Global Civil Society & the UN Sustainable Development Goals

Goal 6: Ensure access to water and sanitation for all

Clean Water & Sanitation


Access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene is the most basic human need for health and well-being. Billions of people will lack access to these basic services in 2030 unless progress quadruples. Demand for water is rising owing to rapid population growth, urbanization and increasing water needs from agriculture, industry, and energy sectors.

The demand for water has outpaced population growth, and half the world’s population is already experiencing severe water scarcity at least one month a year. Water scarcity is projected to increase with the rise of global temperatures as a result of climate change.

Investments in infrastructure and sanitation facilities; protection and restoration of water- related ecosystems; and hygiene education are among the steps necessary to ensure universal access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030, and improving water-use efficiency is one key to reducing water stress.

There has been positive progress. Between 2015 and 2022, the proportion of the world’s population with access to safely managed drinking water increased from 69 per cent to 73 per cent.

Name Acronym Founded City HQ Country/Territory HQ Type I Type II

World Emergency Relief

WER 1985 San Dimas CA USA G

World Energy & Meteorology Council

WEMC 2015 Norwich UK C

World EOD Foundation

Watford UK F f

World Evangelical Alliance Sustainability Center

WEA Sustainability Center 2018 Bonn Germany G

World Farmers' Organisation

WFO 2011 Rome Italy C

World Federation of Engineering Organizations

WFEO 1968 Paris France A y

World Federation of Scientific Workers

WFSW 1946 Mont-Saint-Aignan France C

World Federation of United Nations Associations

WFUNA 1946 New York NY USA E

World Food Programme

WFP 1961 Rome Italy F g

World for World Organization

WFWO 2001 Rome Italy G

World Geospatial Industry Council

WGIC 2018 The Hague Netherlands C t

World Green Infrastructure Network

WGIN 2008 Toronto ON Canada F

World Health Innovation Summit

WHIS Carlisle UK J

World Health Organization

WHO 1946 Geneva Switzerland B g

World Hydrological Cycle Observing System

WHYCOS 1993 Geneva Switzerland F g

World Information Transfer

WIT 1986 New York NY USA F

World Meteorological Organization

WMO 1947 Geneva Switzerland B g

World Mountain People Association

WMPA 2001 Paris France C

World Neighbors

WN 1951 Oklahoma City OK USA G v

World Organization of the Scout Movement

WOSM 1907 Kuala Lumpur Malaysia B

World Overview of Conservation Approaches and Technologies

WOCAT 1992 Bern Switzerland K

World Plumbing Council

WPC 1990 B

World Sailing

1907 London UK B y

World Shiology Forum

WSF 2017 Beijing China J

world stainless association

worldstainless 1995 Brussels Belgium F y

World Sustainable Hospitality Alliance

1992 London UK F

World Vision International

WVI 1950 London UK B

World Water Assessment Programme

WWAP Paris France E g

World Water Council

WWC 1996 Marseille France C y

World Water Institute

AAI Pune India G j

World Wide Fund for Nature

WWF 1961 Gland Switzerland F f

World Wind Energy Association

WWEA 2001 Bonn Germany C yt

World Youth Parliament for Water

WYPW 1998 Montréal QC Canada E

WorldFish

1975 Bayan Lepas Malaysia E

WorldLoop

2011 Brussels Belgium G

WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures

SPS agreement 1993 T g

YOU Stiftung - Bildung für Kinder in Not

YOU Foundation 1992 Düsseldorf Germany G f

Zero Emissions Platform

ZEP 2005 Brussels Belgium F

Zero Emissions Research Initiatives

ZERI 1994 Kamakura Japan E f

Zero Waste International Alliance

ZWIA 2003 J

Zero Waste MENA

ZW MENA 2013 Cambridge UK J

ZOA

1973 Apeldoorn Netherlands G

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