- GWP has grown significantly in the past decade in terms of membership, countries involved, and actions taken. It helped produce IWRM plans in 21 countries from 2009-2012. However, progress on implementing IWRM and addressing challenges like financing remains uneven globally. Major challenges going forward include increasing water stress due to population growth and climate change, the need for more international cooperation on issues like shared waters, and reducing risks from more frequent water-related disasters. GWP is working with UN-Water to establish a new global water goal for the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals that would help make progress on these issues.
America Is the Target; Israel Is the Front Line _ Andy Blumenthal _ The Blogs...
Kenzo Hiroki's presentation at the GWP Strategy Launch 21.03.14
1. GWP in Action
2009-2013
- A prelude to launching GWP Strategy
2014-2019 -
Kenzo Hiroki
Vice Chair, GWP Steering Committee
2. Our Mission
To this end,
GWP helps people to build coalitions to find water
management solutions that serve the public good.
GWP convenes, empowers and connects people
with a stake in water use and management
GWP helps the people to work together effectively
towards water security…
The Global Water Partnership (GWP) came into
being from the clear conviction that there had to be
a new way of doing business towards water security
4. 4
1. Have we grown?
2. Have we seen satisfactory advancement of
IWRM?
3. Have we responded to emerging water
challenges fast enough?
4. Have we had enough money and will we ?
5. Do we still have challenges today?
GWP in 2009-2013
Key Questions
5. Growth of GWP membership
- Nearly tenfold increase in 10 years (2002-2012)-
2,069 2,176
2,359
2,585
2,770
149
154 157
164 167
100
110
120
130
140
150
160
170
180
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
CountriesPartners Number of Partners
Number of Countries
6. 6
Number of GWP Actions
Action category by GWP
Tool Box
2012
Strategy
2009 to
2012
Total
since
1998
A Enabling Environment 19 39 77
B
Institutional Roles and
Capacity
16 37 91
C Management Instruments 19 71 118
Total: 54 147 286
We have grown in terms of countries,
memberships, and actions.
7. Number of countries which GWP directly helped in
producing or implementing IWRM Plans
Period Number of countries
which GWP directly
helped in producing or
implementing IWRM
Plans
Number of countries
which GWP directly helped
in producing IWRM Plans
2002-
2012
36 21
2009-
2012
21 6
8. HDI: Human Development Index
Global Progress of IWRM Plan (2008-2012)
- UN-Water Survey on Status of IWRM (2012) -
Source: Status report on the integrated
approaches to water Resources
Management, UN-Water
9. KeyInfra. Development/ Financing
Financing IWRM
Monitoring the Resource
Disaster management
Water efficiency management
Climate change adaptation
Institutional capacity building
Coordination between levels
Cross-sector coordination
Legislation
Knowledge sharing
Stakeholder participation
Transboundary capacity
Management by private sector
Key management challenges in IWRM
Source: Status report on the integrated approaches to
water Resources Management, UN-Water
Low Med. High HighestPriority: No problem
We have seen good global progress in
IWRM, but still much more to do
10. 0
2
2
2
2.8
33
20
16
25
13
8
9
23
18
21
18
14
20
31
22
9
14
19
33
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Financing IWRM
IWRM Plan
IWRM Policy
IWRM Law
Not relevant Under development
Developed, not implemented Implementation Started
Implementation advanced Fully implemented
Global Status of IWRM Plan and
Implementation Source: Status report on the integrated
approaches to water Resources
Management, UN-Water
11. 7
0
0
6
0
32
18
5
17
0
10
23
22
5
4
18
24
31
24
17
20
21
27
30
29
14
13
16
19
50
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Cross-sector coordination
Capacity Building
Monitoring & Info.
Financing WR Infra.
Stakeholder Participation
Not relevant Under development
Developed, not implemented Implementation Started
Implementation advanced Fully implemented
Global Status of IWRM Plan and
Implementation Source: Status report on the integrated
approaches to water Resources
Management, UN-Water
12. How have we spent money?
68%7%
3%
22%
GWPO Total Expenditure 2010-2012
Region/Countries
Tool Box/Technical Support
Global Governance
Secretariat
Total: 26.9million EUR/3 years
We had not much, but Max for Regions/Countries
Fund has been fully used to support GWP field
actions
We will have sufficient funds for next strategy
14. 14
Any growth without water?
