planet Project on the Council of Canadians' site, which
aims to co-ordinate international anti-privatization efforts - with
extensive links.
www.foei.org/water/index.html
Friends of the Earth International.
http://forums.transnationale.org
Digs the dirt on water transnationals.
www.oneworldaction.org
Read the cogent report 'The Great Water Robbery' here.
www.polarisinstitute.org
Check out Operation Water Lords at the Canadian Polaris Institute's
site.
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2882349.stm
A report on the The First People's World Water Forum.
Two recent
books worth reading: the impressively researched Blue Gold: The
battle against corporate theft of the world's water by Maude
Barlow and Tony Clarke (Earthscan 2002) and
the more polemical Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit
by Vandana Shiva (Pluto Press 2002).
Big Dams
www.dams.org
A wealth of research from the World Commission on Dams.
www.irn.org
The best campaigning site on the subject, courtesy of the Berkeley-based
International Rivers Network.
Conservation
www.acfonline.org.au/
The Australian Conservation Foundation presses for better local water
management.
www.greatlakesdirectory.org/
Useful US site that covers a multiplicity of issues.
www.idrc.ca/waterdemand/
Canadian Government-funded initiative to look at ways of reducing water
demand in regions of scarcity.
www.rain-water.org/
The Japanese group People for Rainwater Utilization with outreach in
Bangladesh.
www.rainwaterharvesting.org
A multitude of stories and strategies from India.
www.waternz.co.nz
Industry initiative concentrating on water quality in Aotearoa/New
Zealand.
Some useful
general sites
www.waterobservatory.org/
Overview of current debates by the US Institute for Agriculture and
Trade Policy.
www.thewaterpage.com/
With an emphasis on sustainable development.
www.worldwater.org
Data culled from Peter Gleick's authoritative biannual reports on the
world's freshwater.