The United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)
New Sanitation and Hygiene Fund will help drive billions into the sector
At current rates of progress, the Sustainable Development Goal towards sanitation and hygiene for all will not be achieved until the next century. A more optimistic outlook emerged with today’s launch of the new Sanitation and Hygiene Fund.
"Lack of sanitation, hygiene and menstrual health remains one of the greatest barriers to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and poses a real challenge to gender equality. We all need to work together to respond to this great challenge, and UNOPS is proud to support this response," said UNOPS Executive Director Grete Faremo.
Women and girls are disproportionately affected by poor sanitation, hygiene and menstrual health, which limits their mobility, freedom of choice and ability to access services and opportunities. It also puts them at greater risk of gender-based violence.
Over the next five years, the UNOPS-managed Fund will seek $2 billion to help countries deliver sanitation, hygiene and menstrual health for all people. Major investments are more crucial than ever as the world grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic, which has both exposed and exacerbated vast inequities in access, and demonstrated the fundamental role that sanitation and hygiene play in stopping the spread of disease.
Speaking at the launch, Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed described safe sanitation and hygiene as “critical to the response that we want to see. First, because it is about human dignity. Second, it is a health issue.”
Currently, half the world’s population does not have access to safely managed sanitation. Some 623 million children attend schools that do not have toilets. One in 3 schools do not have even basic sanitation and hygiene services, and 1 in 5 healthcare facilities have no sanitation services whatsoever. The estimated cost of lack of sanitation and hygiene is $222 billion a year, which includes lost productivity and economic output, as well as increased health expenditures.
The economic benefits of sanitation are about five times the cost, and the cost of inaction is far greater.
The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund provides catalytic funding to countries with the heaviest burden and least ability to respond. It focuses on four strategic objectives: expanding household sanitation; ensuring menstrual health and hygiene; providing sanitation and hygiene in schools and health care facilities; and supporting innovative sanitation solutions.
About the Sanitation and Hygiene Fund
The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund will replace the former Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council. The global financing mechanism will support country-driven programmes to bring sanitation and hygiene to all. With significant investment, it seeks to provide a 21st-century solution to a decades-long crisis on sanitation, hygiene and menstrual health. Investing in a public-private approach, the fund aims to capitalize on the strengths of its in-country and global partners.