The
date, theme and location for the 2008 event was also announced: “Progress and
Prospects on Water: For a Clean and Healthy World,” to be held
August 17-23, 2008
, at the
Stockholm
International Fairs centre.
Anders
Berntell, Executive Director of the host Stockholm International Water Institute
(SIWI), while assessing at the end of the event the efforts to improve the world
water situation, said: “There is progress, but there is still far too little
action and now when climate change is upon us and we need to adapt even faster.
None of us can say we are prepared but it’s clear that poor people will again
suffer the most. Changes in water availability are what will hit us first with
an altered climate; rising sea levels and floods in certain regions but drought
in others. The pressure on infrastructure and physical planning will be
considerable. Ecosystem management will be fundamental. The question remains
relevant: Why is water still not high enough on the political agenda?”
Climate,
sanitation and hygiene, water management, ecosystems and biodiversity,
technology and business issues were prominent programme focal points throughout
the week. SIWI itself called for governments around the world to better manage
how they use their existing water resources, taking necessary and sometimes
painful measures to decrease losses in water delivery infrastructure and
irrigation, to cut subsidies to agriculture, and to put in place realistic
water-pricing measures – all before attempting to boost water supplies. The
World Water Week, which included 140 co-convening organisations, witnessed the
launch of a number of new and groundbreaking studies, reports and initiatives
designed to improve a global situation where billions of people are without
sustainable access to safe drinking water or suffering ill health due to poor
sanitation, where bioenergy demands are diverting water from food production,
and where global climate change is affecting the overall water balance.
Some
of the studies, reports and initiatives and announcements made during the week
included:
·
UN-HABITAT, the United Nations agency working with human settlements, launched
the 1) Global Water Operators’ Partnership and the 2) Water and Sanitation
Trust Fund.
·
SIWI and the Swedish Water House launched four new reports: Making
Anti-Corruption Approaches Work for the Poor; On the Verge of a New Water
Scarcity; Agriculture, Water, and Ecosystems; and Planning for Drinking Water
and Sanitation in Peri-Urban Areas.
·
The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) launched the
Global Water Tool.
·
The Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) and SIWI announced
the opening of the nomination period for the WASH Media Award.
·
British charity WaterAid launched Global Cause and Effect: How the Aid System is
Undermining the Millennium Development Goals.
·
The Global Water Partnership announced 1) Letitia A. Obeng as the new Chair of
GWP and 2) released the policy brief Climate Change Adaptation and Water
Management, and 3) the book Sustainable Sanitation in Eastern and Central Europe
·
The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, Sida, released a
position paper named Natural Resource Tenure.
·
The Asian Development Bank released Dignity, Disease and Dollars:
Asia
’s Urgent Sanitation Challenge.
·
The Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR)
South Africa
presented new technology for removing heavy metals and subsequent radioactivity
from mines.
·
The Co-operative Programme on Water and Climate (CPWC) released Water, Climate,
Risk and Adaptation, and presented its new resource centre on water, climate,
risk, adaptation and mitigation.
·
The World Water Council (WWC), the General Directorate State Hydraulic Works for
Turkey (DSI) and the Secretariat of the 5th World Water Forum released the First
Announcement of the 5th Forum, to be held in 2009.
·
Borealis and Bororouge became a Founder of the Stockholm Water Prize.
·
The International Institute for Environment and Development issued two briefing
papers that summarise new research on payments for watershed services in
developing nations.
·
The International Foundation for Science released Strengthening Capacity for
Water Resources Research in Countries with Vulnerable Scientific Infrastructure.
·
The Government of Singapore and the World Health Organisation (WHO) signed a new
partnership agreement to jointly promote the safe management of drinking water
globally.
·
The Water Environment Federation and the International Water Association
introduced the revamped World Water Monitoring Day initiative and provided kits
to Stockholm Junior Water Prize participants.
·
The International Water & Film Events Istanbul 2009 issued the official call
for entries.
·
The Water Integrity Network launched new website to fight corruption in the
water sector.
The closing session
on August 17 looked eastward to China, where the upcoming 2008 Beijing Olympics
and China’s increasing emergence as the world largest developing economy were
in focus. Chinese Vice Minister of Water Resources, Zhou Ying, presenting
China
’s contributions to the conference’s theme, Striving for Sustainability in a
Changing World, stating: “
China
remains the face of industrialisation. Shortage of resources is a bottleneck
for development, so we will work to harmonize resource saving, clean production,
and integrate water management into our sustainable social and economic
development.”
