building climate resilience through water security dr ania grobicki executive secretary, gwp 27...
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Building climate resilience through water security
Dr Ania Grobicki
Executive Secretary, GWP
27 September 2011
VISION – a water secure world• Enough water for all – for society, for economic
development, and for ecosystems• Reducing risks of drought, floods, landslides, water-
borne diseases – all the negative aspects of water• Improved quality of life for the most vulnerable,
especially women and children• Through an integrated approach – holistic, all-
encompassing
MISSION – To support the sustainable development and management of water resources at all levels
• 13 Regional Water Partnerships (RWPs)
• 79 Country Water Partnerships (CWPs)
• 2,482 institutional Partners in 158 countries
• Grown 5-fold since 2004
A growing international network since 1996
GWP: Network, Partnership and InterGovernmental Organization
“A partnership is not the sum of its parts, it is the product of the parts' interaction.”
Four Strategic Goals
• Promote water as a key part of sustainable national development [operational]
• Address critical development challenges [advocacy]
• Reinforce knowledge sharing and communication [knowledge]
• Build a more effective network [partnering]
GWP visionWater security
A key contributor to sustainable socio-economic
well-being and national development
Goal 3Reinforce knowledge sharing and
communicationsRaising awareness, creating and
disseminating knowledge, and building capacity
Goal 2Address critical
development challengesDevelop and advocate
solutions to help governments take better decisions to
improve resilience
Goal 4Build a more effective network
Government, civil society and the private sector strengthen the
partnership to improve governance and sustainable funding
Goal 1Promote water as a key part of
sustainable national developmentGovernments make water
resources management a top priority and invest in its
development
GWP Strategy :• 4 Interconnected goals• A theory of change
• IWRM is the means to an end, an approach, a set of tools
• Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) is a process which promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land and related resources in order to maximise economic and social welfare in an equitable manner, without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems and the environment
Building Water Security through the IWRM approach
Water for
People
Water for
Food
Water for
Nature
Water for
other uses
Cross-sectoral integration
• Enabling environment
• Institutional roles
• Management instruments
Integration of sectoral interests is the keyCoordination, Integration (vertical/ horizontal, decentralisation, stakeholder dialogue and involvement
Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM)
54 tools
+ archive of national IWRM plans
54 Tools
283 Case Studies
Summing up GWP – An innovative action network
Knowledge base Policy base
Action network
Partnership at all levels + a network on the ground
The second step in the evolution of GWP : A partnership supported by an IGO (2002)
Water on the international agendaWater on the international agenda
2002 : WSSD, Johannesburg : Countries undertook to develop and implementIWRM and water efficiency plans 2012 : Rio + 20 : the water-food-energy nexus????
Water for Development – taking Zambia’s IWRM plan forward( World Bank 2009 Country Water Resource Assistance Strategy )
GWP – a unique international organization
• Unique – an intergovernmental organization (IGO) linked to a global action network
• GWPO : established by the government of Sweden in 2002 together with 10 other governments and international bodies (Sponsoring Partners) - complementary to the UN system, working closely with UN-Water and key UN agencies and organizations
• GWP Network : strong governance system combined with regional autonomy
• Global Steering Committee • Global Technical Committee and regional Technical Committees • Global Secretariat based in Stockholm, linked to 13 Regional
Secretariats world-wide
Common vision and mission :
Building water security world-wide
through integrated water resources management
Innovative structure:• Works at all levels in a non-hierarchical way• Promotes inter-regional learning and knowledge-sharing• Supports joint initiatives – the art of partnership!• The multiplier effect
Dimensions of Partnership :
Interdisciplinary / Intersectoral / Govt – business – civil society
Some lessons from 15 years of GWP:
Overall structure after 15 years :
- 18% government
- 12% private sector
- 30% NGOs
- 30% academic and research
- 10% other (eg. media)
(With important variations
from region to region,
and country to country )
2011 : 15 years of GWP (nearly 2,500 institutional Partners and growing!)
Water Scarcity in the World (2025 scenario)
absolute or physical water scarcity
“economic” water scarcity: water development can meet increased demand
Ethiopia: Rainfall, GDP and Agricultural GDP
-80
-60
-40
-20
0
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rainfall variation around the mean
GDP growth
Ag GDP growth
Ethiopia: Rainfall, GDP and Agric. GDP
World Bank
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-40
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GDP growth
Ag GDP growth
Ethiopia: Rainfall, GDP and Agric. GDP
-80
-60
-40
-20
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-25
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rainfall variation around the mean
GDP growth
Ag GDP growth
Ethiopia: Rainfall, GDP and Agric. GDP
World Bank
Run off variation (1960-90 /2070-90)
Implications of climate change More climatic extremesImplications of climate change :More climatic extremes
Disaster Risk Reduction
Disaster Risk ReductionFood SecurityFood Security
Water Security
Water Security
GWP operational strategy for increasing water and food securitythrough integrated land and water management (Goal 2)
Better climate information
GWP´s role :- Reaching out to the agriculture community and the disaster management community - Linking water security with these agendas at national level, regional level, global level- Advocating that better water management is essential for food security and building climate resilience (a ”no regrets” strategy)
10 years of the Associated Programme on Flood Management
• Established in 2001 to promote the concept of Integrated Flood Management (IFM)
• Guidelines and tools developed
• 2009 : launch of the IFM HelpDesk as a demand-driven mechanism to support countries in flood risk management
• 36 Support Base Partners provide active knowledge base and backstopping
• 2011 : 10 years of APFM !
• Celebration in Japan this week at ICHARM
Objective of the proposed Programme :To provide policy and management guidance through the globally coordinated generation of scientific information, sharing knowledge and best practices for drought risk management.
2011 : WACDEP launched (8 countries, 4 transboundary river basins in Africa starting up)
"In the face of climate change, partnerships such as those launched in the Water, Climate and Development Programme with Global Water Partnership represent a good first step."Hon. Edna Molewa, Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs, South Africa, and President of AMCOW, at the 3rd Africa Water Week
What can GWP offer the UIP?• ”Building on what exists”: nearly 2,500 instituional Partners,
working together at various levels : local, national, regional• The GWP ToolBox which needs more climate-related tools! • Through the APFM – structured work on flood risk
management (country support through CWPs)• Through the proposed IDMP – structured work on drought
risk management (country support through CWPs)• Through WACDEP – structured work on building climate
resilience for development in Africa
From users to stakeholders to Partners in development!
Thank you !
A growing international network since 1996