A woman opens a collapsing pit latrine at Gatei Health centre, Nyeri on
April 3, 2016. East Africa is grappling with the problem of open
defecation. PHOTO | JOSEPH KANYI | NATION
The majority of East Africans still suffer inadequate sanitation
facilities, and use open pit latrines that often smell, attract flies
and can be unsafe for children.
The region is also
grappling with the problem of open defecation and “flying toilets” in
densely populated slums in major cities.
In a study by
Lixil Corporation, Oxford Economics and Water Aid, lack of proper
sanitation costs the global economy a staggering over $220 billion with
the mortality rate accounting for $122.8 billion, medical treatment
$56.6 billion, lost productivity $16.5 billion and time spent finding a
toilet $27 billion.
Of the total $220 billion cost,
Africa accounted for about $19.3 billion, of which about 75 per cent
came from deaths related to sanitation.
Lixil, a
Japanese manufacturer of building materials and housing equipment,
contends there is an urgent need to improve sanitation in East Africa in
order to reduce deaths and illnesses associated with poor hygiene.
In
Kenya alone, the problem costs the economy over $320 million annually,
with nearly 20,000 Kenyans, including more than 17,000 children under
the age of five, dying every year from diarrhoeal diseases directly
attributed to poor water, sanitation and hygiene.
Safe toilet
Now Lixil has
opened a plant in Kenya that will manufacture a product dubbed SATO
(safe toilet), which will offer poor households in rural and peri-urban
areas the benefit of safe, smell-free, affordable and durable toilet
solutions and improving dignity, health and the environment.
The
safe toilet, which is already being used by over six million people in
Africa and Asia, is a prefabricated product designed to automatically
seal open pit latrines with a self-sealing trap doors that close quickly
and seal tightly to eliminate odour and passage of disease carrying
insects.
Lixil is targeting access to improved
sanitation and hygiene for a 100 million people globally with the safe
toilet that is already being sold in 14 countries at between $5 and $10 a
piece.
Research has shown that high cost is among the
top factors preventing households from benefiting from improved
sanitation in a region where over 40 per cent of the population live
below the poverty line.
“Producing SATO toilets
locally keeps costs down and enables broader distribution,” said Jason
Cardosi, SATO Africa general manager.
Lixil reckons
that addressing sanitation problems is critical considering two-thirds
of the world’s population is projected to be living in cities by 2030,
many in informal settlements with limited water and sanitation
facilities.
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