1. Future Outlook Community of Water, Food & Energy for the Human Wellbeing WANA Water Scarcity Policy Brief Workshop22-24th Feb. 2011 Amman, Jordan Walid Saleh, Regional Coordinator, United Nations University, Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH)
2. Water and Human Security Water scarcity is closely linked to food, energy and health security, making better water management a key stepping stone for poverty reduction and economic growth; In the WANA region, economic & population growth, put an added pressure on the water, food, and energy requirements; The lack of investments in the infrastructure to secure these resources has negative impact on the economic growth in the region.
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4. Strategic Foresight Group session redefines water as an opportunity for socio-economic development instead of a source of potential conflict.
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6. Increasing Water Scarcity Threat of Waterborne Illness Growth & Demand Rising Cost of Energy &Rising Demand New Stringent Regulations Massive Infrastructure Needs WANA – Unprecedented Challenges
7. Water Food & Energy InterlinkWater security, food security and energy security are chronic impediments to economic growth and social stability
8. The “water-food-energy” nexus: System Implications A rapidly rising global population and growing prosperity are putting unsustainable pressures on resources; Demand for water, food and energy is expected to rise by 30-50% in the next two decades; While economic disparities incentivize short-term responses in production and consumption that undermine long-term sustainability. Shortages could cause social and political instability, geopolitical conflict and irreparable environmental damage. Any strategy that focuses on one part of the water-food-energy nexus without considering its interconnections risks serious unintended consequences
9. Water, Food & Energy Interlink in WANA A large sum of the potable water in the region is produced from desalination plants, commonly coupled with electricity plants driven by natural gas; Future population growth and development in the region will place increasing demands on limited water resources. Efforts to strengthen water policies and to increase water supplies will lead to a further increase in food production & energy requirements. The interlinkage of food, energy and water production in the region gives rise to ongoing environmental issues. These include, among others, brine pollution from the desalination industry; salination of aquifers, with impacts on agricultural production; and oil spills and tanker waste which threaten the marine ecology and security of water intakes for desalination plants.
10. Water, Food & Energy Interlink in WANA Governance failures in terms of managing shared resources – such as trans-boundary water and energy sources and food trade agreements – create tensions that can lead to conflict; Economic disparity also often exacerbates this nexus of risks as governments and consumers seek short-term, unsustainable solutions to economic hardship such as growing high-value, water-intensive export crops in water-deprived regions. It is at the local level that most opportunities can be found for improving resource efficiency and managing trade-offs between energy, water and food production. However, at the global and regional levels there are few initiatives to raise awareness, share leading practices and motivate consumers in an integrated approach.
11. ... is needed to Grow Food, Both Needed to generate ENERGY ... is needed to process food & generate WATER Water, Food & Energy Nexus Integrated and multi-stakeholder environment resource management
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13. The key challenge is to incorporate the complex interconnections of this nexus of risks into response strategies that are integrated and take into account the many relevant stakeholders;
14. Few governments are developing energy policy with a goal of not only enabling economic growth and reducing carbon emissions, but also ensuring water efficiency;
15. The nature of this nexus, however, means pursuing multiple goals will become a necessity;
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17. Regionally-focused infrastructure development Multi-stakeholder coordination on regional infrastructure investment could significantly enhance resilience with regard to food, water and energy security. For example, by investing in regional electricity grids, Gulf Cooperation Council countries increased the reliability of their power supply. Experience shows that countries with adequate levels of infrastructure, coupled with institutions which ensure that the scarcity value of water is reflected, can be extraordinarily adaptive.
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19. Prices are kept artificially low by government subsidies or other regulation in many countries, thereby increasing demand.
20. However, even if they were allowed to rise through market mechanisms, prices would not account for many of the negative externalities created by water, food and energy consumption.
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22. However raising the price of water has significant and negative social impacts in many regions;
23. To account for these, market mechanisms must be managed progressively so as not to endanger social stability by disadvantaging poor consumers;
24. Thehuman cost of higher resource prices should be recognized by stakeholders and solved with careful planning;
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26. Community-level empowerment and implementation Experts argued that policies which aim to manage food, energy or water resources are in many cases well-designed; However, many of the barriers to sustainable resource use relate to implementation; As an example, lack of sanitary facilities impacts water security through the contamination of local water sources; However it may not be enough simply to build sanitation facilities without also addressing social norms on open defecation; To ensure that such facilities are used requires implementing cultural shifts as well infrastructure investment.; Overcoming such barriers means engaging, empowering and incentivizing local actors at the community level to ensure that those actually using core resources are also the guardians of their sustainable consumption. (Does this implies the Hima approach for sustainable development?
27. Technological and financial innovation for managing the nexus Further research and investment in transformative technologies and risk management tools that address the nexus as a whole are needed. Ensuring that such tools are locally appropriate and broadly adopted is key to their success. Many efficiency improvements require new operational management models and access to information. Innovations such as drip irrigation, and hybridization of crops to make them salt resistant could potentially maintain food security while simultaneously achieving water and energy efficiency, but require investment for both development and implementation
28. Technological and financial innovation for managing the nexus Innovative financial risk management initiatives also look promising; such as the development of “safety net” payments for farmers if yields fall below expected levels due to pests, diseases or weather events such as droughts, floods and typhoons. (is this applicable in the WANA countries ?) Multi-stakeholder collaboration between agricultural banks, insurers and the national government, this scheme addresses multiple risks to help ensure food security on a national level, protecting the livelihoods of farmers and thus increasing the overall resilience of food production in the country. (is this applicable in the WANA countries ?)
29. Technological and financial innovation for managing the nexus However, most of these instruments remain focused on a particular target such as yield or weather risk, and as such do not address regional risk management across sectors, or the ultimate risk of food supply; The interconnected nature of the challenge suggests that further work in integrating technical and financial solutions is needed.
30. Focusing on the Water-Food-Energy Nexus, Future Outlook The outcome should be a validated and unique public-private model and a financed global platform that can support governments who wish to catalyze change in their water sectors; An example of this initiative in action is the WB Forum's ongoing work in Jordan, supported by the Jordanian Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation, and the Ministry of Water and Irrigation; Step one is underway, involving deep analysis and building cost-curves to understand the gaps between water supply and demand, and developing prioritized recommendations and sector strategies;
31. Focusing on the Water-Food-Energy Nexus, Future Outlook There is a need for WANA Agenda Council on Water Security; This should engage governments who wish to work progressively on a water sector reform strategy; and then provide a supporting public-private approach; The initiative will follow the ACT process – undertaking Analysis to help Convene and build Coalitions to develop Transformational policies, programmes, projects and partnerships – aimed to create “proof points” that such a coordinated platform approach can work;
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33. Step 2: Country-level work. Multidisciplinary support through a public-private advisory platform. this will help the government shape and test concepts and governance processes that seek to close identified future water volume gaps; to improve water resource management in a river basin, country or region; and to build this inform national into regional water adaptation planning.
34. Focusing on the Water-Food-Energy Nexus, Future Outlook Step two will build on recent work with the Jordan Business Alliance on Water, a collaboration catalysed at the 2009 World Economic Forum on the Middle East and involving the Jordanian government, Jordan Chamber of Industry, American Chamber of Commerce, USAID and GTZ; A special focus of the initiative is to build awareness and better understanding of the water-food-energy-climate nexus; This nexus represents the most important global dimension of the water crisis in terms of managing economic growth and other impacts connected to water scarcity.