In the week
that preceded the closing session, a number of interesting topics were taken up
in seminars, workshops and side events. These and all other events will be
summarised in the Synthesis Report to be made available in the late Fall of
2007. Some brief highlights:
Sunday,
August 12
Finding
the Balance
Food
feeds our bodies, bioenergy heats our homes and ecosystem services sustain our
planet. The SIWI seminar Water for Food, Bio-Fuels or Ecosystems raised the
challenging question: is there enough water to maintain all three? According to
chair Jan Lundqvist, the number of people earning an annual income of $10,000
will increase from 800 million to as many as 7 billion in 2050. While the MDGs
correctly focus on the unmet needs of the world’s poor, it is the unsatisfied
wants of the upcoming generation that will have the most significant
implications on consumption patterns. “Poverty is no longer the (only)
problem,” he stated as he proposed a 9th Millennium Development Goal of a 50%
reduction in the amount of water wasted in agricultural production.
Dr.
Vaclav Smil of the
University
of
Manitoba
,
Canada
, noted that with increased quantities of food and bioenergy, “production is
no longer the problem. Its impact is the problem.” Those impacts range from
nitrogen and carbon increases to declining services from water starved
ecosystems. The experts concluded dramatic reductions in water lost during
production processes and changes in consumer behaviour are keys to ensuring
water security.
Investors
Still Only Toe-Deep in the Water
The
finance sector still seems to have cold feet when it comes to investing in the
water sector, according to Sunday’s forum Poverty Wealth and Water:
Prioritising Water Investments. The number of water funds is increasing,
however, concerns over profit generation, high risk/low return, inefficiency and
instability inhibit investors. Nevertheless, the bottom line is that in the
1990s, $280 billion was spent dealing with the aftermath of water-related
disasters that $40 billion in preventive investment could’ve helped avert.
In
order to break the bottleneck in water investment, hydro-projects on the macro
and micro scale must avoid being presented primarily as social marketing plans
and stress the financial engineering aspects. This will help prevent
investors’ “cold water fear of jumping into the pool.”
Caucusing
in the
Caucasus
The
southern Causasus region is a test case in hostile neighbours finding common
ground over shared water resources.
Armenia
,
Georgia
and
Azerbaijan
- under the auspices of ENVSEC, OSCE and NATO – have managed to set up
data-sharing and other mechanisms that could plausibly be the foundation of an
IRBM-based institutional structure for joint resource administration. This was
one of the cases covered in Sunday’s seminar OSCE and UNECE Experience in
Transboundary Water Cooperation.
The
role of the UNECE and OSCE is to promote IWRM principles among stakeholders, as
has happened between
Ukraine
and
Moldova
. This can be challenging, given the regional specific ties, which has
contributed to the erosion, pollution and eutrophication of the
Black Sea
. An NGO-led initiative kick started a paradigm shift that has increased the
depth of stakeholder involvement and set the stage for future cooperation over
more than just water.
Trigger
Happy
It
is an all too common lament among academics and civil society activists: weaning
policy makers off of entrenched, inefficient water management policies and
practices requires more than just common sense appeals to move towards more
sustainable models. In rare cases, e.g.
South Africa
or
Chile
, a seismic change in political leadership, allied in a coincidence of interests
with the old technocracy, can induce radically improved approaches to water
governance on national scales. More often than not though, triggers occur when
there is a crisis, an ideological shift, or some economic condition that
necessitates a change in policy. But does a country have to hit the wall before
it fundamentally alters it water policies? This was one of the issues raised at
the seminar entitled How to Trigger and Sustain Water Policy Change.
Sunita
Narain, the 2005 recipient of the Stockholm Water Prize, said that “resistance
gets the most change,” meaning that triggers can occur when the inertia of
poor policy seems to be insurmountable. Paraphrasing Gandhi, she proposed that
knowledge-based activists must “work the change,” the foundation of which is
knowing why one wants such a change and how best to capture the imagination of
the public and media in order to achieve it. In this way, triggers can be
created without having to wait for disaster.
Making
Knowledge Smarter
To
meet the Millennium Development Goals set for 2015, better sharing of experience
and know-how in agriculture and water management is vital. The seminar,
Addressing the MDGs Through Exchange of Knowledge and Technology, took a step
forward in developing mechanisms for international stakeholders to improve
North-South knowledge of sustainable water management practices.
World’s
Eye on Sanitation in 2008
With the upcoming
International Year of Sanitation in 2008, global attention will focus on the
critical need for improved health and hygiene. Sanitation and Hygiene:
Approaches for Sustainable Development resulted in a series of “Sustainable
Sanitation” advocacy messages for future projects. A follow-up seminar, The
Killing Fields of Sanitation, was also held.
