4.3 Article

Improved but unsustainable: accounting for sachet water in post-2015 goals for global safe water

Journal

TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages 1506-1508

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2012.03099.x

Keywords

development; drinking water; Millennium Development Goals attainment; West Africa; developpement; eau potable; realisation des OMD; Afrique de l'Ouest; desarrollo; agua potable; alcance ODM; Africa del Oeste

Funding

  1. National Institute for Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, United States of America [R01HD054906]

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The advent and rapid spread of sachet drinking water in West Africa presents a new challenge for providing sustainable access to global safe water. Sachet water has expanded drinking water access and is often of sufficient quality to serve as an improved water source for Millennium Development Goals (MDG) monitoring purposes, yet sachets are an unsustainable water delivery vehicle due to their overwhelming plastic waste burden. Monitoring of primary drinking water sources in West Africa generally ignores sachet water, despite its growing ubiquity. Sub-Saharan Africa as a region is unlikely to meet the MDG Target for drinking water provision, and post-2015 monitoring activities may depend upon rapid adaptability to local drinking water trends.

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