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Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Disaster Reduction

Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Disaster Reduction. Chris Hartnady & Rowena Hay Umvoto Africa (Pty) Ltd. Africa Regional Consultation on Disaster Reduction Johannesburg, 2-3 June 2004. Water Cycle Science.

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Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Disaster Reduction

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  1. Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Disaster Reduction Chris Hartnady & Rowena Hay Umvoto Africa (Pty) Ltd Africa Regional Consultation on Disaster Reduction Johannesburg, 2-3 June 2004

  2. Water Cycle Science • Understand fluxes and storage of water as it moves through the hydrologic cycle & associated fluxes of solutes, sediments, and energy • Monitor and understand change, if any, in the quantity and quality of water • Test hypotheses and models, formulate new hypotheses (traditional scientific use)

  3. Water-related (Geo)Hazards • Floods (“Hydrometeorological” hazard) • Extreme precipitation events and/or river flooding • Coastal storm surge • Dam failure • Ground Instability • Landslides and mass-wasting (water-induced) • Subsidence and collapse • Carbonate dissolution • Fluid withdrawal • Earthquakes (fluid pressure-triggered) • Droughts and desertification • Global climate change (effects on hydrological cycle)

  4. Flood cause and consequence Sudden-onset wide area event triggered by extreme weather - river flooding at Ashton, Western Cape, RSA March 2003

  5. Integrated Water Resources Management • IWRM (inception at 1992 Dublin conference) • people- and environment-focused, holistic paradigm by which to regulate and manage water • breaks down boundaries of sector, scale and discipline to ensure that water is managed • at the most appropriate level • by the most appropriate people • in a manner that acknowledges the rights of other uses and users (“Whiskey is for drinking, but water is for fighting over”)

  6. Eight Dublin principles • Conserve and protectwater sources and catchments as essential to life, health and socio-economic productivity • Agree on fair and equitable water allocationsbetween stakeholders within broad national framework • Manageat lowest appropriate level • Build human capacityas key to resource sustainability • Involve all stakeholders actively at all stages • Use water efficiently(often an important “source” in itself ) • Value wateras both economic and social good • Strike a gender balance in water management

  7. IWRM philosophy • “IWRM is a philosophy of co-ordinated management of an area’s water, land and other resources to maximize economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of the resource and vital ecosystems” South African Department of Water Affairs and Forestry (DWAF) brochure

  8. Disaster Reduction • World Conference on Natural Disaster Reduction (May 1994, Yokohama Japan) adopted “Yokohama Strategy and Plan of Action for a Safer World”, based on ten principles • 2nd WCDR (Kobe, Japan, January 2005) provides opportunity for a comprehensive review of the Yokohama Strategy

  9. Principles of Yokohama Strategy • Risk assessment a required step for DR • Disaster prevention and preparedness (DP&P) of primary importance • DP&P integral aspects of development policy and planning all levels • Capacities to prevent, reduce and mitigate disastersa top priority • Early warnings of impending disasters, effective dissemination, key factors • Effective community participation at all levels • Vulnerability reduced by proper design and patterns of development, appropriate community education and training • International community to share necessary technology, freely available in timely manner, as integral part of technical cooperation • Environmental protection as component of sustainable development consistent with poverty alleviation, imperative • Each country bears primary responsibility for protecting people, infrastructure, other national assets. International community should … mobilize adequate … resources, bearing in mind needs of developing countries, particularly least developed countries

  10. Linking IWRM and Disaster Reduction • Dublin (D) and Yokohama (Y) intersections • Integration of (resource) development-planning and risk-assessment processes (D1, D7, Y1, Y3, Y7, Y9) • Prioritization of prevention and preparedness (D1,Y2-Y7) • Emphasis on cooperation and communication at all levels (D1, D2, D5, D8, Y6, Y8) • Importance of building human capacity (D4, D8, Y4, Y7) • Implicit need for conflict resolution (D2, D5, Y6, Y7)

  11. Possible Flagship Project(s) • Link to IGOS-P Geohazards Theme • Precipitation / geosphere moisture content related to climate change, provides triggering mechanism for landslides and other ground deformations • Deep groundwater infiltration triggers strong earthquakes in Southern African neotectonic zones (e.g., Kariba) • Integration of Southern African weather, climate, hydro(geo)logical, space-geodetic & seismological observing systems, along with satellite remote-sensing and geo-informatics technologies, is required • Cross-cutting collaborations possible with IGOS-P Water Cycle Theme (floods) and Ocean Theme (tsunamis and coastal flooding)

  12. Existing platform? • SA Dept of Land AffairsTrigNet Array • Continuous GPS • often co-located with weather stations • can monitor • crustal motions to mm/yr precision • water vapour in troposphere

  13. GEO initiative • Ad-hoc Group on Earth Observation • Co-chaired by South Africa (DST), with “developing nation” interests, following WSSD • Aims to establish a Global Earth Observation System of Systems • UN/ISDR is observer member of GEO • “Water” and “Disasters” are among 9 focus topics in current activities of GEOSS Implementation Plan Task Team (IPTT) • Flood forecasting and an integrated (satellite-based, ground-calibrated) global monitoring system for droughts – among priority requirements

