Strong Messages As 2007 World Water Week Ends
8/19/2007
It is Time to Do Better on Global Poverty, Sanitation, Water
Scarcity and Climate Change
Stockholm, Sweden — A 2007 World Water Week in Stockholm that began with
a call for governments around the world to better manage their existing
water resources concluded Friday morning with the 2,500 participants from
140 countries saying, collectively that progress is being made, but in the
face of global poverty, critical lack of sanitation, water scarcity and
climate change, we all need to do much better. 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.
Studies, reports and initiatives and announcements to be made during the
week include:
- 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 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 provide 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.
SOURCE: The World Water Week
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