Nearly nearly 1.7 million Europeans symbolically brought their voices to Brussels on Monday to say “water is a human right,” not a commodity to be privatized.
The action comes as a result the first European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI)—a tactic through which EU citizens can propose legislation if they show backing from at least one million EU citizens, coming from at least 7 out of the 28 member states. There is also a minimum number of signatories per member state required.
The campaign behind this first ECI, the Right2water, has three main goals. “Implement the human right to water, do not liberalize water services in the EU and do more to ensure people across the world have access to clean and safe water,” stated Jan Willem Goudriaan, vice-president of the ECI Right2Water.
“We want the EU to change their mind-set from its current focus on competition and completely market-based approach, to a public service attitude and a rights-based approach. Water is a limited natural resource and a public good fundamental for life and health. It is a ‘natural’ monopoly and must be kept out of internal market rules,” the campaign adds on its website.
This rights-based approach is far from controversial, Gabriella Zanzanaini, Director of European Affairs for the watchdog group Food & Water Europe, told Common Dreams in an email. “Time and time again through referendums and petitions, citizens have made it evident that they do not want water to be treated as a commodity and that it should be a public service,” she stated.
Representatives of Right2Water, which has the backing of the European Anti Poverty Network, European Public Health Alliance and the European Trade Union Confederation, presented their proposal to Commission Vice-President Šefčovič and senior Commission officials, and had a public hearing in the European Parliament.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT