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Investing in sanitation to help the world reach the SDGs

A cross-disciplinary team at 911 has linked the need for safe sanitation to all 17 SDGs, demonstrating the far-reaching benefits of investing in sanitation infrastructure that go beyond better health.

SDG Case study G6.2 Parikh sanitation

8 October 2020

The UN General Assembly’s agenda for 2030 buildson the principle of “leaving no one behind”and lays out17interconnectedSustainable Development Goals(SDGs), alongwith targets to achieve them. The Goals includeSDG6:toensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all.

“More thanhalf the world’s population lacks access tosafely managed sanitation,and in 2017approximatelytwobillionpeoplewere stillliving without even the mostbasic sanitation,”explainsDrPriti Parikh, Director oftheUCL Centre for Engineering for International Development.“Thisincreasesmorbidity rates, healthcare costs andreducesproductivity.”

To ensure everything possible is done to address this lack of basic human rights,DrParikhis drawing attention to the importance ofsanitation infrastructure and managementacrossall theotherSDGs.

She is working with colleagues acrossfive UCL faculties,from disciplinesincludingengineering, urban design and planning, health, social science,economics,policy and law. The team hasconductedan evidence-based reviewof the academic literature to identifylinks–actions, synergies and trade-offs–between sanitation and each of the SDG targets.

Thereviewhas identified synergies between sanitation and two thirds(130)of the 169 Targets and trade-offs for a thirdof them, acrossall17 SDGs,demonstratingthe far-reaching benefits that can be unlocked from investment in sanitation, which extend beyond health.

In addition to theclearconnections between improved sanitation and reductions in infant and maternal mortality, the researchhashighlighted links with SDG5: Gender Equality and SDG16:Peace, Justiceand Strong Institutions. “There is evidence forthe need for the development of female-friendly toilets, especially where women and girls are exposed to harassment,”DrParikh explains.

She hopes the team’sapproachwillprovidevitalevidencefor policymakers and practitionersto supportnewcross-disciplinaryinterventionstodeliverimprovedsanitation for all by 2030.“It also offers a framework for others to use that enables the analysis of interconnected global challenges,”she adds.

The team hasapplied this approach for thewater,sanitation and hygienesector in Brazil,andWater Aid hascommissionedthemto develop a policy brief and toolkit to influencepolicymakersin Sub-Saharan Africa.