Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene July-August 2015 Vol. 10 No.4 | Page 11

NEWS in brief experts to smell and describe odour intensities, with descriptions including “vomit” and “barnyard,” against odorant concentration. “Nobody quantitatively linked intensity and concentration measured before,” Starkenmann says. This combination of chemical and sensory analysis is the study’s most innovative aspect, according to George Preti, a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania and the Monell Chemical Senses Centre in the US. “This greatly increases the probability of understanding the chemical composition of the malodour bouquet,” he said. The team found that Indian toilets had a lot of sulphur gas. “There’s more anaerobic fermentation that causes a lot of this eggy, sewage odour,” Starkenmann explained. The improved ventilation in the African pit latrines reduced this problem. Global Highlights annually the sanitation and hygiene budget lines “to reach a minimum of 0.5% GDP by 2020”. This is contained in a declaration issued by the ministers at the closure of AfricaSan4 in Ngor, Dakar, Senegal. The declaration acknowledges that while 133 million people living in Africa have gained access to sanitation since 1990, over 500 million still lack access and many more still defecate in the open. The Ministers’ commitments address a wide range of issues that must be tackled to improve sanitation and hygiene including: political leadership; financing; monitoring and evaluation; equity and inclusion; research and learning among others. The Ministers also call upon all stakeholders to play different roles to achieve the vision. The commitments contained in the Ngor Declaration 2015, replace the eThekwini commitments of 2008. The study results are helpful because improving the smell of toilets means more people will use them, said Clara Rudholm, a programme officer for the Global Sanitation Fund at the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council in Switzerland. Lydia Mirembe is the Communication and knowlegde management advisor, IRC Uganda But beyond the business-led toilet model Firmenich envisions, Rudholm said community-led models could also be effective. “People enabled to build and use well-ventilated toilets are likely to keep them clean, well-maintained and odour-free,” she added. Exposing the value of waste through urban development This news item was originally published on the IRC website, 29 May 2015 This post first appeared on SciDev.Net. African Ministers renew commitment to sanitation and hygiene By Lydia Mirembe Ján Ilavský (right), Sunu M. Soemarno (far right), and other visitors hear about the Fukuoka landfill method during a programme tour for the 25th session of UN-Habitat’s Governing Council The AfricaSan4 conference (25-27 May) ended with a declaration defining the vision and aspirations of the African Ministers in charge of hygiene and sanitation. African ministers in charge of sanitation and hygiene under their umbrella body African Ministerial Council on Water (AMCOW) have expressed their commitment to achieve universal access to adequate and sustainable sanitation and hygiene services and eliminate open defecation by 2030. They reinforce their committment by promising to increase Nairobi, Kenya As part of a comprehensive tour of UNHabitat programmes in Kenya, Ján Ilavský, President of the 25th session of UN-Habitat’s Governing Council, and Sunu M. Soemarno, Chairman of the Committee of Permanent Representatives, visited Kenya’s first semi-aerobic landfill in Kang’oki, Kiambu County during the Governing Council meeting earlier this year. During the visit, they also met with William Kabogo, Governor of the County of Kiambu, on the status of sustainable and economic development within the County of Kiambu. Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • July - August 2015 9