Public - visible to all visitors to the platform.
Open to join - users can join this group without approval.
Invite only - users can only join this group if they are added/invited by group managers.
According to the UN, nearly one-third of people globally lack access to safely managed drinking water services, and over half lack access to safely managed sanitation facilities. This lack of access can have potentially significant adverse impacts on people’s health, through water-related diseases, in addition to productivity and environmental impacts. The COVID-19 pandemic has compounded the situation, and has demonstrated the critical importance of sanitation, hygiene and adequate access to clean water for preventing and containing diseases.
While substantial progress has been made in increasing access to clean drinking water and sanitation, billions of people – mostly in rural areas – still lack these basic services. More needs to be done to improve the situation and achieve one of the Sustainable Development Goals, which calls for ensuring access to water and sanitation for all. The challenge lies in finding a way to use the world’s water more efficiently and make it available to all at a reasonable cost, while leaving sufficient quantities to sustain the environment. Green growth policies in the water sector can address issues of both quantity and quality by encouraging water-related innovation and investment in green infrastructure, and through integration with policies in other relevant sectors.
Created a Post in Water and Sanitation
Toward Reducing Adolescents’ Bottled Water Purchasing: From Policy Awareness to Policy-Congruent Behavior
Effects of Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi on Root Growth and Architecture of Tulip Gesneriana
A Primer on Gas Phase CO2 Production and Transport in Peatland Soils
Possible Assessment Method of Green Infrastructure in the Case of Small Town Keszthely, Hungary
The Rapid Method of Soil Identification Based on Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems (Case Study of Moramo Watershed)
Annual Report 2019: At the Forefront of the Resource Nexus
A Systematic Review of Water and Gender Interlinkages: Assessing the Intersection With Health
Created a Post in Cities and Urban Development, Natural Capital, Water and Sanitation
Urban and Regional Futures
Blue and Green Cities
New World Bank data in the WWF Water Risk Filter tool will help companies assess and act on the invisible water crisis of water quality