Human
Development Needs New Course on Carbon
According
to The Human Development Report 2007, massive human development costs will
result from climate change unless we dramatically reduce carbon emissions within
the next decade. Sunday’s side event Climate Change and the Life Cycle of
Disadvantages, introduced the theme for the upcoming report set to be released
this November. Speakers discussed water as the link between climate, human
societies and ecosystems, while emphasising an immediate need for adaptation
measures. The report, they said, explains why we have less than 10 years to
change course in carbon emissions in order to avoid long term low development
traps among the world’s most vulnerable populations.
Monday,
August 13
Kicking
off the Week
The
opening session featured many luminaries from the water world. SIWI Executive
Director Anders Berntell kicked things off, followed by Swedish Prime Minister
Fredrik Reinfeldt, who exhorted those assembled to keep fighting and raise
awareness of water issues. “It’s the drop that hollows out the stone,” he
told them. Then Mikael Söderlund,
Stockholm
's Deputy Mayor, spoke about municipal water issues. UN Habitat
Under-Secretary-General Dr. Anna Tibaijuka explained how that in the immediate
post-WWII period, the UN’s founders prioritised economic and security issues
over environmental ones, but that now water and climate issues have been
elevated to the top of the agenda as well. This year’s Stockholm Water Prize
winner, Professor Perry McCarty, spoke of the advances in anaerobic processes
that can speed up the natural flushing of polluted groundwater, which normally
takes centuries or even millennia. This was followed by talks from Margaret
Catley-Carlson, Chair, Global Water Partnership, United Nations
Secretary-General’s Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation and Dr. Vaclav Smil,
Distinguished Professor,
University of Manitoba
,
Canada
. Gram Vikas Executive Director Joe Madiath gave colourful accounts of his
organization’s sanitation efforts in rural
India
, where in some villages a fine of fifty rupees are imposed on those who use the
outdoors as their toilet. Once collected, the fifty rupees are split between
community organisers and the one who catches the violator, which has spawned a
cottage industry of vigilant lookouts in treetops. The session concluded with a
talk by Dr. Monirul Mirza of Environment Canada and a lead author for the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Let's
Stop Playing Games on Climate Change
The
World Water Week high level panel discussion on Climate Change, Water and
Vulnerability inspired passionate debate over the most relevant question left on
the climate table: What do we now?
Moderated
by Mr. Adrian Finighan of CNN International, the distinguished panel featured
South African Minister of Water Affairs and Forestry H.E. Mrs. Lindiwe
Hendricks, Dr. Monirul Mirza of Environment Canada, Dr. Pavel Kabat of Earth
System Science & Climate Change Group, Mr. Colin Sabol of ITT Fluid
Technology, Professor Jörg Imberger of the University of Western Australia, and
Human Development Report Co-author Mr. Claes Johansson.
The
speakers made appeals for a shift in global attitudes, priorities and
development models, and called on governments to take climate and water issues
more seriously. “Climate risks are wavering heavily on the lives of the poor,
and those living in poverty are not able to withstand the shocks,” said Claes
Johansson. Measures to increase adaptive capacities among vulnerable
populations, coupled with deeper commitments to mitigate carbon emissions, were
put forward as immediate ways to minimise present and future devastation. Their
message was clear: we need to act now, waiting is no longer an option.
Who’ll
Store the Rain?
In
order to make the MDGs reality, new solutions can come in old packages. To this
end,
Uganda
’s Water Minister Maria Mutagamba extolled the virtues of rainwater
harvesting, a practice “as old as history itself.” As chair of Rainwater
Harvesting for Climate Change Adaptation and for Accelerating MDG
Implementation, Ms. Mutagamba presided over a panel discussion that covered,
among other things, the wide-ranging impacts of under-utilisation of rainwater.
For example, in dry areas, an average of 4-5 hours/day is spent fetching water.
Addressing this problem can be local, long-term and low-tech. It takes about a
week to construct a 10 cubic meter rainwater harvesting tank, which usually has
a life span of 20 years.
Partnering
Across the Subcontinental Divide
Bringing
women closer to the decision-making process about water practices has been one
of the key successes of the Crossing Boundaries Project in
Bangladesh
,
India
and
Nepal
. Those presenting at Crossing Boundaries, Meeting Future Challenges -
Capacity
Building
in IWRM and Gender and Water in South Asia talked about their efforts at
facilitating higher education partnerships across
South Asia
that stress “research with an impact.”
The
Fifth Dimension
Organisers
of the 5th World Water Forum to be held in
Istanbul
in 2009 solicited input from the audience at Monday’s lunchtime side event.
