|
|
MaximsNewsWATER

|
|
|

|
HIGH-LEVEL
NEGOTIATIONS ON A GLOBAL PLAN OF ACTION FOR WATER IN ADVANCE OF NEXT WORLD
WATER FORUM:
21/01/2009
(MaximsNews Network)
|
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 21
January 2009 --Rome - Delegates from more than 60 countries are meeting in
Rome (21-23 January 2009) to continue negotiations on a global plan of action
for adapting to global changes that affect how countries manage freshwater
resources.
The meeting is part of preparations for the 5th World Water Forum, to be held in
Istanbul, Turkey, 16-22 March 2009. The World Water Forum is the largest
international event in the field of water. The Rome gathering is the third in a
series of high-level meetings to prepare for the ministerial conference on water
that will be part of the World Water Forum.
Under threat
"Water today is under threat from a variety of sources. Human beings rely
on water to survive, yet, often people are water's worst enemy", said Ger
Bergkamp, Director-General of the World Water Council, the international
organization that stages the triennial World Water Forum.
"With population increasing and cities expanding, more pressure will be
placed on water supply", Bergkamp added. Industrial development will
require more water, and as countries look to increase their energy supply, more
water will be diverted to generate hydro-electricity. The pollution of lakes,
rivers and underground reservoirs reduces the supply of clean water. Climate
change adds another variable to the already unstable equation.
Competing for water
"Agriculture accounts for around 90 percent of the consumption of the
freshwater and is by far the biggest water user. Generally, it takes between 2
000 to 5 000 litres of water to grow enough food for one person per day,"
said Alexander Müller, FAO Assistant Director-General, Natural Resources
Management and Environment Department.
"World population will grow from around 6.5 billion today to over 9 billion
in 2050. This poses a major challenge for world agriculture: to produce more
food to feed a growing world population while using limited water resources more
efficiently. The competition for scarce water resources will increase in future,
as the demand for water from industry and private households will rise. Feeding
the world in a sustainable way, also responding to growing climate change
threats, requires new concepts and a strong political will to solve the world's
growing water problems," Müller added.
Because agriculture consumes such a large proportion of freshwater, increasing
water productivity in agriculture is likely to free significant amounts of water
for other uses. If agricultural yields can be maintained with a one percent
decline in water consumed, this would translate into a 10 percent increase in
water availability for other sectors.
Better water management
"We have to radically rethink our ideas about the relationship between
food, water and the environment if we are to deal with water scarcity and
achieve the Millennium Development Goals targets," said Pasquale Steduto,
Chief of FAO's Water Development and Management Unit and Chair of UN-Water, the
UN inter-agency mechanism fostering coordination of UN water initiatives.
"The World Water Forum, by bringing together government officials from
different sectors, civil society, private sector, consumer organizations and
universities, presents a tremendous opportunity to ensure that the international
agenda on water management reflects this new way of thinking."
Coming up with a coherent international strategy for water management is urgent.
During the recent food price crisis, many countries experienced severe droughts
that affected food production. Climate change scenarios suggest droughts will
become more frequent in many areas already coping with water scarcity. Major
river basins, including important food producing areas around the Colorado River
in the United States, the Indus River in southern Asia, the Yellow River in
China, the Jordan River in the Middle East, the Nile Delta in Africa and the
Murray Darling River in Australia, are 'closed', with no possibility of using
more water.
"The recent food crisis has caused world leaders refocus their attention on
the global food system and the issue of hunger. At this meeting we hope to
impress upon world leaders that sustainable water management is inextricably
connected to food security," Steduto said.
Plan of action
Senior officials attending the meeting in Rome are expected to conclude
negotiations on a global action plan, to be finalized and approved by the
Ministerial Conference at the World Water Forum in Istanbul.
"FAO is extremely pleased to cooperate with the World Water Council in this
process" said Steduto. "By fully integrating agriculture into the
global policy debate on water, we can address a wide range of development
issues, including food security, poverty reduction, environmental
sustainability, clean energy and rural and urban sanitation," noted Steduto.
The World Water Forum in Istanbul will provide input into other international
negotiations in the Group of Eight (G8), the UN Commission on Sustainable
Development (UNCSD) and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC).
Source: FAO
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N., MaximsNews,
MaximsNews WATER,
MaximsNewsWATER,
water,
FAO, Food
and Agriculture Organization, food
security, Global
Action Plan, Ministerial
Conference, World
Water Forum, agriculture,
irrigation, climate
change, poverty
reduction, environmental
sustainability, clean
energy, sanitation, international
development,
environment,
water news,
water
sustainability,
water resource,
water management,
global water
crisis,
sustainable
development
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 |
MaximsNews®
LLC
NEWS NETWORK FOR THE
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY |
MaximsNews Network® LLC is a Global News Network
that is read worldwide, in 201 countries and territories. It is associated with MediaChannel.org and Globalvision News Network, global news and media information services with more than 350 news affiliates in 135 countries.
Established in 1999, MaximsNews now publishes in
the six UN working languages: English, French, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and
Spanish.
SEE:
About
MaximsNews
The views expressed are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of MaximsNews®
LLC.
REACH
THE WORLD'S MOST INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE
SEE:
Advertise
with MaximsNews | MaximsNews
MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS
|
Labels: MaximsNews,
United
Nations, U.N., UN,
World Politics,
International
News, Opinion,
Diplomacy, NGO,
Think-TankNews,
People
in World News,
|
|
MaximsNews
UN
United Nations World
Politics International News
Opinion
Commentary Diplomacy
Turbo Tagger
|
MaximsNews.com
U.N. ® LLC www.MaximsNews.com
| MaximsNews@MaximsNews.com
| CONTACT
MaximsNews | Please
contact us about Republishing:
Syndication@MaximsNews.com ©Copyrights 1999 -
2008, MaximsNews® LLC. All rights
reserved.
|