World Water Day: Ale tasks FG on collaboration with experts

A developmental expert and President of the Association Of Water Well Drilling Rig Owners Practitioners (AWDROP), Michael Ale, has tasked the Federal Government on collaboration with experts in the water industry to provide safe drinking water.

Ale, the Co-founder, Global Initiative for Nigeria Development (GIND), while speaking with Newsafresh in Ado-Ekiti on the commemoration of this year’s World Water Day, said government at the local level is doing little or nothing to provide safe drinking water.

He said, “Every March 22 is marked by United Nation to celebrate water and this year’s theme is ‘Valuing water’. The world is covered by water and we have merely 3 percent as fresh water out of a total 98 percent.

“My organization is a business minded organization. We have human face in terms of Corporate Social Responsibilities (CSR). If we look at it comparatively, we have done more than government in providing safe and clean water. We are working to complement government efforts. For instance, if we don’t have boreholes in the world, what would have happened to livelihood?

”Now, we are talking about children and adults, I can say we in private sector have done more than the government. Despite the heavy cost, we are able to give safe and clean water to our clients at subsidized cost to provide safe and clean water.

“We have a situation where the Federal Government has helped the road transport owners and workers with their vehicles, also with good roads and motor parks, the market women with shops and beautiful markets, and so on. But when it comes to our industry, nothing has been done to assist practitioners.

”More so, the only program earmarked for our sector has been scrapped by some unscrupulous individuals in government. This is really bad.

”I don’t see where the government is collaborating, instead we are subsidizing to provide these facilities and provide water for the people. People don’t even want to dig well again because the cost is almost equivalent to digging borehole.

“In rural areas, we don’t have water resources and we don’t know which of the 36 state governors is ready to collaborate with us, even in the state we are in, Oyo State.”

Speaking on lack of regulation as the major challenge, he said, ”I don’t want to be sentimental about this, but I want to say unequivocally that water should be treated as a business. African Development Bank current President, Akinwunmi Adesina, during his tenure as the Minister for Agriculture in Nigeria, emphasized the business face of agriculture and a department was created where giving agriculture input for free was stopped. Same way to value water, water must be treated as business.

”We have Asejire Dam in Oyo State. What is the percentage of water coming from there for Ibadan people. Why must we depend solely on dam alone? Why drillings are not regulated? These are areas calling for concern.”

Ale maintained that livelihood is more important than environment because the latter is of no importance if there are no people, adding that the only solution to this is regulations of borehole operations in Nigeria.

Also speaking on 2030 UN’s water target goal, Ale noted that with realities on ground, Nigeria cannot reach that target, noting that after 2030’s water goal, there won’t be another goal for 15 years.

He therefore advised that for Nigeria to achieve the goals, FG must domesticate UN’s method.

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