Expressing their intentions to make the World Water Council event more
multi-stakeholder and real world focused, they announced that there will be a
political component that encourages direct interaction between policy makers and
those working with water issues. During the question and answer period, an
attendee remarked that all too often water conferences tend to be an exercise in
preaching to the choir, and need to include those outside the water box who
might help integrate trade and labour issues into the overall debate.
Tuesday,
August 14
Aquifers
Under the Desert
There are 8
different words in Arabic to express “dying of thirst,” a telling fact in a
region where none of the shared aquifers are jointly managed. In order to strike
a balance between water availability and demand, more international attention
needs to be diverted to developing groundwater agreements among the nations of
the region. The Transboundary Groundwater Resources in the Middle East Region
seminar featured lively discussions of a part of the world where power relations
usually trump governance principles. As one panelist noted, the political
leadership of the region are prone to seek short-term results, which is usually
at odds with sustainable water resource planning. One attendee noted that the
Palestinian-Israeli Joint Water Committee was one example of coordination
between neighboring political entities. However, given the region's lack of a
widely practiced framework based on international law, weak actors in the region
will be stuck with the status quo unless they can make coalitions that allow
them greater negotiating power.
Combating
Inaction
In
the workshop "Making Governance Systems Effective," participants
explored legislative and economic solutions to water inequity. Speakers
dissected existing government structures, examining shortcomings and feasible
action plans in developing countries. Participants discussed legislative
enforcement and mitigation of corruption, especially on the transboundary level.
Speakers stressed the need for dialogue among stakeholders, with an emphasis on
economic incentives for water sustainability. Cooperation within the public and
private sector is key. "We create awareness of the benefits of
collaboration," said UNDP's Joakim Harlin, the chair of the workshop.
Speakers called for leaders to take responsibility for previous failures in
policy and embed water equity standards in the political framework.
Target
Practice
According
to the workshop International Targets and National Implementation, in order to
ensure long-term benefits and global progress towards the MDGs, national
political commitment is paramount. Leading scientists evaluated challenges and
opportunities in monitoring and implementation in nations as diverse as
Bangladesh
,
Uganda
,
Israel
and
Ukraine
.
The
day-long event focused on questions critical to our ability to move forward in
the quest to improve human health and livelihoods: How can we enhance political
will for implementation? “Political will comes from the people themselves,
taking active part and engaging decision makers,” said
Jon Lane
of the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council. Speakers and
participants energetically debated how science can be better used to translate
information into political commitment and how these commitments can bring about
tangible improvements in human development. The discourse highlighted the need
for the scientific community to improve its ability to make recommendations more
accessible to political actors.
Saving
the Slums
Nearly
one billion people live in overcrowded urban areas that lack adequate shelter,
water supply and sanitation. At Integrated Slum Upgrading: Meeting the Water and
Sanitation Needs of the Poorest of the Poor, speakers presented current work
underway to improve the conditions and planning in destitute areas throughout
Asia, Africa and the Americas. Participants packed the room to discuss ways to
engage local governments and empower communities through people’s
participation and micro-finance initiatives. In the afternoon, H.R.H.
Willem-Alexander hosted the seminar Practical Approaches to Pro-Poor Water and
Sanitation Governance that expanded on this crucial theme by devising clear
steps to better connect water and national poverty eradication policies.
European
Union Water Initiative: It Was a Very Varied Year
The
EU Water Initiative released a draft report detailing their work over the past
year. While progress was “slow and varied across regions,” presenters at the
EU Water Initiative Partners Meeting - Multistakeholder Forum Part I reiterated
their efforts’ strengths. The EUWI is based on 4 pillars: reinforcing
political will for concrete action, improving coordination, increasing
efficiency and water governance for long term sustainability.
Getting
off the Fence
Getting
beyond the basic levels of corporate social responsibility is one of the main
goals of the World Council for Sustainable Development. Their workshop Business
Working on Water – Beyond the Fenceline, engaged participants to think about
possibilities, and cited examples such as water supplies destined for mining
operations being tapped along the way in order to give communities access to
clean water.
Mexico
Wins
Stockholm
Junior Water Prize
Adriana
Alcántara Ruiz, Dalia Graciela Díaz Gómez and Carlos Hernández Mejía from
Mexico
were awarded the prestigious 2007 Stockholm Junior Water Prize in a formal
ceremony in the Stockholm City Conference Centre/Folkets Hus during the World
Water Week in
Stockholm
. The students from the Cultural Institute of Paideia in
Toluca
,
Mexico
, received the Prize from the hands of H.R.H. Crown Princess Victoria on behalf
of the Stockholm Water Foundation. They also received a USD 5,000 scholarship
and a crystal sculpture.
