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Three-quarters of Somali families found lacking water as drought looms

by Nita Bhalla and Mohammed Omer | @nitabhalla | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 22 March 2021 14:06 GMT

FILE PHOTO: An internally displaced woman from a drought-hit area carries a jerrycan of water as she walks towards her shelter at a makeshift settlement area in Dollow, Somalia, April 4, 2017. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra

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Increasingly erratic weather - from recurring droughts to floods - is becoming commonplace in East African countries such as Somalia, Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia

* Almost three in four families do not have clean water

* Crops failing, cattle dying due to shortages, charity says

* Somali official urges rich nations to cut carbon emissions

By Nita Bhalla and Mohammed Omer

NAIROBI/GAROWE, Somalia, March 22 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Nearly three-quarters of Somali families lack safe drinking water as drought looms across the country and depletes wells, raising the risk of hunger as crops fail and livestock dies, UK-based charity Save the Children said on Monday.

Climate change is taking a heavy toll across eastern Africa, and increasingly erratic weather - from recurring droughts to floods - is becoming commonplace in countries such as Somalia, Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia.

In a survey of more than 630 households in eight of Somalia's 18 regions, the charity said a dearth of seasonal rain last year had left 70% of families without clean water.

Mohamud Mohamed Hassan, the organisation's country director, said children were bearing the brunt of "a growing climate crisis" - warning that the water shortages could lead to increased hunger, displacement and exploitation.

"Save the Children is seeing wells drying up, families rationing their water, crops and pastures dying, and people moving away from their communities in search of water and food for their livestock," Hassan said in a statement.

"In some locations, the price of water has skyrocketed. Those who cannot afford to pay for water are forced to use unsafe water sources, thereby putting children at risk of deadly diseases such as cholera."

The survey's results were published on World Water Day, which aims to raise awareness of the global water crisis, and the need for nations to move towards an internationally agreed goal of providing water and sanitation for all by 2030.

FACTBOX-World's water woes spring from undervaluing its 'blue gold'

CUT EMISSIONS, UP CLIMATE FUNDS

About 2.2 billion people - one in three - globally do not have access to safe water, according to the United Nations.

By 2050, up to 5.7 billion people could be living in areas where water is scarce for at least one month a year due to a growing population, increasing demands of agriculture and industry, and the worsening impacts of climate change, it says.

Impoverished Somalia is highly vulnerable to extreme weather. In the past year, the country of 15 million people has already been hit by floods and its most powerful ever cyclone.

Abdullahi Ahmed, national technical consultant at the nation's Environmental Directorate, said climate change was also taking a huge economic toll.

A 2018 government assessment found losses and damage caused by drought totalled more than $3 billion - equivalent to 50% of Somalia's GDP, he said, urging rich nations to do more to cut their carbon emissions.

"Several climate disasters have already taken place in the country. The consequences of these effects are food insecurity, hunger, malnutrition, displacement and loss of lives," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an emailed response.

"Somalia has contributed a very small percentage of the global emissions, yet unfortunately, Somalia is among the worst 20 nations affected by the severe impacts of climate change."

International development groups are also calling on wealthy nations to step up investment in climate finance to help countries like Somalia adapt, such as funding water systems including boreholes that can provide reliable local supplies.

According to WaterAid, only 5% of total global climate funding is spent on helping poor countries adapt to their changing climate, and that money is not targeted at the most vulnerable communities.

"Unless communities have access to a reliable source of water, people's health will suffer," Tim Wainwright, WaterAid's chief executive, said in a statement.

"They'll be burdened with spending more and more time searching for water, taking away the opportunity to create a better life and escape poverty," he said.

Related stories:

'I'm looking for God to help': Somalia's most powerful storm leaves traders, herders devastated

Climate change linked to African locust invasion 

Somalia races to save livelihoods as new locust generation spawns

(Reporting by Nita Bhalla @nitabhalla and Mohammed Omer; Editing by Helen Popper. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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