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Torkil Jønch-Clausen Water Policy Adviser, DHI Group Senior Adviser, Global Water Partnership Danida Development Days 2011 Water for the future – the place for public private partnerships “Perspectives on integrated water resources management, Danish development assistance and the private sector”
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15 minutes covering: IWRM: WHY? WHAT and HOW? HISTORY and STATUS IWRM IN DANISH DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE WATER AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR
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IWRM: WHY?
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The basic need challenge: - water as a human right Water supply Sanitation
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The food challenge - a ‘real’ water problem Securing basic water needs takes 50 l/cap/day a political will problem! Securing our basic diet takes 2500 l/cap/day a water problem !
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The energy challenge - the water- energy nexus 5-8% annual growth in electricity consumption in most Asian countries Energy as a major water user Water as a major energy consumer Climate change major hydropower dams bio-fuels using up to 10-30,000 l water per l bio-fuel!
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Large cities 2005 Large cities 2015 The urban water challenge Growing - and thirsty - mega cities
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The environment challenge - ecosystems paying the price ? 50% of all freshwater species disappeared in the 20 th century Lakes disappearing (ex. Aral Sea, Lake Chad)
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The poverty challenge A sad statistic: 2/3 of people without access to clean water live un less than 2 $/day 1/3 live on less than 1$/day Water is essential to achieve the MDG’s: - on poverty, hunger, health and environment
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The climate change challenge - an added driver! MDG WATER - one of several key drivers of change! CLIMATE ECO- NOMY POPU- LATION OTHER
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Water- MDG- climate MDG/Adaptation Governance Natural resource base Water Service delivery system Empowerment Rights WATER SECURITY THROUGH IWRM
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IWRM: WHAT AND HOW?
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The Dublin-Rio principles 1992 - the underpinning of IWRM - 1.Fresh water as a finite and vulnerable resource. 2.Water development and management based on a participatory approach 3.Women playing a central part 4.Water as an economic good with an economic value in competing uses
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IWRM: the triple top/bottom line! Structure Economic Efficiency Equity Environmental Sustainability Management Instruments Assessment Information Allocation Instruments Enabling Environment Policies Legislation Institutional Framework Central - Local River Basin Public - Private Balance “water for livelihood” and “water as a resource” The three “E”s The three “pillars” of IWRM
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Horizontal integration : Managing competing uses, across sectors Water for people Water for food Water for nature Water for energy and other uses Cross-sectoral integration Enabling environment Institutions Management tools
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Vertical integration Cross-sector dialogue Stakeholder dialogue Vertical and horizontal linkages Cross-sectoral and stakeholder dialogues at all levels - from watershed to basin to the trans-boundary level
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Water demand management - and good water stewardship Managing water demand Awareness Regulations Water markets Reducing water footprints Improving water use efficiency More crop per drop 3R: Recycle – Reuse –Recharge Potential saving in the Mediterranean by 2025: 25% of total water demand (65% in agriculture)
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IWRM - the basin as the basic management unit Structure
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IWRM: the approach to adaptation for land and water IPCC 3 rd Assessment : ” it can be expected that the paradigm of IWRM will be increasingly followed around the world.. which will move water, as a resource and a habitat, into the centre of policy making. This is likely to decrease the vulnerability of freshwater systems to climate change”
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The proposed IWRM Roadmap: Preliminary concept Water governance and IWRM: A never ending cycle! - awareness, political will, capacity building => taking time!
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IWRM: HISTORY AND STATUS
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IWRM – a short history 1980’sWater = “drinking water” and sanitation 1992Rio: Agenda 21 => the IWRM concept born 2002 Rio +10: WSSD Johannesburg => all countries to develop IWRM Plans 2010 IWRM explicit in policies, laws, strategies of more than 60 countries 2012Rio +20: IWRM and Green Growth
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IWRM IN DANISH DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
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IWRM in Danish support to water At the global level Danish water footprints in Agenda 21 Influencing Dublin principles and A 21 water chapter Danish support to GWP, UNEP, World Bank, UN-Water … Fostering synergies in the global water community Support to WSSD IWRM target follow-up 58 countries in 10 sub-regions, 19 country ‘roadmaps’ The Nairobi process for adaptation to climate change The 5 Nairobi guiding principles
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IWRM in Danish support to water At the regional level Support to sub-regional IWRM processes SADC, ECOWAS etc. Support to IWRM in trans-boundary basins Nile, Mekong, Zambezi etc. At the national level Support to national IWRM plans and implementation Uganda, Burkina Faso, Zambia …
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WATER AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR
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Private sector : types of engagement Private sector as service provider Water and sanitation, utilities Hydropower and irrigation, major infrastructure Private sector in water resources management Consultancy and knowledge provision Rationale: Good business, profit CSR, water stewardship, reducing water footprints Making sense: protecting investments A crucial partner: finance, knowledge, innovation..!!
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Private sector : some issues Focus on “one E”, not the triple E’s! Economic objectives at expense of social and environmental objectives? Focus on “quick fixes” Ignoring that involving stakeholders, building political will, building ownership and capacity takes time Ignoring actual capacity constraints Impatience ! Focus on ‘big actors’ and central level Ignoring river basin an local levels Distorting “good governance” practices Need for engagement, but how..!
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Thank you! tjc@dhigroup.com
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