Wednesday,
August 15
Storm
on the Water
At
the opening session of Water and Climate Day, speakers from the IPCC presented
the findings of the latest climate simulation models and their implications for
global and regional water management. The presenters were frank on the
considerable challenges we face, stressing that water and climate issues are not
future concerns, but problems of yesterday and today. “It’s quite clear that
current water management practices are likely to be inadequate to reverse the
impacts of climate change,” Dr. Zbigniew Kundzewicz of the IPCC said. Flexible
water management that accommodates new understandings of climate change
scenarios was pushed as imperative in order for societies to successfully adapt.
In practice, this involves performing risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis
of management schemes which can both protect the vulnerable against hazards and
take advantage of new opportunities to increase water efficiency and equity. Dr.
Bryson Bates compared the successful adaptation policies implemented in
Western Australia
and the static management practices precipitating the current water crisis in
Queensland
to highlight our role in determining what the consequences of global change
will be. A classic axiom suits our modern circumstances, “Failing to Plan is
Planning to Fail.”
Sanitation
Seminar a Real Lavatory of Ideas
At
the UN-Water Seminar: Preparing a Final Action Plan for the International Year
of Sanitation 2008, Prince Willem-Alexander asserted that ”every dollar spent
on sanitation is five dollars spent on at least five other MDGs.” The
cross-cutting impact that lack of access to sanitation is indisputable: a child
dies every 15 seconds from water-borne diseases, mothers die in childbirth,
menstruating girls skip school because of poor facilities, and so on. To make
matters worse, there seems to be an aversion to open discussions of hygiene
issues in the larger water discourse. This, the seminar’s speakers agreed, is
counterproductive to say the least. The International Year of Sanitation is
meant to address the problem, and organisers are hoping that 2008 will be the
year that the stigma surrounding sanitation is overcome.
Access
to Water at any Cost
If
water doesn’t have a price, it doesn’t have value. This was according to one
of the panellists at The Global Water Challenge – A Shared Responsibility. He
cited the case of subsidised irrigation in
Mexico
and correlated it with the high levels of water loss there. Nestlé – who
convened the seminar and is one of the sponsors of World Water Week – believes
that the immense water use in the agricultural sector can become more
sustainable through economic incentives that will drive farmers to use more
efficient methods. For its activities overall, Nestlé has recently published a
comprehensive Water Management report, describing the initiatives it has taken
in its own business and indirectly in its value chain to meet the challenge.
During the seminar’s coffee break, ATTAC, an NGO working for global justice,
announced their opposition to World Water Week’s association with Nestlé.
Nestlé's representatives and World Water Week organisers responded by inviting
ATTAC to organise a seminar and constructively join the discussion.
Later
in the day another seminar, Founders Business Seminar: When Sustainable Water
Use Becomes Everybody’s Business – Linking Investors, Business Sectors and
Water Sector and Water Sector Stakeholders, grappled with the issues of
public/private collaboration. The moderator pointed out that while reaching the
MDG targets will require capital investment from the private sector, ”civil
society has strange feeding habits. NGOs tend to bite the hand that feeds
them.”
Asia
's Hydrohub Honoured
PUB
Singapore
was awarded the 2007 Stockholm Industry Award for their impressive work to
transform the urban nation into a model of smart and sustainable water
management practice. PUB, the creator of NEWater, has established a blueprint
for water industry success: sound policy, investment in technology, close
partnerships with business and community, and cost-effective policy
implementation. Using four ‘national taps:’ imported, desalinised,
rain-captured, and recycled water, the public corporation, which provide 100% of
Singapore’s water, will increase its NEWater production to 30% within the next
five years.
Burning
Issues
In
Indonesia
alone, the burning of tropical peatlands, primarily resulting from palm oil and
peat production, causes an equivalent of 8% of the annual worldwide greenhouse
gas emissions from fossil fuels. According to the Water and Climate Day side
event Clearing the Smoke in
South-East Asia
, restoring these ecosystems not only reduces greenhouse gases at a fraction of
the cost of other mitigation efforts, but also reduces poverty, improves health,
and saves biodiversity. Speaker Jane Madgewick concluded, “Restoring peatlands
is a no-brainer. This will bring results and do it quickly.”
Capable
Hands
At
the
workshop
Building
Capacity for Future Challenges, focus was placed on tapping the greatest
renewable resource we have: human talent and ingenuity. Participants discussed
ways to improve knowledge sharing and networking activities in the water sector.
Building teams with diverse talents was recommended to reduce internal
competition and improve organisations’ abilities to communicate important
messages.
Thursday,
August 16
Cities
for the Future
With
more than half the global population, over 3.2 billion people, living in urban
areas, humanity is for the first time in history truly an ‘urban species.’
