NEW YORK - Human waste is awash with economic and social opportunities, according to a new report by the UN’s Sanitation and Hygiene Fund (SHF) released at the UN 2023 Water Conference today.

‘From Human Waste to Prosperity: The Sanitation Economy’ reveals that sanitation economies - comprising the toilet economy, the circular sanitation economy, the smart sanitation economy - and the menstrual hygiene marketplace could unlock close to a potential USD 22 billion in economic gain, job creation, women’s empowerment and environmental protection by 2030 in Benin, Kenya, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Uganda alone.

According to estimates, achieving the 2030 SDG target 6.2 on universal access to safe, adequate and sustainable sanitation requires a 20-fold increase in rates of progress for safely managed sanitation services and a 42-fold increase for basic hygiene services. An ecosystem of sanitation and hygiene infrastructure, services and jobs, the sanitation economy marks a business response to the global sanitation and hygiene crisis.

Investment in the sanitation economy together with the menstrual hygiene marketplace which covers reusable and disposable menstrual products, the recycling and reuse of menstrual materials, and smart supply chains, offers an important pathway to accelerate progress on SDG target 6.2 and other related SDGs on health, education, gender equity, economic growth and climate resilience.

“Coming after almost 50 years, the UN 2023 Water Conference marks a watershed moment for the WASH sector and we at the SHF believe that it could propel a significant breakthrough in how sanitation, hygiene and menstrual health have been viewed and invested in so far. Tapping into the ‘dirty’ side of water as sanitation and hygiene have been called, we can generate not only access to basic human rights and services for those in need but significant economic growth and opportunities for communities, especially women and girls.

In a world in which an estimated 1 in 4 menstruators are unable to manage their period safely, we can build a thriving marketplace which offers all those who menstruate access, affordability and most importantly agency to choose, use and dispose their menstrual hygiene products of choice,” said Dominic O’Neill, Executive Director, SHF.

The estimated current total value of the menstrual hygiene marketplace is expected to reach US$ 3 billion in the five countries assessed once universal access has been achieved. More broadly, it is estimated that with the sanitation economy approaches, the cost of sanitation provision can be transformed from a cost of US$ 200 per person to a net value of US$ 10 per person. Importantly, a focus on the circular sanitation economy that ensures effective collection, transport, treatment and reuse of human waste can also deliver important results on climate action. Globally, faecal sludge (and poorly managed wastewater) is responsible for 2-6% of methane emissions and 1-3% of nitrous oxide emissions.

“There is growing consensus on the need for a transformative approach to development finance and the sanitation economy approach is a model that can deliver impacts not just for people, especially women and girls, but also for the planet and investments. Products like a toilet pan, hand tap or reusable menstrual products could be the pathway to better health, well-being and livelihoods for many; it’s time to turn the tap on investments in them and the economies they underpin,” added O’Neill.

Working globally and with an initial footprint in Africa, SHF is mobilizing resources to develop and fund a pipeline of investable propositions to create sustainable sanitation economies and menstrual hygiene marketplaces in low and lower middle income countries. Present at the UN 2023 Water Conference to advocate for greater investment in sanitation economies through the Water Action Agenda, SHF will be co-hosting an event on the topic with the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the World Toilet Organization (WTO) in Conference Room 5 on Friday 24 March 11:00 a.m. ET.

Panelists include the Honourable Minister Engineer Suleiman H. Adamu, Minister of Water Resources of the Republic of Nigeria; Mr Jingdong Hua, Former Vice-President and Treasurer of the World Bank and of the International Finance Corporation, SHF Board member; Mr Jack Sim, Founder of the World Toilet Organisation and World Toilet Day; Ms Kitty van der Heijden, Director General for International Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Netherlands; Ms Ana Carolina Argolo Nascimento de Castro, Director of Brazil’s National Water and Sanitation Agency (ANA) and; Ms. Nazneen Damji, Chief a.i. of the Governance and Participation Section, UN Women.

 

 

 

 

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