  14. Flood forecasting • “… the costliest and deadliest hazards worldwide …” • Warning and protection systems incorporate geostationary satellite precipitation fields in conjunction with hydrological models, statisticallycalibrated to particular locations • Maximizing effectiveness of precipitation observations in flood prediction • near real-time instantaneous microwave and auxiliary (microwave-calibrated geosynchronous–infrared, etc.) rain products at the sensor resolution • uncertainty characterization of instantaneous microwave precipitation products

  15. IWRM and Groundwater Groundwater resources provide alternative decentralised approaches to water supply, which • generally existed before big (surface-water) schemes and projects involving large-scale damming of river systems • were often replaced and rendered dysfunctional by major surface-water supply projects • are now finding their way back into the mainstream of water supply options • often are the last resort or relief under drought conditions

  16. Groundwater & Climate Change • Underground reservoirs (aquifers) are evaporation free and therefore will have increasing marginal advantage under conditions of global warming • Most are recharged annually (artificially in rare cases) • Some aquifers have potentially large, natural storage volume, well in excess of annual recharge • Many can be managed conjunctively with surface water reservoirs (an “excellent example of IWRM in practice” – DWAF, South Africa) • UNESCO/WMO-IGRAC - General lack of information about groundwater resources should stimulate national and regional efforts in monitoring and assessing aquifer systems

  17. GRACE for Southern Africa • Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment satellite mission – co-PI: Byron Tapley (UT Austin) • “GRACE's trump card is its ability to measure the changes in gravity caused by the movements of water.The satellites can detect changes in groundwater and river basins, which are crucial for farmers and environmental scientists. GRACE should be able to measure a 4-millimetre change in water height across the 32 million square kilometres of the Mississippi river basin” • “Eventually,” says Tapley, “we will be able tolet countries in Africa know how their aquifers are changing”. National Geogaphic Magazine quote

  18. Water-related conflict • “Water is one of the most important ingredients for development and stability. Without access to basic water supplies, disease and ill-health, poverty, environmental degradation and even conflict may be the result – all of which lead, in turn, to greater water stress. Water-related conflict does not have to take on the attributes of war in order to be debilitating – it can fester between groups, ignite between neighbouring farmers or industrialists, and can cause loss of trust between people and their governments. When water conflict erupts between sovereign states, the victims may not perish on any clearly discernible battlefield, but the people and the watercourse itself will suffer the consequences of the absence of either co-operation or communication between those sharing a basin.” Mikhail Gorbachev, President of Green Cross International

  19. End • Thank you “Better water storage monitoring on a global scale should also help scientists improve our ability to predict, plan for, and respond to extreme events, such as floods and drought” Alan Ward NASA Earth Observatory 2003 December 23

  20. Dublin challenges 1-2 • Inadequate frameworks to ensure communication and cooperationin water source and catchment conservation between different sectors and levels. Focus remains on limited interventions close to source • Reality of conflict between competing uses and users often glossed over. Stakeholders • involved mostly at information, not decision making level • lack good,appropriately presentedhydro(geo)logical information essential to informed decision making.

  21. Dublin challenges 3-4 • Unavailable / unclear / confusing frameworksfor management at lowest appropriate level. Community-based approaches now accepted as norm, but do local governments & user association have necessary structures and capacity? • Uneven / ineffective / unmonitored capacity building.Proper monitoring essential to effective CB programmes • Do they pay sufficient attention to lower and intermediate levels within decentralised support agencies? • Are they able to fulfil role in facilitating user decision making?

  22. Dublin challenges 5-6 • Limited / narrow-focus / uninterested stake-holder involvementin wider IWRM, because of • high transaction costs • lack of genuine decision-making power • purely consultative form of community involvement • multiple perspectives and agendas of water users • ineffective mechanisms for conflict resolution • Low emphasis onefficient water useImportant to integrate demand management into projects and decisions. Water generally valued most highly where scarcest, or where tariff structures make waste expensive

  23. Dublin challenges 7-8 • Poor perspective on role of water as social good. Principle of paying for water widely accepted and many projects introduce user charges, but rights of vulnerable, poverty-stricken groups still need protection in planning for cost recovery • Strikingabsence of women within staff of support agencies. Do we understand how gender encompasses other important aspects of community dynamics such as age, wealth, class, cast, etc.?

  24. Principles of Yokohama Strategy • Risk assessment a required step for adoption of adequate and successful disaster reduction policies and measures • Disaster prevention and preparedness (DP&P) of primary importance in reducing need for disaster relief • DP&P integral aspects of development policy and planning at national, regional, bilateral, multilateral and international levels • Development and strengthening of capacities to prevent, reduce and mitigate disasters a top priority

  25. Yokohama Strategy Principles (2) • Early warnings of impending disasters and effective dissemination using telecommunications, including broadcast services, key factors to successful DP&P • Preventive measures most effective when involving participation at all levels, from local community through national government to regional and international level • Vulnerability reduced by application of proper design and patterns of development focused on target groups, by appropriate education and training of the whole community

  26. Yokohama Strategy Principles (3) • International community to share necessary technology to prevent, reduce and mitigate disaster; made freely available in timely manner as integral part of technical cooperation • Environmental protection as component of sustainable development consistent with poverty alleviation, imperative in prevention and mitigation of disasters • Each country bears primary responsibility for protecting people, infrastructure, other national assets from impact of natural disasters

  27. International Community Role • (cont.) International community should demonstrate strong political determination to mobilize adequate and make efficient use of existing resources, in the field of natural disaster reduction, bearing in mind needs of developing countries, particularly least developed countries

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