According to The Royal Colloquium in Honour of H.M. King Carl XVI Gustaf of
Sweden
, Cities at Risk: A Warmer World and the Big Chill for Urban Planners, the
capacity of our now urban species to adapt to climate change will be decided
largely by how we construct and use our cities. Speakers stressed the stark
challenge ahead and the increasing vulnerability that cities face from rising
sea levels, stronger, less predictable and more frequent natural disasters.
Housing and transport that is more energy efficient were recommended as positive
improvements. The most essential steps, however, to building resilient cities
are to fortify existing infrastructure in vulnerable areas and to ensure all new
urban expansion is built in less disaster prone locations, using construction
methods that take climate uncertainties into account. As Anna Tibaijuka,
Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, explained, this profound
challenge is neither simple nor singular; and if any solution is to work for
nations in the developing world it will require great global progress on
poverty, gender and international inequity issues. Still, she encouraged
everyone to renew their commitment to urban development, “I invite all of you
to change your professions a little bit so we all become urban planners.”
Stockholm
Water Foundation Chair Peter Forssman ended the colloquium with humour and hope.
He joked, “Well, your Majesty, happy birthday. Someone asked me what kind of
gift is this? A depressing seminar about catastrophic problems we can not
solve?” Rejecting defeatist outlooks he noted recent success in conquering the
Freon emission crisis, and pointed out the water management model in
Singapore
as an inspiring example to the world. “A serious seminar creates reflection.
Reflection creates awareness. Awareness brings about change. Humanity has always
proved itself under hard conditions to develop solutions.”
Microbes
and More
Professor
Perry L. McCarty from
Stanford University
,
California
, a pioneer in the development of the understanding of biological and chemical
processes for the safe supply and treatment of water, received the 2007
Stockholm Water Prize on August 16 from the hands of H.M. King Carl XVI Gustaf
of
Sweden
. The ceremony took place at the
Stockholm
City Hall
.
All
the World’s a Stage...
Much
progress in public health has been made since the founding of the WHO, when the
reigning catchphrase was “environmental sanitation.” The seminar Progress in
Environmental Public Health tracked the progress made from the landmark 1978
Alma Atta Declaration onto the work being done today. Participants painted a
mixed but encouraging picture of the situation. They noted the paradoxical
situation where exponential progress in terms of number of actors involved in
the public health and environment sector leading to an increasingly fragmented
and complicated field. As a result, the overall effort to combat preventable
diseases, create better hygiene conditions, provide more access to safe water,
etc., all continue to face challenges. For instance, while fresh water supplies
can be extended through re-use of water for agriculture, there are consequent
risks that the soil will be contaminated by that water and adversely affect
consumers of produce coming from the polluted fields.
Unshrinking
Sanitation Capacity
There
are many factors to consider when the talk turns to getting decent sanitation
within reach of those who lack access, which is nearly half the world’s
population. The panellists participating in the seminar The Killing Fields of
Sanitation – Political Neglect touched on many of the basic capacity building
strategies. One speaker noted that the declining role of the state over the past
25 years has set the stage for the lack of capacity today. “People forget that
in the 1980s, when
Tanzania
refused to shrink its public services like sanitation, it was subject to a
donor boycott by the world, except for the Scandinavian countries.” The
upcoming International Year of Sanitation 2008 and its potential effects in
achieving MDGs was also discussed.
Heaven
Can’t Wait
According
to the Water, Ethics, Religion seminar, religion can play a key role in
furthering human development efforts. Representatives from a wide variety of
creeds and denominations from every corner of the world came together to discuss
the role that religious ethics can play in driving users, stakeholders and
policy makers to foster more sustainable water practices and help achieve the
MDGs. The panel asserted that while science tells us what can be done, religion
tells us what ought to be done. As one speaker reminded the audience, this
function of organised faith can be quite powerful: “Don’t underestimate
religions ability to mobilise and motivate authorities and social assets to get
things done.”
Breaking
the Cycle
At
the workshop Water – A Brake on Economic Development, participants discussed
ways arid and semi-arid regions can steer clear of paths that lead to vicious
cycles of water scarcity, poverty traps and environmental degradation. Case
studies from
North Africa
,
India
,
China
and the
Middle East
pointed out potential pitfalls for planning in water-scarce regions while
displaying opportunities to improve groundwater management and rainwater
harvesting practices Participants suggested that tackling the simultaneous
increases in water demand and hydrological variability requires steady sources
of investment and multi-pronged approaches to improve the socio-economic
efficiency of water use.
Setting
the Trend
Today, we lie
halfway between the pronouncement of the MDG targets in 2000 and the deadline in
2015. But where do we stand in terms of progress made towards our goals? On
Thursday, two seminars looked at trend-related monitoring and evaluation of
water supply and sanitation and integrated water resources management. The open
discussions worked to find ways to better conduct and analyse evaluation
processes.
