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What is the role of water in rural and urban school facilities?

The presence or absence of water in rural and urban landscapes is very much dependent on the hydrological cycle. Erratic rainfalls caused by climate change can create too much or too little water for communities, affecting the availability of clean and safe water for drinking, sanitation and hygiene.
Illustration of Henning Göransson Sandberg, SIWI expert by Cecile Pillon Hue

As a WASH expert, Henning Göransson Sandberg explains here how the increasing effects of climate change require stronger cooperation between Water Resource Management and WASH to ensure better access to education for all.

What comes to mind first, when speaking of water in rural and urban landscapes, and why?

My work is focused on water, sanitation and hygiene services, so for me, I think of how we can ensure the human right to clean drinking water, safe sanitation and hygiene to preserve human dignity and health.

For a long time, the water sector has made the distinction between water resources more broadly, focusing on ensuring the long-term sustainability and availability of water resources for various uses, and more specifically on water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), which focuses on human consumption of water at the household and community levels.

While they are interrelated and dependent on each other for their objectives, the sectors have historically worked relatively separately. For example, within SIWI, the WASH and Water Resource Management (WRM) departments have worked as separate departments. However, with the effects of climate change being increasingly felt, essentially through too little, too much water or too polluted water, this distinction becomes less useful, and the need for cooperation between these two areas becomes more important. SIWI has recently published a report which proposes a framework that can be used to improve cooperation between WRM and WASH, illustrated with examples and case studies.

My current focus has been specifically on the impact of climate change related risks on WASH services in schools. While vulnerable to the same risks, such as water scarcity for drinking and hygiene, and infrastructure damage in schools and education facilities, communities face unique challenges which are caused by, or exacerbated by, climate risks.

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