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PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, February 23, 2009 (ENS) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today presented a $2 million grant to Philadelphia to help the city address the risk of intentional contamination of its drinking water by diseases, pests, or poisonous agents.

The federal agency says it could make a total of $9.5 million available to the city for this project, contingent upon EPA’s budget over the next three years.

The grant will fund the Philadelphia Water Department to pilot monitoring and surveillance components of an early warning system.

“Philadelphia was selected for this pilot because of its existing water quality protection programs and its commitment to put in place the complex systems needed to increase water security,” said William Wisniewski, the U.S. EPA’s acting administrator for the mid-Atlantic region.

Clean drinking water is an essential resource. (Photo credit unknown)


The project, called the Water Security Initiative, was begun during the Bush administration with the first the first contamination warning system pilot established in 2006 in partnership with the City of Cincinnati at the Greater Cincinnati Water Works.

Similar water security pilot grants were awarded by EPA to New York City, San Francisco, and Dallas. A total of $39 million was divided among the four cities, which are required to contribute a 20 percent cost share to fund the project in their city.

The contamination warning system to be developed and evaluated by Philadelphia involves online real-time drinking water monitoring, public health surveillance, laboratory analysis capabilities, enhanced security monitoring and consumer complaint surveillance. The warning system will be designed for long-term operation.

Coordination is critical to effectively detect or respond to contamination incidents.

To ensure effective communication and response, Philadelphia’s Water Department will collaborate with many city and governmental agencies in this pilot including the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, the Office of Emergency Management and Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection.

The 2,000 men and women who work for the Philadelphia Water Department deliver reliable, high-quality drinking water to more than 1.6 million consumers who live or work in the city of Philadelphia.

This Water Security Initiative developed in Philadelphia and the other pilot cities is expected to serve as a model for all the nation’s drinking water utilities.

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By Elina Karakulova

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan, June 11, 2008 (ENS) – A shortage of clean drinking water in Kyrgyzstan has been tackled with multimillion dollar funding in recent years, but critics say the results have at best been mixed.

Much of the blame has been directed at the international donors who paid for a major program to expand and repair water networks in the countryside. But an expert working on the Clean Water program said that most of the management problems have been fixed, and the big obstacle now is people’s reluctance to pay a small amount towards upkeep, so their supply system is liable to break down.

The government’s hygiene and disease department says at least 600,000 people out of a total population of five million have no access to clean drinking water, leading to a high incidence of diseases such as typhus and other gastric illnesses. Unofficial estimates put the figure much higher at close to half the population, overwhelmingly in rural areas where nine out of 10 villagers do not have access to clean, properly treated water.

“The drinking water supply is satisfactory only in Bishkek,” said Ularbek Mateev, an expert on water and energy issues. “Outside the capital and in remote villages, people drink water right from the aryks.”


This Western traveler filters water from a
Kyrgyz aryk before drinking. (Photo
by Robert Thompson courtesy
14 Degrees)

“Aryks” are traditional channels used for irrigation in Central Asia.

Provision has deteriorated in the 17 years since the Soviet Union broke up due to a lack of investment by Kyrgyzstan’s cash-strapped government. In places where a mains water supply exists, the infrastructure has often deteriorated to an alarming extent, and there are also many areas that were never connected up in the first place.

For example, people in Karakol, a town in northeastern Kyrgyzstan, have running water but cannot use it until they have allowed the clay and sand to settle and then boiled the water. In the southern town of Mailuusuu, people without a mains supply are at risk from subsoil water contaminated by radioactive waste from defunct uranium mines.

Paradoxically, while arid, low-lying Central Asian states like Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan face a perennial shortage of water, mountainous Kyrgyzstan has, in theory at least, an inexhaustible supply, with massive glaciers and countless rivers.

In 2001, the Kyrgyz government, in conjunction with foreign donors, launched two big projects to improve access to clean water with the common title Taza Suu, or Clean Water. The Asian Development Bank, ADB, was the major funder of one of these projects, providing US$36 million of the US$45 million cost, to improve rural water infrastructure in four regions of Kyrgyzstan. The World Bank and Britain’s Department for International Development provided US$31 million for the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Project, covering the remaining three regions.

After some delay, both projects are due to end by December 31, 2008.