New
Capacity Initiative
The
UN-Water Decade Programme on Capacity Development (UNW-DPC) was launched in
Bonn
,
Germany
, on 1 August and announced during the World Water Week. It is hosted by the
United Nations University and funded by the German ministries of BMZ and BMBF.
Dr. Reza Ardakanian, the founding director of this programme, says the work plan
presented in
Stockholm
will follow up on the
Johannesburg
targets and Millennium Development Goals related to water.
Voices
from the World Water Week
What
do you consider being the most pressing water global issue right now?
“Pollution
of water due to industrial urbanisation performed in an unplanned way, making
clean freshwater less accessible.”
Shaikh
Halim, VERC,
Bangladesh
“Sustainable
sanitation for all. We need to assure better governance and make advanced
technology options available to more people.”
Helmut Lehn,
Forschungszentrum
Karlsruhe
,
Germany
“Lack
of political will to make a significant change for the poorest or the poor women
and men in the world's remote ”no-go areas.”
Joke
Muylwijk, GWA,
Netherlands
Why do you attend the World Water Week?
“This
a good forum for known scientists to share experiences with young scientists as
well as getting updated evidence of water related issues.”
Alebel
Weldesillassie, IWMA,
Ethiopia
“World
Water Week is a great collective opportunity to get together with new and old
partners.”
Köeti
Sousa Serôdio,
Sida
,
Mozambique
“To
motivate students and future decision makers to care for the global environment.
It is inspiring to see so many nations with so many young people working so hard
for the same good goal.”
Camilla
Mathisen & Torill Roeggen, Working with the Norwegian Junior Team, Kastellet
Skola
“I
represent a new water company in
Kenya
. We are concerned about the usage of water resources and we are here to learn
more to make the future of the company sustainable.”
John
K. Nyumu, Nairobi Water Company,
Kenya
What is the greatest climate change challenge?
“It
will be challenging to tackle in
Africa
where people are not prepared for it technically and socially.”
Joseph
Sang, ICRAF,
Kenya
“We
have to be smart. We have to use conservation, reuse, recycling, reduction of
demand and land management. If we do that, we should be alright for the next 50
years.”
Peter
Rogers,
Harvard University
,
USA
“Change
is necessary for individual survival and global survival. If we do not change
our lifestyle, nothing will happen. We have to internalise it, especially in the
Western world.”
Björn
Guterstam, GWP,
Sweden
“We
need political commitments by the right governments to make tangible and
meaningful impacts in the right places. We cannot look at business as usual. We
must back cast — look at our goals for the future and assess tangible steps to
get there.”
Dana
Cardoo, Institute for Sustainable Futures,
Australia
How
can we raise the water issue on political agenda?
“The
first step is to get a clear political message…The reason why its difficult to
is that water is the ultimate common property resource dilemma. Nobody owns the
solution, therefore no one owns the political solution.”
Domjinic
Waughray, WEF,
Switzerland
“For
now this link to climate change is good. It’s quite concrete. People are
concerned with climate, so pointing out that linkage can help.”
Karin
Bagge, Political Advisor to European Parliament MP
“The
media should give greater attention. The organisations in water sector must
cooperate with media more to get indirect pressure to politics.”
Urooj
Amjad, BDP Water and Sanitation
Links
World
Water Week in Text and Photos: http://www.worldwaterweek.org
Press Kit: http://www.worldwaterweek.org/Downloads/WWW_2007_Press_Kit.pdf
Klimat,
vatten och miljö står alltmer i fokus. Under World Water Week (12:e -17:e
augusti) samlar Stockholm International Water Institute, SIWI världens experter
med kunskap om vatten, teknik och miljö. Stockholm blir därmed centrum för
den internationella kunskapen och forum för debatten om hur vi kan lösa världens
vatten problem.
Drygt 2 500
deltagare från hela världen, med representanter från näringsliv, myndigheter,
regeringar, internationella organisationer och forskarsamhället, samt 140
medarrangörer möts för 17:e gången i Stockholm för att diskutera hur vi
tillsammans kan skapa en hållbar utveckling med fokus på vatten, miljö och
teknik. På agendan hittar vi frågor som berör såväl den internationella världspolitiken,
som våra svenska småföretag.
Några
programpunkter:
12
augusti: Vad betyder
klimatförändringen för Östersjön och hur kan vi skydda havet?
