
 | [March 10, 2003]The 3rd World Water Forum Opens March 16thWorld Water Council and Secretariat of the Third World Water Forum P R E S S R E L E A S E
Secretariat of the 3rd World Water Forum, 5th FL. 2-2-4 Kojimachi Chiyoda-ku
Tokyo 102-0083, Japan
World Water Council, Les Docks de la Joliette, Atrium 10.3, 10 Place de la
Joliette, 13002 Marseille, France
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
The 3rd World Water Forum Opens March 16th
Crucial Water Issues to be addressed
The most important international water meeting ever opens in Kyoto, Japan on
March 16th to address life and death issues. These range from helping
the 2.7 billion people who will face water scarcity by 2025 and preventing the 5
million annual deaths from water-related diseases, to growing dangers of
accelerating conflicts over water and saving the worlds lakes, rivers and
wetlands.
"The world is in a water crisis that will only grow more acute and devastating
in coming years unless governments start giving higher priority to water in
their development and investment plans" " says William Cosgrove, Vice-President
of the World Water Council. "Our discussions will have far more effect on
humankind for the 21st century than the current crisis in the Middle
East, or any other political problem of the day."
Over the next 20 years, the average supply of water per person is expected to
drop by one-third, according to the World Water Assessment Programme, issued by
the UN earlier this month.
"The dream of pure water for all is within the reach of humanity," says Michel
Camdessus, Chairman of the World Panel on Financing Global Water Infrastructure
and former Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund. "Financial
flows will need to at least double for us to reach this goal by 2025. They will
have to come from financial markets, from water authorities themselves through
tariffs, from multilateral financial institutions, from governments, and from
public development aid, preferably in the form of grants."
Dr. Mahmoud Abu-Zeid, Egyptian Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation and
President of the World Water Council, explains: "Increasing scarcity,
competition and arguments over water in the first quarter of the 21st
century will dramatically change the way we value and use water and the way we
mobilise and manage water resources. Innovative ways of using this precious
commodity have to be found to protect ecosystems and ensure food for the
billions on this planet."
The 3rd World Water Forum, to be held in Kyoto, Shiga and
Osaka from March 16-23, will highlight actions being taken to implement
solutions to key global water problems. The Forums secretariat has initiated
the "Water Voice" project aimed to solicit grass-roots views on water problems
and solutions, which has so far drawn an estimated 30,000 messages from both
individuals all over the globe who suffer from water problems as well as those
who value water resources. The innovative web-based program "Virtual Water
Forum" collected more than 160 topics and has seen 5,400 participants. Another
initiative. The Forum will also consider some of the outstanding success stories
among the 3,000 water actions of communities and other stakeholders to address
the global water crisis that were collected for more than two years by the World
Water Council for its new "World Water Actions" report. Many of these
demonstrate that local communities implement their own solutions when
governments fail to act,. This supports the argument that governments should
encourage bottom-up solutions.
Some 10,000 government officials, representatives of international organizations
such as the World Bank, and UN organizations such as UNESCO and UNEP, along with
water experts, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the media are slated to
attend the meeting, many more than the number of participants at the 2nd World
Water Forum (The Hague, 2000). More than 1,300 journalists have already
registered to cover the Forum. In a break with the traditional approaches to
such meetings, the organizers are asking participants to come not to debate
issues, but to describe actions they have taken and make concrete commitments to
future actions.
Hideaki Oda, Secretary General of the secretariat of the 3rd World
Water Forum, adds "I am very proud of the fact that the Forums program was
shaped by many around the world through the Water Voice Project, the Virtual
Water Forum, regional and international meetings - this has been a true
"ground-up approach" in organizing this event.
Nowadays, 800 million people are going hungry because they cannot afford to buy
food. More than 1.2 billion people currently lack access to safe water and 3
billion have inadequate sanitation. This leads to diseases that kill more than 5
million people each year, more than 2 million of them children under the age of
five who succumb to diarrhea-related illnesses.
Poor residents have few options but to live in squalid, unsafe environments. In
addition, the circumstances of these poor communities contribute to
environmental deterioration, through water pollution and floods in neighboring
areas caused by blocked drainage systems.
The 40 worst water-famished countries in the world, in many of which people live
on just two gallons a day for all uses, can never escape poverty and achieve
sustainable development without first addressing their water scarcity, global
water experts say.
This amount is far less than the 50-liter (13.2 gallons) per day level that the
United Nations says constitutes the absolute minimum for water needs. The daily
per capita water requirements include 5 liters for drinking, 20 for sanitation
and hygiene, 15 for bathing and 10 for food preparation, per person.
"Only about 60 percent of the 680 million people in Sub-Sahara Africa have
access to safe water supplies," says Professor Albert Wright, Chairman of the
African Water Task Force and Co-chairman of the UN's Task Force on the
Millennium Goals for Water. "Incredibly, people in 13 countries, nine of them in
Africa, must try and live on an average of less than 10 liters (2.6 gallons) per
day, a truly desperate situation. Poverty and lack of water is inextricably
linked for these people (in countries such as The Gambia, Haiti, Djibouti,
Somalia, Mali, Cambodia, Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Albania and Bhutan)." In this context, one of the eight United Nations
Millennium Goals (MDGs) from September 2000 to "Ensure environmental
sustainability," mentions as one major objective "to reduce by half the
proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water" by 2015.
