*My favorite quote of the day: *

 “I just know that I am dedicated to work for the wellbeing of the people. I
love and care for my staff. I respect and love anyone who is suffering... If
you have strong commitment and dedication, the impossible will be possible.”
*Mr. Ek Sonn Chan, Director General, PPenh Water Authority.
*



--- On *Thu, 7/1/10, [email protected] <[email protected]>* wrote:




FYI.
==========

Publication : 7203 -FTCMA
Source : FAC - Factiva Select
Jun 30 2010
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

It has become a truism, buttressed by the hard realities of economic
performance, that the 21st century will belong to Asia. But there is a big
problem to overcome first, and it is not the flashpoints in North Korea, the
Taiwan Straits and Kashmir. It is the region's dangerous pace of population
growth, and the health, environmental and security problems caused by
urbanisation on a scale unique in human history.

The United Nations is forecasting that the world's population will rise by
more than 40 per cent to 9.3bn by 2050, with the proportion living in cities
increasing to 70 per cent from slightly more than 50 per cent today. But the
impact will be concentrated in Asia, where two-thirds of the world's
population lives, and where rapid economic growth is accelerating the
natural process of urbanisation. While Europe is dealing with the problems
of ageing, Asia (excluding Japan) will be trying to cope with a rush to the
cities estimated at nearly 140,000 people a day.

How well it succeeds will have a huge impact on whether this really does
turn out to be the Asian century. So far, the signs are not good. About 550m
people are living in slums and squatter settlements in the region, according
to Anna Tibaijuka, head of Habitat, the UN agency responsible for the built
environment. That is about 55 per cent of the global total, and it stems
directly from a headlong rush for development that has largely ignored the
consequences of growth.

The physical manifestations of the dash for gross domestic product are
obvious over much of the continent. In Mumbai, shanty towns breed resentment
among street dwellers starving next to the luxury apartment blocks of the
rich. In Hong Kong and Shenzhen, air pollution clogs the lungs of
billionaires and their immigrant maids alike. In Kuala Lumpur, cars belch
fumes in barely moving traffic jams because no government has yet built a
metro system.

Without substantial change, all this will get worse. The 2bn or so extra
people who will move to Asia's cities by mid-century will double or triple
demand for health services, transport, energy, housing, sanitation, food and
water. All these services will have to be delivered in the right place at
the right time and in the right way, often by governments unable to cope
with existing demand. To make things worse, most of the new urbanites will
end up in informal settlements of fewer than 500,000 people, which fragments
demand and makes it harder to deliver services efficiently.

The worst of these crises is already upon us. At least nine countries,
including India and China, are officially regarded as "water stressed"
because they have access to less than 1,700 cubic metres per person per
year. Arjun Thapan, the Asian Development Bank's special adviser on water
and infrastructure, says the gap between supply and demand will reach 40 per
cent by 2030, as population growth and rising prosperity trigger greater
demand from industry and agriculture. Climate change is likely to make the
shortage even worse. India, for example, gets much of its water from a short
monsoon season. If rain falls more heavily than expected, or in different
places, much of it may run off uncollected.

*There are some signs that Asia is waking up to these problems. *Governments
are beginning to discuss them at events such as the twin conferences on
world cities and water shortages taking place in Singapore this week. Some
have adopted the novel approach of treating water as an economic resource,
rather than a public good. Australia has cut its total water use to 30 per
cent of a decade ago, in part by giving farmers title to their water. That
means they can sell any surplus to those who need it, rather than allowing
it to go to waste. *In the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, the state-owned
water utility has connected every building in the city to a new distribution
grid, and is making a profit from supplies. Seepage is down to 6 per cent,
compared with 50 per cent or more in some Asian cities. Residents get a
reliable supply of clean, safe water, and are at least $18 a month better
off because they no longer have to buy supplies from private vendors.* In
the richest countries, desalination and waste water treatment plants can
also help.

What is really needed, though, is a new approach to growth. Noeleen Heyzer,
head of the UN's economic and social commission for Asia and the Pacific,
says the impact of trying to maintain the existing growth pattern over the
next 15 years would be environmentally and socially devastating. Governments
in Asia, she says, "simply do not have the luxury of growing first and
cleaning up later".

If this is to be Asia's century governments will have to transform economic
and urban planning, delivering huge savings in areas such as energy and
water use. Can it be done? Possibly. But don't count on it. Good intentions,
hard work and even adequate funding are not enough. A huge international
effort to eradicate slums over the past decade moved 227m people out of
poverty, according to the UN. But the actual number of slum dwellers rose by
more than 50m. Such is the lure of the city, even if the reward is no job
and a shack on a hillside with no water and no electricity.

The writer is the FT's Asia regional correspondent
================

Click on this link to read the latest World Bank Newsletter about PPenh
Water Authority:

http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTCAMBODIA/newsletters/22633488/Cambodia-newsletter-june-2010.pdf

My favorite quote of the day:

 *“I just know that I am dedicated to work for the wellbeing of the people.
I love and care for my staff. I respect and love anyone who is suffering...
If you have strong commitment and dedication, the impossible will be
possible.” Mr. Ek Sonn Chan, Director General, PPenh Water Authority.*









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