The right to water
The human right to water was asserted by the United Nations in 2002 in their
General Comment No.15. This clarified the obligation for governments to extend
access to sufficient, affordable, accessible and safe water supplies and to safe
sanitation services as their resources allow.
This means that while governments are not required to secure immediate access
to water for all their population, they are required to progressively seek to
improve access year on year.
WaterAid lobbied to establish the right to water and is now working to help
the poorest people achieve that right in the following ways:
WaterAid, in conjunction with Rights and Humanity and the Fresh Water Action
Network (FAN) have developed a website to act as an information source on the
right to water.
www.righttowater.org.uk
The site aims to:
Provide information on relevant policy commitments and explain the concepts
and theories of human rights law with respect to the right to water.
Disseminate General Comment No 15 adopted by the UN Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights confirming and interpreting the right to water.
Promote the use of the right to water as a tool for community empowerment,
advocacy and legal redress.
Read
more about the right to water in our publications

A safe water supply close to home is a basic human right.
Credit: WaterAid / Marco Betti
WaterAid's Citizens' Action programs empower communities to find out what their entitlements to water services and hold water service providers to account for inadequate services.
Read more about Citizens' Action
WaterAid, Rights and Humanity and the Fresh Water Action Network have developed a website exploring issues surrounding the right to water in detail.
Visit Right to water website