World Water Development Report 2, UNESCO-WWAP, 2006
Areas in red are densely populated with high
water stress
15. Source: Water Footprint Network
Water cooperation is everybody’s issue
-Virtual water trade in the world-
--
16. Major Water-Related Disasters in 2010 & 2011
Philippines
Flood
110 dead
Dec. 24, 2010–
Jan. 2011
Nigeria
Flood
40 dead
Sep. 13, 2010
Philippines
Tropical cyclone
35 dead
Oct. 18, 2010
Nicaragua
Flood
66 dead
Aug. 17, 2010
Burkina Faso
Flood
16 dead
Jul. 21, 2010
France
Extratropical cyclone
53 dead
Feb. 28, 2010
Honduras
Flood
117 dead
Aug. 2010
India
Flood
203 dead
Nov. 15, 2010
Pakistan
Flood
1,985 dead
Jul. 28, 2010
Pakistan
Flood
60 dead
Jul. 21, 2010
Poland
Flood
16 dead
May. 17, 2010
Tajikistan
Flood
73 dead
May. 06, 2010
Indonesia
Tsunami
530 dead
Oct. 24, 2010
Benin
Flood
46 dead
Jul. 2010
Philippines
Flood
16 dead
Mar. 14, 2011
Bolivia
Flood
56 dead
Feb. 14, 2011
Philippines
Flood
23 dead
Jan. 25, 2011
Brazil
Flood
806 dead
Jan. 11, 2011
United States
Local storm
354 dead
Apr. 22, 2011
United States
Local storm
142 dead
May. 22, 2011
Colombia
Flood
138 dead
Apr. 2011
Kenya
Flood
100 dead
May. 08, 2010
China
Flood
1,691 dead
May. 29, 2010
Philippines
Flood
16 dead
Nov. 01, 2010
Australia
Flood
16 dead
Dec. 25, 2010-Jan. 2011
Indonesia
Flood
291 dead
Oct. 02, 2010
Bolivia
Flood
26 dead
Jan. 01, 2010
Colombia
Flood
418 dead
Apr. 06, 2010
Afghanistan
Flood
70 dead
May. 05, 2010
Afghanistan
Flood
65 dead
Jul. 27, 2010
Philippines
Tropical cyclone
146 dead
Jul. 12, 2010Pakistan
Flood
456 dead
Aug. 2010
Thailand
Flood※
813 dead
Oct. 2011
Angola
Flood
7 dead
Mar. 01, 2010
Bangladesh
Flood
10 dead
Jul. 19, 2011
Brazil
Flood
72 dead
Jun.19, 2010
China
Flood
102 dead
Sept. 2011
China
Flood
152 dead
Jun. 2010China
Local storm
30 dead
Jan. 01, 2010
China
Tropical cyclone
75 dead
Sep. 20, 2010
Japan
Tsunami
15,824 dead
Mar .11, 2011
Myanmar
Flood
106 dead
Oct. 20, 2011
China
Flood
168 dead
Jun. 03, 2011
China
Flood
59 dead
Aug. 13, 2010
China
Local storm
17 dead
Apr. 17 ,2011Myanmar
Tropical cyclone
45 dead
Oct. 22, 2010
El Salvador
Flood
35 dead
Sep. 2011
Guatemala
Flood
43 dead
Oct 12, 2011
Guatemala
Tropical cyclone
174 dead
May. 28, 2010
India
Flood
34 dead
Sep. 2011
India
Flood
196 dead
Aug. 06, 2010
India
Local storm
54 dead
May. 06, 2010
Bangladesh
Flood
15 dead
Oct. 01, 2010
India
Flood
53 dead
Jul. 5, 2010
India
Flood
200 dead
Sep. 18, 2010
India
Flood
98 dead
Jul. 05, 2010
India
Tropical cyclone
114 dead
Apr. 13, 2010
Sri Lanka
Flood
43 dead
Jan. 05, 2011
Madagascar
Tropical cyclone
35 dead
Feb. 14, 2011
Brazil
Flood
256 dead
Apr. 04, 2010
Mexico
Tropical cyclone
12 dead
Sep. 15, 2010
Mexico
Tropical cyclone
20 dead
Jun. 30, 2011
Mexico
Flood
25 dead
Sep. 20, 2010
Mexico
Tropical cyclone
22 dead
Jun. 30, 2010
Namibia
Flood
65 dead
Mar. 01, 2011
Kenya
Flood
94 dead
Mar. 01, 2010
Madagascar
Tropical cyclone
120 dead
Mar. 10, 2010
Nepal
Flood
89 dead
Jun. 2011
Niger
Flood
3 dead
Aug. 01, 2010
Chad
Flood
24 dead
Aug. 15, 2010
Nepal
Flood
138 dead
Aug. 21, 2010
Thailand
Flood
258 dead
Oct. 10, 2010
Philippines
Tropical cyclone
43 dead
Aug. 27, 2011
Philippines
Flood
103 dead
Sept. 24, 2011
Philippines
Storm
84 dead
July 26, 2011
Viet Nam
Flood
84 dead
Oct. 01, 2010
Viet Nam
Flood
50 dead
Nov. 12, 2010
Viet Nam
Flood
21 dead
Oct. 14, 2010
Cambodia
Flood
207 dead
Aug. 2011
Source: EM-DAT/CRED as of Jan 19, 2012
* The data for Oct 2011 flood in Thailand is from CRED/UN ISDR Press
Conference Report, Jan 18, 2012 (includes missing)
Disasters with more than 50 persons dead or more than 100,000 persons affected
In case a country has multiple disasters, disasters with less than 10 persons
dead are omitted
17. Numbers of Reported Natural Disasters (1900-2010)Numbersofreporteddisasters
Year
500
400
300
200
100
18. Flood and
drought in
Indus Basin
Flood and drought in
Ganges System
Flood and
drought in
Mekong
Flood in Rivers of
China
Flood and
drought in Aral
Sea Basin Trans-boundary
flood and drought
Tsunami
in Indian
Ocean
Tsunami in
Pacific Region
Typhoon in
Pacific Region
Volcano eruption
and mud flow
Cyclone
in Indian
Ocean
Regional Cooperation is a must to address water
problems
–Water disaster, for example, know no borders-
20. 20
.. which cover the dimensions of sustainable development
and contribute towards poverty reduction
