1 / 16

Ousmane S. DIALLO Coordinator of the Water Programme Observatoire du Sahara et du Sahel (OSS)

UNW-DPC International Workshop Institutional capacity Development in Transboundary Basins Bonn, 10-12 November 2008. Knowledge & Information as a basis to establish transboundary cooperation: the experience of the North Western Sahara Aquifer System (NWSAS). Ousmane S. DIALLO

verena
Download Presentation

Ousmane S. DIALLO Coordinator of the Water Programme Observatoire du Sahara et du Sahel (OSS)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UNW-DPC International WorkshopInstitutional capacity Development in Transboundary BasinsBonn, 10-12 November 2008 Knowledge & Informationas a basis to establish transboundary cooperation: the experience of the North Western Sahara Aquifer System (NWSAS) Ousmane S. DIALLO Coordinator of the Water Programme Observatoire du Sahara et du Sahel (OSS)

  2. OUTLINE • Overview of the OSS & Water issues in the circum-Sahara • Key characteristics & issues of the NWSAS • Capacity in the context of IWRM • Knowledge & Informationfor transboundary cooperation • Lessons & Conclusion

  3. NWSAS The Circum-Sahara region Work in progress on major transboundary aquifers TTAS LCAS SMAS IAS IGAD 1. OSS & Water issues in the circum-Sahara Generating, Managing & Disseminating information to support sustainable NRM Joint management of shared WR for economic integration & sustainaible development in Africa • 22 African countries in the circum-Sahara • 5 countries from the North • 4 African Sub-Regional Organisations (IGAD, UMA, CENSAD, CILSS) • International & UN Organisations • Civil Society

  4. Renewable water per capita Water stress PNUE, 2008 PNUE, 2008 Water is a mojor stake in the circum-Sahara Less than 9% of total renewable WR are in Africa More than 300 millions of people are water-stressed in Africa But Africa is endowed with a huge potential of WR

  5. Objectives of transboundary cooperation A potential for cooperation & sustainable development Environment DegradationSustainability Balance of compromises Political & Institutional ConflictCooperation Economical FragmentationIntegration

  6. Livestock Agriculture TC IC Tourism Water supply Fig. 1 : extension des formations du SASS CI CT 2. Key characteristics & issues of the NWSAS • Aride to saharan climate conditions • Area: 1.03 million km2 • Algeria: 700,000 km2 • Libya: 250,000 km2 • Tunisia: 80,000 km2 • Superposition of 2 main deep aquifer layers • Reserves: 30 000 km3 • Recharge rate: 1 km3/y • Increased & intensive abstraction Rate: 1.5 km3/y • Major threats & risks • Limited knowledge & capacity • WR: key developmental resource for the countries • Need for joint management & cooperation

  7. 2007: - Agreement on the structure, operation & funding modalities; - Ownership by the three countries; - Coordination Unit (CU) hosted by OSS. 2008: - Establishment of the CU Technical tools update Institutional dynamics Political agenda The Consultation Mechanism 2005: Ministerial declaration on the consultation mechanism

  8. 3. Capacity in the context of IWRM Definitions: Capacity:the ability of individuals, institutions and societies toperform functions, solve problems, & set & achieve objectivesin a sustainable manner. (UNDP) Capacity Development:theprocessthrough which individuals, organisations & societiesobtain, strengthen and maintain the capabilities to set & achieve their own development objectivesover time. (UNDP) Political will and a strategic approach to address the issues of capacity building are essential. The biggest challenges that must be addressed to reach the African Water Vision (2025) and the MDGs is human & institutional capacity building (AMCOW, PNAFCOM 2003).

  9. Capacity required for sustainable joint management & development of shared WR based on IWRM: • Technical: assesment/modeling, knowledge, M&E, information technology,hydrodynamics, infrastructure, utilities, geography, ecology, climate variability/change, link to national issues, etc. • Institutional: strategic leadership, human resources, core resources, project & process management, external links, accountability & voice mechanisms, etc. • Political: agreements, vision, joint development, integration, economy, hydrosolidarity, regulation, legislative, legal, etc.

  10. Institutional Capacity Development Institutional Capacityunderlies the institution’s performance. Capacity is understood as the six interrelated areas below. Strategic leadership 1 Interinstitu-tional linkages Dimensions of human resources 6 2 Interrelated areas 5 3 Core resources Process management 4 Project/ Programme management

  11. 1 2 Political Institu- tional 4. K.& I. for transboundary cooperation Capacity Technical Capacity Development steps in NWSAS

  12. RESULTS: • Common mgt. tools • & language • Understanding & • common vision • Capacity to decide • & have common • solutions • Basin awareness • CC: 1st step for • adaptation strategy • WHAT? • • Water monitoring networks • qty/qly; rech/abs • • Data & information mgnt. • system • • Modeling: global & sub • -models • Training sessions • WHY? • Assessment, hyrodynamics • Accesible & reliable data, • System boudaries, scenario • devpt., impacts, risks • Data mgt. tools, dialogue, • transboundary issues • HOW? • Involvement of key • stakeholders: common • studies & surveys • • Development of mgt. tools • • Training sessions • •Scientific cooperation The case of the NWSAS Knowledge improvement Technical dimension

  13. RESULTS: • HR developed • Agreement on • structure & funding • modalities • Improved legal & • institutional context • with enhanced • transparency & • accountability • WHAT? • • Strategic leadership • • Dimensions of HR • • Core resources • Project management • Process management • Inter-institutional linkages • WHY? • Governance, Structure • HR needs, • Infrastructure, Technology • Finance • Planning, Implementaion • M&E, Communications • Networks, Partnerships • HOW? • Initial deliberation & talks • • Joint meetings (convergence • & consensus) • • Capacity of national bodies The case of the NWSAS Joint managementof SWR Institutional dimension

  14. RESULTS: • Political will • Ministerial • Declaration • Full ownership: • process driven by • the countries • Transboundary • cooperation in place • WHAT? • • Political commitment • • Structure of the joint • management framework • • Operation modalities • Funding modalities • WHY? • Transboundary cooperation • Governance of shared WR • Agreement for equal invol- • vement of the countries • Facilitation of political will • & action • Allocation of resources • HOW? • Advocacy for joint • management • • Trust & Confidence • • Ministerial Declaration • •Agreements The case of the NWSAS Transboundary cooperation Political dimension

  15. 5. Lessons and Conclusion • In North Africa, GWR are crucial & strategic resources. • Knowledge improvement is a prerequisite for the management of these resources. • In TGWR, IWRM is essential to start with technical consultation by developing monitoring & management tools. • Need to involve people affected by taking into consideration theirs concerns with the information they understand. • Progress cannot be made unless strong need & political committment are in place. • Outcomes must be relevant to policy makers & win their willingness to make necessary changes. • The institutional context: general principles apply, but need to be adapted to the specifics.

  16. 5. Lessons and Conclusion • Provide advice to AMCOW:strengthening science-policy interactions. • Advice AMCOW for public information & awareness on the importance of GWR in Africa. • Strengthen GWR management & protection institutions& to build capacity in those areas. • Promote cooperative management of shared aquifers. • Promote education & training & trigger national & regional initiatives to address capacity building for users & decision-makers. • Result: appropriate capacity (policy & legislation); appropriate institutions & human resources to plan & implement sustainable GW utilisation

More Related