
WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION SIGNS AGREEMENT WITH SINGAPORE
New partnership aims to improve public health worldwide through the safe management of drinking water.
Today, the Government of Singapore and the World Health Organisation (WHO) signed a new partnership agreement to jointly promote the safe management of drinking water globally. The signing ceremony took place in
“
“Today, we have put in place a sustainable water supply system through a diversified supply strategy with four different sources, namely water from local catchments, imported water from Malaysia, NEWater (or recycled water) and desalinated water. In
The agreement was signed by Mr Tan on behalf of the Government of Singapore, and by Mrs Susanne Weber-Mosdorf, WHO’s Assistant Director General for Sustainable Development and Healthy Environments, on behalf of WHO. The ceremony was witnessed by Dr Yaacob Ibrahim,
"It is our collective responsibility to address the devastating effects of declining water quality. When water is scarce, people are forced to rely on unsafe water. Proper water management is ever more crucial in those places where little water is available. Moreover, with freshwater resources strongly affected by, and vulnerable to, climate change, finding solutions to these challenges becomes all the more pressing,” said Mrs Weber-Mosdorf.
“
Under this agreement, which will run until 2015, WHO will work with Singapore to strengthen and disseminate knowledge to developing Member States on the procedures for the safe use of wastewater in direct and indirect drinking uses; intra-urban water catchment management; the desalination and advanced chemical treatment of waste / sea-water as a source of drinking water; and the ability of a country's drinking water infrastructure to withstand disruptions and restrictions in its water supply.
The collaboration leverages on
Mr Tan elaborated, “The Four National Taps strategy leverages on technology to create a sustainable water supply for
“As for the harvesting of rainwater,
Under the agreement, the areas of cooperation will include:
• Research Collaboration on water quality, water technologies, and best practices. For example,
• Capacity building – WHO and
• Emergencies and Disasters –
• Conferences and meetings –
• Participation of
• Secondment of Singaporean experts and government officers to WHO
Currently more than 1.1 billion people lack access to safe water worldwide. Every year, this unremitting but seemingly invisible disaster claims the lives of more than 1.6 million people because they lack access to safe water and sanitation.
Ninety percent of the deaths occur among children under five, mostly in developing countries. For every child that dies, countless others suffer from poor health, diminished productivity, and missed opportunities for education. With a rising trend of water scarcity, the situation is getting worse due to climate change, population growth, urbanisation and the increase in domestic and industrial water use.
“There is an urgent need for sustainable water solutions and we are pleased to partner with
15 August 2007
For further information, journalists may contact:
Singapore: Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources (MEWR)
Name: Tristin Ong
Contact Number: 65-67319025
Email address: Tristin_Ong@mewr.gov.sg
PUB –
Name : Lim Hui Ling
Contact Number: 65-67313293 Hp : 65-90233665
Email address : Lim_Hui_Ling@pub.gov.sg
Name : Ms Teo Yin Yin
Contact Number : 67313158
Email Address : teo_yin_yin@pub.gov.sg