13
augusti: Debatt: klimat, vatten och sårbarhet
16
augusti: Städer i farozonen –
kalldusch för stadsplanerare när världen blir varmare
17
augusti: Verktyg för att skydda världens
hav
Öppningsseminariet
den 13:e augusti:
Fredrik
Reinfeldt och finansborgarrådet Kristina Axén Ohlin inleder veckan och
markerar det stora politiska intresset för frågan.
Ordföranden
i FN:s klimatpanel Rajendra Pachauri talar om klimat, vatten och sårbarhet.
Mer än 70
seminarier och plenarsessioner, samt en rad andra möten genomförs under den
veckolånga konferensen på Stockholm City Conference Center. Mer information
och fullständigt presskit med experter, vinklar, aktiviteter etc finns på: http://www.worldwaterweek.org/press/index.asp
Som
journalist är du välkommen att delta utan kostnad.
Anmäl dig
genom att skicka e-post till anna.noren@siwi.org.
Du får här även hjälp med bokning av intervjuer, bakgrundsinformation,
statistik och bildmaterial.
Stockholm
spelar en nyckelroll i ”vattnet, den obekväma sanningen”.
World
Water Week 2007 står för dörren och i år är debatten hetare än någonsin.
På agendan hittar vi frågor som berör såväl den internationella världspolitiken,
som våra svenska småföretag. Talare under öppningsceremonin öppningsdagen
den 13:e augusti är bland andra Fredrik Reinfeldt, Kristina Axén Olin och ordföranden
i FN:s klimatpanel RK Pachauri.
Varför
kallas vatten för den globala uppvärmningens ”obekväma sanning”? Vad
betyder egentligen klimatförändringen för Östersjö? Klimatdebatten har
under våren accelererat och kommer under World Water Week att tillägnas en hel
dag. Ordförande i FN:s klimatpanel RK Pachauri och Fredrik Reinfeldt är två
deltagande politiska aktörer.
Är
framtidens gröna energiproduktion ett hot mot den globala vattentillgången?
Regeringar världen över stöder biobränsleföretag och deras tillväxt, men
är det verkligen bättrehållbart ? För- och nackdelar, lösningar och möjligheter
diskuteras under olika seminarier denna vecka. Pasquale Steduto ordförande vid
FN Water UnitProfessor Jan Lundqvist, SIWI, Daniel Solberg från SCA, samt
Sunita Narain Chef för CSD CSE i Indien är tre av deltagarna som väcker
debatt.
Hur
delar man på något som inte syns? Kan de gemensamma grundvattensresurserna i
mellanöstern delas rättvist? Och hur styr man i så fall detta?
Möt
de Irakiska ministrarna Nazaneen Mohammed Wusu och Tahsin Kader Al, samt den
tidigare jordbruksministern i Palestina Mr Walid Abed Rabboh.
Med
Stockholm International Water Institute som värd intar World Water Week
Stockholm City Conference Center den 12:e till den 17:e augusti. Från hela världen
samlas drygt 2 500 deltagare. Representanter från näringsliv, myndigheter,
regeringar, internationella organisationer och forskarsamhället, samt 140
medarrangörer möts nu för 17:e gången i Stockholm för att diskutera hur vi
kan lösa världens vattenproblem. Super också!
Som
journalist är du välkommen att delta utan kostnad.
Anmäl
dig genom att skicka ett e-post till dave.trouba@siwi.org
eller faxa i blanketten som finns på http://www.worldwaterweek.org/press/index.asp
eller ladda ned ett fullständigt presskit med experter, vinklar, aktiviteter
osv..
För
mer information, kontakta:
David
Trouba, Communications Director, SIWI
+46
(0)8-522 139 89, dave.trouba@siwi.org
Stephanie
Blenckner, Communications Manager, SIWI
+46
(0)8-522 139 86, stephanie.blenckner@siwi.org
Anna
Norén, Media Relations, SIWI
+46
(0)70-338 79 51, anna.noren@siwi.org
eller
SIWI – Independent
and Leading-Edge Water Competence for Future-Oriented Action
The Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) is a policy institute that
contributes to international efforts to find solutions to the world's escalating
water crisis. SIWI advocates future-oriented, knowledge-integrated water views
in decision making, nationally and internationally, that lead to sustainable use
of the world’s water resources and sustainable development of societies.SIWI
– Självständig och ledande vattenkompetens för framtidsorienterad handling
SIWI - Stockholm International Water Institute - är ett policyinstitut som
bidrar till det internationella arbetet med att bekämpa världens snabbt ökande
vattenproblem. SIWI verkar för att en framtidsorienterad och kunskapsintegrerad
vattensyn skall tillämpas vid beslutsfattande, nationellt och internationellt,
för en hållbar samhällsutveckling och ett hållbart nyttjande av jordens
vattenresurser.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~