Both segments of the Taza Suu program have had to lower their expectations, and the ADB-run project in particular has faced criticism from a local pressure group for the way it was run. Officials at the bank say significant concerns have already been addressed and other teething problems are being dealt with along the way.

Although the initial plan was to supply about 1,000 villages with clean water under the two projects, this has been scaled back to half that number. According to Nurmamat Mulakeldiev, who heads the water supply department at the Kyrgyz agriculture ministry, this is because the rising cost of fuel and construction materials means the donor funding no longer stretches as far.

Mulakeldiev’s department says just under a third of the approximately 1,700 villages in need of clean water have now been provided for, but there are about 1,200 left. Some of the remaining work will be covered by a second phase of both projects for which donors have allocated about US$30 million.

“Villages where sanitation is particularly bad and there is typhoid fever and other diseases caused by low-quality water will take part in the second tranche. They will be given priority,” said Mulakeldiev.


Boys play at the water pump that provides
a village with clean drinking water in
Jalalabad province. (Photo by Magnus
Björk courtesy UN Volunteers)

The ADB-funded project covering Chui region in the north as well as the whole of the south – Osh, Jalalabad and Batken – has come in for fierce criticism from a nongovernmental organizations led by the group Taza Tabigat, or Clean Nature.

Taza Tabigat monitored the way the project was implemented and says it found a string of blunders as well as outright abuses.

“Many villagers in the settlements covered by the project had to collect rainwater and carry water in buckets,” said Taza Tabigat’s head Anara Dautalieva. “Poor-standard, obsolete chlorination plants and toxic asbestos pipes forbidden by the international donors’ documentation were used within the project.”

In addition, she said, villagers were unaware of the nature of the project funding – while the bulk of it was covered by a loan taken out by central government, five percent of the costs had to be found by the local community that benefited from works in their area.

“When we told people how much their villages had to pay, they were surprised they had to pay for water of this quality,” said Dautalieva.

Dauletalieva says pressure from her group led the ADB to agree to conduct an investigation into allegations of fraud and corruption in the water project, and to restructure the financing to ensure the work was completed, and where necessary, re-do work that had already been done.

The ADB has not confirmed that an investigation is planned. Its Kyrgyzstan country director Lan Wu has said the bank is to spend an extra US$4 million sorting out problems.

Cholpon Mambetova, an project implementation officer with the ADB’s Community-Based Infrastructure Services project, accepted that some of the installation of water infrastructure had been poorly executed and monitoring of the work had been inadequate. She attributed this to management issues in past years, but says these have been addressed.

She referred to the criminal cases launched against local contractors for Taza Suu following the ousting of President Askar Akaev in 2005. No senior government official has been prosecuted.

“The old team [in the agriculture ministry] performed poorly in that there were cases which prosecutors are now looking at, involving financial irregularity and allegations of corruption. The problem is that no one’s been punished – that’s our flawed judicial system – but all the facts were uncovered and the individuals concerned were identified, if not punished,” she said.

“All these errors and miscalculations occurred under the previous team. But there is a new team that’s now in its second year of work and is cooperating with us to try to resolve problems where these have arisen.”

Overall, said Mambetova, the project has been a success. “Fortunately, it’s only in a small number of villages that the money wasn’t used as it should have been, and we are now correcting the situation in these sub-projects,” she said. “In most villages, the project has been very successful – there is water, residents are satisfied.”


Water is drawn from a pump in this Kyrgyz
village and carried to its destination
by donkey. (Photo by Lambro)

Persuading rural communities to pay for the upkeep of the water network was a real headache, she said.

“We come along and repair the system and hand it over, but people are unaccustomed to paying for it, so they’re unwilling to do so and don’t pay. Two years later, the system breaks down again and they blame the ADB and the government. People refuse to understand that repairs have got to be paid for – this isn’t Soviet times, when everything was laid on for free.”

Mambetova argued that this failure by villages to maintain networks installed with ADB funding several years ago was often the real reason why problems arose and people are now complaining about the quality of work done under the Taza Suu project.

She pointed out that the five soms a month – around 14 US cents per person – that villagers are being asked to pay for maintenance is hardly exorbitant. “A bottle of vodka costs 40 soms, and male head of households often take that kind of money and drink it every day,” she said.

It is crucial to get communities to think about looking after their own water systems. “The question of public participation, whether people are ready to take responsibility for maintaining these systems is a very serious one,” she said.

