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SECRETARY CLINTON: Thank you very, very much, Maria, and I am delighted to be able to join
you for this meeting. Sometimes when you look at the busy schedule of the UN General Assembly,
you see only the headlines, the problems, the hotspots, the conflicts, the challenges,
and all of those are certainly important. But you also have to look at the trend lines,
and you’re here because you know that water is an issue that cuts across borders and affects
every human being. You know better than any that water management
and resource issues are both a moral imperative and a strategic investment, and I want to
thank everyone who has participated in this, because whether you’re talking about economic
development or improving global health, whether you focus on promoting food security or building
peace or coping with climate change or providing sustainable energy, access to clean water
is critical. And the problems that are already coming to the forefront around the world will
only intensify as populations grow and demands increase.
Now, this year alone in the United States, we’ve experienced extreme drought conditions
in some parts of our country and devastating floods in others. We are well aware that Europe,
Asia, and Africa have all experienced similar challenges. Now, you’ve already heard about
our Intelligence Community Assessment on Global Water Security, and I hope that you will have
if you didn’t today have a chance to really study it, because water scarcity could have
profound implications for security. The report found that dwindling supplies and poor management
of water resources will certainly affect millions of people as food and crops grow scarcer and
access to water more difficult to obtain. In fact, in some places, the water tables
are already more depleted than we thought and wells are drying up.
In other parts of the world, water resources could become a real source of manipulation
and increasing instability. And we want to get ahead of what those potential problems
might be. We can’t wait until we already have a crisis. So I think water should be
a priority in every nation’s foreign policy and domestic agenda, and we need to work together
to advance cooperation on shared waters. Here at the UN, we have to work in our continuing
efforts to ensure no child dies of a water-related disease and certainly no war is ever fought
over water.
Now, to give just one example of what we need to be doing, the United States is working
with the UN Development Program and other partners from not only governments but the
business world, civil society, philanthropy, and academia on the shared waters partnership
to help build really robust institutions. And also, as part of that, we will be looking
for ways to establish online platforms to facilitate cooperation and to facilitate regional
dialogues. All of us are here today because we understand the urgency. It is for me a
critical issue that we have to start asking ourselves what are we going to do today and
tomorrow to address.
Many of you are already working on developing practical solutions. How can we better connect
and share what you’ve already learned? How can we build more effective institutions for
managing shared water resources? And how do we bring safe drinking water and sanitation
to all the world’s people? I’m sure it’s been said many times already today, but there
are countries where there are more cell phones than toilets. How do we look for every possible
creative, innovative approach to safe drinking water and sanitation? I’m excited, because
I think this is now getting the attention that it so richly deserves. I thank Under
Secretary Otero for leading our efforts inside the United States Government, and I look forward
to hearing the results of your deliberations and working with you to try to implement your
very practical solutions. Thank you all. (Applause.)