Do your bit: Focus on days highlighting international issues International Days and Observations
World Toilet Day
19 November
In 2013, the United Nations designated 19 November as "World Toilet Day". This was done to to raise awareness about people who do not have access to a toilet.

Access to water and sanitation is in factenshrined as a human right globally, but many still do not have access to an adequate toilet.

Facts and Figures:

  • 2.6 billion people have gained access to improved drinking water sources since 1990, but 663 million people are still without

  • At least 1.8 billion people globally use a source of drinking water that is fecally contaminated

  • Between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of the global population using an improved drinking water source has increased from 76 per cent to 91 per cent

  • But water scarcity affects more than 40 per cent of the global population and is projected to rise. Over 1.7 billion people are currently living in river basins where water use exceeds recharge

  • 2.4 billion people lack access to basic sanitation services, such as toilets or latrines

  • More than 80 per cent of wastewater resulting from human activities is discharged into rivers or sea without any pollution removal

  • Each day,nearly 1,000 children die due to preventable water and sanitation-related diarrhoeal diseases

  • Hydropower is the most important and widely-used renewable source of energy and as of 2011, represented 16 per cent of total electricity production worldwide

  • Approximately 70 per cent of all water abstracted from rivers, lakes and aquifers is used for irrigation

  • Floods and other water-related disasters account for 70 per cent of all deaths related to natural disasters
United Nations
SDG Goal 6 SDG Goal 6

Sustainable Development Goals
Goal 6: Ensure access to water and sanitation for all

Clean, accessible water for all is an essential part of the world we want to live in. There is sufficient fresh water on the planet to achieve this. But due to bad economics or poor infrastructure, every year millions of people, most of them children, die from diseases associated with inadequate water supply, sanitation and hygiene.

Water scarcity, poor water quality and inadequate sanitation negatively impact food security, livelihood choices and educational opportunities for poor families across the world. Drought afflicts some of the world’s poorest countries, worsening hunger and malnutrition.

By 2050, at least one in four people is likely to live in a country affected by chronic or recurring shortages of fresh water.

Additional Resources:

GDRC has been working on themes related to this international day/observance, in the water section of its programme on Urban Heritage and Conservation.

GDRC reaffirms its committment to uphold the objectives of the World Day for Cultural Diversity, and work towards better understanding of, and action on, the values and norms that make up our cultural heritage, and its crticality for development.

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