Incredible Water far all
Water far all
Water for
All is the Atlas Copco Group’s main community engagement project, driven on the
local level by our employees on a voluntary basis. A guiding principle is that
access to clean water is a human right and the foundation for improved living
conditions.
Drinking
water supply and sanitation in India continue to be inadequate, despite
longstanding efforts by the various levels of government and communities at
improving coverage. The level of investment in water and sanitation, albeit low
by international standards, has increased in size during the 2000s. Access has
also increased significantly. For example, in 1980 rural sanitation coverage
was estimated at 1% and reached 21% in 2008. Also, the share of Indians with
access to improved sources of water has increased significantly from 72% in 1990
to 88% in 2008 At the same time, local government institutions in charge of
operating and maintaining the infrastructure are seen as weak and lack the
financial resources to carry out their functions. In addition, only two Indian
cities have continuous water supply and according to an estimate from 2008
about 69% of Indians still lack access to improved sanitation facilities. A
study by WaterAid estimated as many as 157 million Indian or 41 percent of
Indians living in urban areas, live without adequate sanitation. India comes
top for having the greatest number of urbanites living without sanitation.
India tops urban sanitation crisis, has the largest amount of urban dwellers
without sanitation and the most open defecators over 41 million people.
A number of
innovative approaches to improve water supply and sanitation have been tested
in India, in particular in the early 2000s. These include demand-driven
approaches in rural water supply since 1999, community-led total sanitation, a
public-private partnerships to improve the continuity of urban water supply in
Karnataka, and the use of microcredits for water supply and sanitation in order
to improve access to water and sanitation
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