Post-2015 development goals need to
address five priority areas…
Healthy
people
Universal access to safe drinking
water, sanitation and hygiene, improving
water quality and raising service
standards
Increased
prosperity
The sustainable use and development of
water resources, increasing and sharing
the available benefits
Equitable
societies
through
Robust and effective water governance
with more effective institutions and
administrative systems
Protected
ecosystems
Improved water quality and wastewater
management taking account of
environmental limits
Resilient
communities
Reduced risk of water-related disasters
to protect vulnerable groups and
minimize economic losses
21.
22. 22
Universal access to sanitation, benefits outweigh costs
5.5 to 1
Universal access to drinking-water, the ratio is 2 to 1
Irrigation infrastructure in Africa, rates of return are up to
26%
Overexploitation of groundwater Middle East and
Northern Africa imposes economic loss of 2% of GDP
Watershed protection initiatives in the US yield up to
USD 200 for every dollar invested, compared to
conventional water treatment costs
Early warning systems for storms, floods, and droughts
throughout Asia indicate potential returns of up to USD
559 for each USD 1 invested
A water goal makes economic sense
23. 23
Proposed Targets
A. Achieve universal access to safe drinking
water, sanitation and hygiene
B. Improve by (x%) the sustainable use and
development of water resources in all countries
C. All countries strengthen equitable, participatory
and accountable water governance
D. Reduce untreated wastewater by (x%), nutrient
pollution by (y%) and increase wastewater reuse
by (z%)
E. Reduce mortality by (x%) and economic loss by
(y%) from natural and human-induced water-
related disasters
24. Influencing Post-2015 Process
“One push/one partner will make big changes”
Countries
-Thematic
Consultation
-Regional
Consultation
UN-
System
Task Team
High
Advisory
Groups
(HLP, SDSN)
Leaders
Member States
Open Working Group
UN General Assembly
2,800 GWP Partners
GWP Regions
GWP Countries
Thousands of
Friends of GWP
GWPO
GWP-TEC
Friends of
GWPO/TEC
Mobilizing Stakeholders, Media & Private Sector
25. 25
1. Have we grown? Yes!
2. Have we seen satisfactory advancement of
IWRM? Yes!
3. Have we responded to emerging water
challenges fast enough? Yes!
4. Have we had enough money ? No, but we
will!
5. Do we still have challenges today? Many!
But we can solve them together with you
by New GWP Strategy 2014-2019
GWP in 2009-2013
Answers to Key Questions
The national consultations are being undertaken in collaboration with UN-Water, based on their Technical Advice Paper, which was developed with GWP as a Partner: http://www.unwater.org/news-events/news-details/en/c/213666/. UN-Water’s homepage: http://www.unwater.org/home/en/
The proposed Goal for Water is : Securing Sustainable Water for All. The aim is to set a 15 year period for the new development agenda from 2015 to 2030. This comprehensive goal sets out the broad purpose of the water goal in simple language that can be readily understood and communicated. It is coupled with five targets that are inter-related, all of which are needed to meet the goal. They cover (i) drinking water supply and sanitation, (ii) water resources management, (iii) water governance, (iv) wastewater pollution and water quality and finally (v) water-related disasters. The goal and targets are all inter-linked and require an integrated approach so that there is synergy across the range of interventions needed to meet the targets.
Growing body of evidence on the cost-benefits of investing in water.
These five targets have been formulated after an extensive consultation among over 25 UN agencies plus partners including GWP. The aim is to have clear target that set out objectives that are measurable and realistic. The aim is for countries to set values for the various numbers (x, y z) etc. which would then be compounded to give overall global values. The final wording of the targets is the responsibility of the OWG and the aim of the meeting is not to discuss the wording but to consider if they cover the key issues important to the country, if any key priority is not covered and if they set a suitable framework for the future development agenda.