1 / 27

Law and Catchment Management

Law and Catchment Management. The International Arena. International events. Global consultation on safe water & san. (New Delhi 2000) Intertn. Conference on water & environment (Dublin 1992) UN Conference on Envir. And Dev. (Rio 1992) Rio +5

nolen
Download Presentation

Law and Catchment Management

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. Law and Catchment Management The International Arena

  2. International events • Global consultation on safe water & san.(New Delhi 2000) • Intertn. Conference on water & environment (Dublin 1992) • UN Conference on Envir. And Dev. (Rio 1992) • Rio +5 • 2nd World Water Forum & ministerial conf. (Hague 2000) • Water for 21St Century: vision to action (Southern Africa 2000)

  3. International events • Millenium Development goals 2000 • International conference on freshwater (Bonn 2001) • Ministerial Conference on water(AMCOW Abuja 2002) • Water and sustainable development (Accra 2002) • World Summit on Sustainable Development (Joburg 2002) • 3rd World Water Forum (Kyoto 2003)

  4. Global cons. On safe water & san.(New Delhi 2000) • Provide Access to water in sufficient quantities and sanitation for all • Principles • protection of environment from solid and liquid waste • institutional reforms to promote integrated approach • community management of services • sound financial practices

  5. Intertn. Conference on water & environment (Dublin 1992) • Dublin Principles • fresh water is vulnerable and essential for life and the environment • water development and management to be participator (users planners, policy makers) • woman a central to provision, management and safeguarding water • recognise that water has an economic value in all competing uses and is an economic good

  6. UN Conference on Envir. And Dev.(Rio 1992) • Dublin principle also echoed at the Earth Summit in Rio (also emphasized social good) • Principle were a basis for programme of action in 7 areas • integrated water resources development and management • water resources assessment

  7. The 7 areas continue • protection of water resources(including water quality) • drinking water supply and sanitation • water and sustainable urban development • water for sustainable food production and rural development • the impact of climate change on water resources

  8. Rio +5 • Revision of the Earth Summit emphasizing on • strengthening of regional and international cooperation in technology transfer and and financing of IWRM programmes • sustainable development of international water courses taking into account interests of watercourse states

  9. 2nd World Water Forum & ministerial conf. (Hague 2000) • World Water vision was presented with the following objectives • empower people to decide on how to use water • to get more crops and jobs per drop • to manage the use so as to conserve freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems

  10. Five critical action to achieve the objectives • Involve all stakeholders in intergrated management • move to full cost recovery (pricing) • increase public finding for research • cooperate on managing international basins • massive increase in investment in water

  11. Water for 21St Century: vision to action (Southern Africa 2000) • Equitable social andeconomic development • equitable acces to water of acceptable quality and quantity • proper sanitation and safe disposal of waste • food security for all households • energy security for all households • sustainable environment • security from natural disasters • intergrated water resources development and management

  12. International conference on freshwater (Bonn 2001) • Themes of the Ministerial declaration • governance- primary responsibility rests with GVT • funding gap-making more efficient use of existing source & raising finding from all source (public, private, community international) • role of international community-official development assistance to reach 0.7% of GDP • capacity building and technology transfer- • gender-strengthen role of women and participation

  13. Millenium Development goals 2000 • Millenium development goals include • reduce by half the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water by 2015 • reduce by half the number of people living on less than a dollar a day by 2015 • improve lives of at least 100 million people living in slums by 2020

  14. Ministerial Conference on water(AMCOW Abuja 2002) • AMCOW to support measures which • encourage stronger and better performing institutions in the sector • strengthen monitoring and assessment of available water resorces • ensure sustainable water and sanitation infrastructure and services delivery • promote policies for appropriate allocation of water for domestic use, food security and competing demands

  15. Water and sustainable development (Accra 2002) • Water can be used to eradicate poverty, reduce water related diseases & achieve sustainable development, through • improved access to portable water and sanitation • water use for food security and income generation • IWRM in national and shared basins • water related disaster prevention, mitigation and management • empowerment and capacity building to improve equity and gender sensitivity • Pro-poor water governance & policies and protection of environment

  16. World Summit on Sustainable Development (Joburg 2002) • Affirmed the millenium development goals and agreed to half the proportion of people without basic sanitation by 2015, through • development and implementation of efficient household sanitation systems • improved sanitation in public institutions eg schools • promotion of safe hygiene practices • promotion of outreach on children as agents of change

  17. continue • Promotion of affordable socially and culturally acceptable technologies and practices • development of innovative financing and partnerships mechanism • integration of sanitation into water resources management strategies

  18. continue • Plan of implementation • develop IWRM and water use plans by 2005 • a) develop and implement • i) national/regional strategies, plans & programmes with regards to • ii) integrated river basins, water shed and aquifers • iii) put measures to reduce loses & increase recycling of water • - balance with requirements for restoring or conserving environment in fragile environment

  19. continue • b) employ the full range of policy instruments including • regulation, monitoring, volutary measures • market and information tools • land use management and cost recovery tools (without cost recovery being a barrier to safe water by poor people) • adoption of river basin approach • c) improve efficient use of water resources • - promote allocation amon competying uses giving priority to basic human need

  20. continue • d) develop programmes to mitigate extremes events • e)support the diffusion of technology and capacity building • f) facilitate establishment of public private and other forms of partnerships • give priority to needs of poor • provide transparent national regulatory framework • improve accountability of public and private institutions

  21. 3rd World Water Forum (Kyoto 2003) • Declaration noted that • Water is a driving force for sust. Deve. and eradication of poverty &hunger • prioritizing water issues is an ergent global requirement • primary resposibility lies with each country • international community plus international and regional organisations should support this

  22. Cont. • in managing water, good governance should be ensured focusing of household and neighbourhood community base approaches by • addressing equity in sharing benefits • with due regard to poor and gender perspective in water policies • participation of all stakeholders, transparency and accountability should be promoted in all actions

  23. Cont. • With regard to capacity building,commitment should include • to fortify capacity of people and institutions with assistance from intern. Community • ability to measure and monitor performance • to share innovative approaches, best practices, information knowledge and experience relevant to local conditions

  24. Cont. • Ministers declared that • addressing the financial needs is a task for all • they should create an environment to facilitate investment • they call for prioritization of water issues and reflect the in national development plans • explore financing arrangements including including private sector participation • they will identify and develop new mechanisms of public-private partinerships

  25. Summary of the International agenda • Principles • New Delhi- “some for all” instead of “all for some” • Dublin- economic good, gender, participation IWM • Rio- added social good, affirmed IWRM • Rio + 5- called for cooperation on international rivers, technology transfer, cost recovery • WW Vision- cost recovery, increase in investment, role of private sector, targeted subsidies

  26. continue • SA Vision-right to basic services, promote pollutor pay but soft on cost recovery • Bonn declaration- important role of governance, capacity building, gvt to promote IWRM • Nepad- increased private sector involvement • MD goals-reduce poverty and improve conditions in urban sums, reduce people without water supply by half • WSSD-added reduce people without sanitation by half by 2015

  27. SADC • Regional Strategic Action Plan (RSAP) projects • legislation, policy and strategic planning • capacity building and training • awareness,consultation & participation • information: • collection, analysis, management, dissemination. • Transboundary river management, Planning, coordination • infrastructure investment • stand alone special priority areas

More Related