USAID - U.S. Agency for International Development

09/24/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/24/2024 17:27

Administrator Samantha Power at the Clinton Global Initiative

ADMINISTRATOR SAMANTHA POWER: Thank you so much. And, President Clinton, just the good that you have done in your life as President, before you were president at CGI [Clinton Global Initiative], just thank you so much. Thank you, truly.

So, I have been working for three decades in the international domain, seeking ways to improve and save lives. And, honestly, never in my career have I seen such a compelling, low-cost opportunity to make such a massive impact on a major global killer.

The scale of lead poisoning around the world is actually mind boggling. Right now, in low- and middle-income countries, half of children have elevated blood lead levels - lead that slows their brain development, harms their bodies, and can even kill them. Imagine: one in two kids.

The damage that lead is causing to children's brains is actually estimated to account for 20 percent of the education gap between high- and low-income countries. Every year, lead poisoning is estimated to cost the global economy a trillion dollars, and it kills at least 1.5 million people, as you just heard.

But, none of this has to happen. This problem is solvable.

Decades ago, we banned leaded gasoline, long the biggest source of lead exposure here in the United States. And then, we worked with countries across the planet to phase out lead from gas, which continues to save over a million lives every year.

Of course, in high income countries, we didn't stop with gasoline. We worked to remove lead from consumer products and to clean up industrial operations that leach lead into the environment. But, for those sources, we didn't replicate the playbook in other countries, so kids there simply continue to be poisoned.

Well, it is time to change that - and, partner countries abroad have started leading the way.

Countries like Bangladesh and Malawi, for instance, have launched campaigns that eliminated lead from spices and paint for a total cost of just a few million dollars or less.

In just the eight months since we began a concerted push to galvanize awareness and support for this global issue, six countries have committed to banning lead in paint. They are showing us that stopping lead pollution at its source is both achievable and it is affordable.

USAID, UNICEF, and Open Philanthropy are announcing a Clinton Global Initiative Commitment to Action to launch the Partnership for a Lead Free Future - a global coalition to end childhood lead poisoning in developing countries once and for all.

Up to now, as you heard, just $15 million a year in donor capital was supporting this effort. Well, today, on behalf of the Partnership, we are delighted to commit $150 million to get the lead out. This is ten times the previous annual funding levels. This is remarkable, but it is just the start.

We need you all to help generate more resources and more awareness that gets governments and companies to act. So we hope you will join us and come together to help put an end to one of the great injustices of our time.

Thank you so much.