The government official overseeing the implementation of the project, Mulakeldiev, took a similar line, saying that water supply problems have been identified in only nine of the 500 villages that came under the Taza Suu project, and most of these problems were caused by people’s refusal to pay for the upkeep.

“Any system is going to break down if it isn’t repaired,” he said.

{This article originally appeared in “Reporting Central Asia,” produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting [www.iwpr.net]. Journalist Gulnara Mambetalieva contributed to this report.}

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By Azeez Mahmood

SULAIMANIYAH, Kurdistan, Iraq, May 5, 2008 (ENS) – A rash of patients hospitalized with diarrhea and vomiting in northern Iraq has raised fears of a cholera outbreak across the region.

In April, the main hospital in Sulaimaniyah received an average of 25 patients per day with such symptoms – which are very similar to those associated with cholera.

While no cases of the disease have been confirmed, officials are worried.

“We have serious fears of a cholera outbreak,” said Ziryan Osman, Kurdistan Regional Government, KRG, health minister.

According to statistics from Sulaimaniyah general hospital, around 400 patients were admitted with diarrhea and vomiting in April – a big leap from the 260 cases in March.


Cholera patient receives treatment in a
Sulaimaniyah hospital. (Photo
courtesy Iraq Today)

Cholera is a potentially deadly waterborne illness that causes severe diarrhea and dehydration. Children and the elderly are particularly vulnerable to infection.

An outbreak in the region last year led to 2,000 infections and 24 deaths. Hardest hit was the northern city of Sulaimaniyah, where 14 people died.

Health officials said a lack of clean drinking water and rising temperatures in the region could spark a similar epidemic this year. The former coupled with poor sanitation was to blame for last year’s outbreak, which began in the province of Kirkuk and spread throughout Iraqi Kurdistan as well as Baghdad.

“People have a great deal of difficulty getting hold of clean drinking water in Sulaimaniyah,” said Sherko Abdullah, manager of the Sulaimaniyah health department.

Abdullah noted that areas on the outskirts of the city often rely on wells in which cholera – particularly in warm climates – can fester.

The poor infrastructure in the region causes endless frustration for health workers, who treat patients only to have them fall ill again due to contaminated water supplies.

“We cannot continue treating people and have them leave hospital and get sick again,” said Muhammad Omer Muhammad, director of a teaching hospital in Sulaimaniyah.

“Protection is much more important than a cure.”

Late in March, the KRG sought to begin countering a possible outbreak of cholera by banning the sale of fresh greens, such as lettuce, in Kurdistan’s markets. Osman said the government believes that they may be a potential source of the disease.

The region’s ministry of health has also launched a media campaign to educate people on the risks of cholera and encourage them to boil water.

The KRG has also given Sulaimaniyah emergency funds to deal with a potential outbreak and the World Health Organization has been contacted to provide medical support, said Osman.


Women and girls get drinking water from
a pump installed by the KRG.
Khalabag, Iraq. August 2007
(Photo courtesy Leadership
Council for Human Rights)

Jutiyar Nuri, deputy governor of Sulaimaniyah province, said the KRG allocated 25 billion Iraqi dinars (US$20 million) to Sulaimaniyah to address the cholera concerns and to help ease drought conditions.

The drought, which began in the spring, has restricted the supply of clean water, which is already sparse because of the outdated water supply system, according to Abdullah.

While Abdullah said Sulaimaniyah has the drugs to treat cholera, he did not say how many patients local hospitals could cope with in the event of another outbreak. Health officials have also set up special medical teams to both assist patients with diarrhea and monitor cases, he added.

Sulaimaniyah officials, including the governor of the province and town mayor, have also formed a committee to provide clean water, said Abdullah.

“The government has to provide basic services,” he said.

Awni Muhammad, 25, a student at a local seminary, was admitted to a Sulaimaniyah hospital last week after suffering severe diarrhea and vomiting. Three of his friends who, like him, have rooms at the college dormitory were hospitalized with similar symptoms.

“The water we use for drinking is really dirty,” said Muhammad. “We told the municipality about our water problems, but they haven’t responded to us.”

Sabiha Majid, a 45-year-old housewife in Sulaimaniyah, said she boils water before using it because the supply is unclean. She is concerned there will be a cholera outbreak in her area.

“If someone is infected with the disease, the government will be responsible,” she said.

{”This article originally appeared in Iraqi Crisis Report, produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, www.iwpr.net“}

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CHICAGO, Illinois, March 28, 2008 (ENS) – To mark World Water Day, celebrated on March 22 each year, hundreds of Chicagoland area restaurants participated in the week-long UNICEF Tap Project. The program was started last year to bring attention to the urgent need for clean drinking water and to help supply parts of the world where clean, safe water is a rarity.

During the week that began March 16, nearly 200 city and suburban restaurants and bars invited patrons to donate $1 for tap water usually enjoyed for free. For every dollar raised, a child will have clean drinking water for 40 days.

“Lake Michigan is one of the greatest sources fresh water on the planet. Unlike other parts of the world where clean, safe water is a rare commodity, here in Chicago and throughout Illinois, we are privileged to have access to safe water every day,” said Illinois EPA Director Doug Scott.

“Some of the best things we can do for future generations are to further protect and restore the country’s fresh waterways, continue to make sure the water flowing through our rivers and lakes and into our taps is clean and safe, and continue to urge people to become educated about the scarcity of water through projects like the Chicago Tap Project,” said Scott.

According to a study by the National Resources Defense Council, Chicago enjoys some of the best tap water on Earth.

Some of Chicago’s most notable chefs – including Rick Tramonto, Carrie Nahabedian, Bruce Sherman, Sarah Stegner, George Bumbaris and Paul Virant – and their restaurants lent their support to make Chicago’s Tap Project a success.

“Restaurants are called on weekly to participate in charitable events and the sizeable list of Tap Project participants once again demonstrates the restaurant industry’s tradition of giving back,” said Sheila O’Grady, president of the Illinois Restaurant Association, IRA.

“The IRA supports the mission of UNICEF’s Tap Project with Copperblue, Hackney’s Printers’ Row and Va Pensiero as just a few of our member restaurants involved in this important humanitarian project,” O’Grady said.


Tap water is poured at a New York
restaurant during the 2007 inaugural
Tap Project. (Photo courtesy
Tap Project)

The Tap Project was created as part of “Esquire” magazine’s December 2006 ‘Best & Brightest’ issue, to raise awareness about a lack of safe drinking water worldwide. The project raised $100,000 in partnership with the US Fund for UNICEF in 2007. The goal is to raise $1 million this year.

Last year, over 300 New York City restaurants, along with thousands of their customers and individual contributors helped to make the inaugural Tap Project a huge success.

This year, it went national. From Dallas, Texas, to Seattle, Washington, more than 2,200 restaurants took part.

More than one billion people lack access to safe drinking water sources and more than 5,000 children die each day due to dehydration and other water-related illnesses, according to United Nations figures.

“Every year, unsafe water and lack of basic sanitation contribute to the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million children under the age of five,” said UNICEF Executive Director Ann Veneman the Tap Project celebration March 20 in New York.

“Increasing access to clean and safe water will not only save young lives, it will also help break the vicious circle of poverty,” said Veneman, a former U.S. secretary of agriculture.

“Here in Illinois,” said Scott, “we are fortunate to have an adequate supply of safe drinking water in to meet the needs of our population, and when more than 11 million Illinois residents turn on the tap, they can be assured their water meets the federal health standards.”

The most recent annual Compliance Report for the more than 6,000 public water supplies in the state showed that 99.9 percent of the population served by these systems received water that met all acute standards set by the federal government.

More than 1,700 of the largest community water systems are subject to extensive monitoring and reporting requirements under the oversight of the Illinois EPA for a variety of potential contaminants.

Illinois EPA will oversee additional federal requirements over the next few years, including new limits on disinfection byproducts and other potential contaminants in source water, which can either be from lakes or rivers, or from groundwater wells.

In addition, although there are no applicable federal standards, Illinois recently expanded monitoring for pharmaceuticals in Illinois waterways after trace amounts were found in sampling done in other states by the Associated Press. Previous sampling done by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2002 also found trace pharmaceuticals in rivers and streams across the country.

Illinois EPA has implemented a recent pilot project with local governments to collect more unused medications for safe disposal.

Illinois citizens can access data on their own community water system online by going to the Illinois EPA website at: www.epa.state.il.us and clicking on the “Environmental Facts Online” button on the right side of the home page.

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