
Why use ECO toilets
With SOUTH AFRICA going down the proverbial TOILET. Why is it necessary to
consider ECO TOILETS ? Durban being swamped with fresh sewerage during Christmas season was the
only WAKE UP CALL. 1000s of rivers in South Africa are SWAMPED with sewage
because of ANC theft and negligence. Simply places of R&R like
Hartebeespoort dam Is now a SEWAGE catchment area and a dump site. We are in a
crisis that no one is FACING while everyone is focused on looking at ESKOM.
Sewage flowing freely in VAAL DAM, the biggest DRINKING water reservoir in SA,
Is now a long lost memory. South Africa is on the precipice of having NO FRESH
WATER available anymore. While we might take toilets for granted, billions in the world don’t.
Toilets and all that is related – loosely called sanitation – play a hugely
important role for all of us: not only in our daily lives as we spend time to
relieve ourselves, but also for our sustainable, inclusive development. Toilets
are crucial for the healthy development of people, not to mention children. So is sanitation – facilities and services for safe disposal of human urine
and faeces includes maintaining hygiene through services such as garbage
collection and wastewater disposal. The overall purpose of good sanitation is
to provide a healthy living environment for everyone, protect natural resources
such as surface water, groundwater, and soil, and provide safety, security, and
dignity for people when they defaecate or urinate. The facts and figures of toilets (or improved sanitation) from the World
Sanitation Program, the World Health Organization (WHO) and WaterAid, among
others, speak for themselves. 1. Today, 2.4 billion people or about one-third of the world’s population
lack access to improved sanitation—facilities that hygienically separates human
excreta from human contact—and 1 billion people still practice open
defaecation. 2. In 2012 the WHO estimated that the global economic return on
sanitation spending is US$5.50 for every dollar invested – nearly triple the
US$2 economic return on water spending. 3. Open defaecation (the practice whereby people go out in fields, bushes,
forests, open bodies of water, or other open spaces rather than using the toilet
to defaecate) is a leading cause of diarrhoeal death, says the WHO. The
diarrhoea death toll stands at around 6,000 a day, mostly young children. 4. In South Asia alone, 1 billion people lack access to improved sanitation
and 675 million practice open defaecation, more than any other region in the
world. 5. Half of global malnutrition cases are linked to chronic diarrhaea caused
by lack of clean water, decent sanitation, and good hygiene, including
hand-washing with soap. The extent of the global stunting crisis and scarce
access to clean water and decent toilets is having an enormous impact on the
future of millions of children suffering from malnutrition. 6. Without improved sanitation facilities and awareness, the risks of
infections or other illnesses from faecal sludge or wastewater are extremely
high. Just 1 gram of faeces can contain 10 million viruses, 1 million bacteria,
1,000 parasite cysts, and 100 parasite eggs. 7. Hand-washing with soap after using the toilet is one of the most
effective and inexpensive ways to prevent diarrhoeal diseases and pneumonia.
This simple act can reduce the risk of diarrhoeal disease by up to 47 per cent,
but only if it’s done consistently. Research shows that globally less than one-fifth of people currently wash
their hands properly at critical times, and only 19 per cent of people wash
their hands after using the toilet or changing a child’s diaper. Diarrhoea and
pneumonia, two major illnesses that are transmitted this way, together kill an
estimated 1.7 million children every year. To wash your hands properly, make sure you scrub your hands with soap for 20
seconds, or the time it takes to sing “Happy Birthday” twice. 8. According to Target 2 of the Sustainable Development Goal number 6 on
sanitation, by 2030 we should achieve access to adequate and equitable
sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defaecation, paying special
attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations.
This makes sanitation a global development priority. 9. In India alone about 550 million people defaecate in the open, which
accounts for more than half of the people in the world who practice open
defaecation. Indians excrete close to 65,000 metric tons of faeces into the
environment each day. This results in 188,000 annual deaths of children under
five from diarrhoea. India loses 6.4 per cent of GDP—US$53.8 billion—due to
poor sanitation on a yearly basis. These findings are based on 2006
figures, but a similar magnitude of losses is likely in later years. Under Prime Minister Modi, the government wants to eliminate open
defaecation by 2 October 2019, the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi,
by spending US$29 billion to construct 120 million toilets in rural India. 10. What are we doing? ADB’s sanitation portfolio of US$1.6 billion since
2006 is mostly focused on big centralised sewer systems. As it’s impossible to
implement large-scale sewerage systems throughout Asia and wastewater treatment
still needs increased coverage, we need to look into implementing local systems and solutions. ADB collaborates with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to increase
Faecal Sludge Management solutions in the Asia Pacific region since 2013. ADB’s
work in faecal sludge management has increased significantly since, and the
future looks promising. Today, investments in non-sewered sanitation solutions
are ongoing in Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Mongolia, Nepal, the
Philippines, and Sri Lanka. More than the nominal investment value, the
remarkable effect this effort has achieved is that it has paved the way for new
approaches to tackle sanitation problems. Unfortunately this has NOTHING to do with AFRICA. With the ANC whos object
is to STEAL everything it can lay its hands on. We as citizens need to push
back. Not pay sanitation fees and go OFF THE GRID. On World Toilet Day, we must raise awareness and inspire action to tackle
the global sanitation crisis, a topic that is often neglected and shrouded in
taboos. Today, 2.4 billion people are struggling to stay healthy, keep their
children alive and work their way to a better future – all for the want of a
toilet. Let’s change that.