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From: WWF
Published August 19, 2008 08:26 AM
World needs global water agreement now
WWF Director-General James Leape today called on governments to support
the entry into force of the 1997 UN Watercourses Convention—an international
agreement which could play a key role in water security for about 40% of the
world's population.
Launching the booklet Everything you need to know about the UN
Watercourses Convention at World Water Week in Stockholm, Mr Leape
said, "This essential treaty has languished in limbo for more than a decade,
largely due to the failure of nations in not signing up to what they long
ago agreed to.
More than 100 states voted for the Convention on the Law of the
Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses in 1997, with only
China, Turkey and Burundi voting against. Since then only 16 nations out of
a required 35 to bring it into force have joined the treaty despite a
succession of calls for its implementation from key international bodies, UN
agencies, and even governments.
Mr Leape praised the efforts of Ghana, The Netherlands, and the Economic
Community of West Africa States in standing up for the convention and urging
their neighbors to take action.
“Because most of the world’s transboundary river basins lack adequate legal
protection, the world needs a global framework for sustainably managing and
preventing disputes over those resources and this is the only such framework
available in the timescale to help us deal with a growing water crisis,”¯ Mr
Leape said,
If brought into force and widely implemented by the nations sharing the
water of river systems and associated lakes and aquifers the convention
could greatly contribute to ending the chaos of water grabbing and to
improving the health of 263 rivers and lakes in 145 countries. Rivers that
cross or form borders, most suffering from non-existent or inadequate
regulation, drain half the earth's surface, provide water to 40 percent of
the human population and generate about 60 percent of global freshwater
flow.
Flavia Loures, who heads the WWF initiative to have the convention brought
into force, said "Now, when there are increasing water shortages and water
quality issues world-wide, and climate change will only make things worse,
is when we need to have an effective and widely accepted agreement of global
scope covering shared freshwater resources”¯.
A key benefit of the UN Watercourses Convention will be its procedures for
consultation and benefit-sharing on large infrastructure projects and for
peacefully settling water disputes between countries.
"This is about national and global security as much as human and water
security," Mr Leape said. "The experts are telling us that rivalries over
water will be a significant source of future conflict as indeed, they
already are.
"An essential element of the response to our current water crisis and the
looming escalation of that crisis is on the shelf and ready to go. All we
need is for the world's nations to match their actions on water to their
rhetoric."
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