Stockholm, Aug 17 (DPA) India's Bindeshwar Pathak, the founder of Sulabh sanitation movement, will receive the 2009 Stockholm Water Prize, as delegates from over 130 countries gathered here Monday for the annual World Water Week conference.
Keynote speakers included Swedish International Development Cooperation Minister Gunilla Carlsson and South African Deputy Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs Rejoice Mabudafhasi, who both touched on the linkage between climate and development issues.
Pathak used his lecture to urge delegates to act. 'Only talking about the problem will not solve the problem.' Later this week Pathak is to accept the $150,000 prize.
He is credited with improving sanitation across India and converting the waste into energy.
Pathak is credited with developing a simple twin pit, pour-flush toilet system used in more than 1.2 million residences and buildings. It has since been distributed to countries in both Asia and Africa.
Like other speakers, Patahk discussed the need for cooperation between countries on water issues, noting how his native India had 16 percent of the global population, four percent of the world's water and three percent of the land.
Mabudafhasi later reminded reporters how women in rural areas and girls often have to walk long distances to collect water. This task can disrupt girls' schooling and has other impacts on women's ability to participate in society.