(on MDG see: www.un.org/millenniumgoals/index.html)
"If current trends continue, the shortage of water will extend well beyond the
semiarid and arid regions," says Professor Frank Rijsberman, Director-General of
the International Water Management Institute (IWMI). "Expanding demand for water
will drain some of the worlds major rivers, leaving them dry throughout most of
the year. Urban centres will experience severe water shortages. But the rural
poor will suffer the most serious consequences. Many already lack access to
potable water and to the quantity and quality of water needed to grow food and
generate income." IWMI has conducted the global study that predicted that
one-third of all people by 2025, or 2.7 billion, will face water scarcity.
The debate on the use of water is sharply divided. Agricultural scientists say
that farm water use, especially irrigation, must be increased 15-20 percent in
the coming 25 years to maintain food security and reduce hunger and rural
poverty for a growing world population.
Environmental scientists, on the other hand, say that water use will need to be
reduced by at least 10 percent to protect the rivers, lakes and wetlands on
which millions of people depend for their livelihoods and to satisfy the growing
demands of cities and industry. Many of these ecosystems have already been
eliminated or severely damaged over the last decades.
Floods and Droughts
From 1971 to 1995, floods affected more than 1.5 billion people worldwide, or
100 million people per year, according to experts. This total includes 318,000
killed and more than 81 million left homeless. Major floods that left at least
1,000 people dead and caused $1 billion in damages per episode have been the
most destructive.
The number of people affected by floods came to 31 million during the 5-year
period from 1983 to 1987. For the 5-year period from 1993 to 1997, it increased
to more than 130 million, that is, four times more than during the period from
1983 to 1987.
Economic losses from weather and flood catastrophes have increased ten-fold over
the past 50 years, says the World Water Council.
Many parts of the world are seeing more intense rainy seasons, longer dry
seasons, stronger storms, shifts in rainfall and rising sea levels. More
disastrous floods and droughts have been the most visible manifestation of these
changes.
"Extreme weather records are being broken every year and the resulting
hydro-meteorological disasters claim thousands of lives and disrupt national
economies," says Bill Cosgrove from the WWC, "The big problem is that most
countries aren't ready to cope adequately with the severe natural disasters that
we get now, a situation that will become much worse as storms and droughts
become more pervasive. Ignoring the problem is no longer an option."
"The minimum consequences will be higher food prices and expensive food imports
for water scarce countries that are predominantly poor," says Mr. Cosgrove,
referring to the consequences of droughts. "The populations of the poorest
countries will face hunger if they cannot get the resources to import food they
cannot grow. Its intolerable to think that billions of our children and
grandchildren will face these deprivations because we fail to act today."
According to climate experts, the expected climatic change during the 21st
century will further intensify the hydrological cycle with rainy seasons
becoming shorter and more intense in some regions, while droughts in other areas
will grow longer in duration, which could endanger species and crops and lead to
drops in food production globally. Evidence of the link between climate change
and increasing climate variability is mounting rapidly. For example, scientific
research has linked the recent droughts in the USA and Afghanistan to the
effects of global warming.
In addressing the challenge how to balance increasing human requirements for
adequate water supplies and improved sanitation with food production, energy and
environmental needs, most countries will require more effective governance,
improved capacity and adequate financing. Community level public participation
is fundamental to achieving these goals. Examples of actions dealing with all of
these problems will be presented during the Forum.
Rich and poor nations both need better water management -- The newly
developed international Water Poverty Index (WPI), by the UKs Centre for
Ecology & Hydrology, finds that some of the worlds richest nations such as the
United States and Japan fare poorly in water ranking because they consume more
than they need and still deal inadequately with pollution. At the same time,
some developing countries score in the top ten, because they either have a great
deal of water or have good plans in place in how to use it.
The Water Poverty Index, developed by a team of 31 researchers in
consultation with more than 100 water professionals from around the world,
grades 147 countries according to five different measures resources,
access, capacity, use and environmental impact -- to show where the
best and worst water situations exist.
According to the WPI, the top 10 water-richest nations in the world are, in
descending order: Finland, Canada, Iceland, Norway, Guyana, Suriname, Austria,
Ireland, Sweden and Switzerland. The 10 countries lowest on the Water Poverty
Index are all in the developing world -- Haiti, Niger, Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Malawi, Djibouti, Chad, Benin, Rwanda, and Burundi.
The new index demonstrates the strong connection between 'water poverty and
'income poverty, a link that will be a prime subject of the 3rd
World Water Forum.
Forum meetings will demonstrate how improved water management can make the
livelihoods of poor people more productive and sustainable. The reason is that
water is a key input into many livelihood activities, such as agriculture and
home-based enterprises, and is critical to large-scale economic development.
Water management plays a critical role in conserving and sustaining the natural
resource base and is pivotal in reducing the vulnerability to hazards such as
floods and droughts that impoverish so many.
Water Success Stories -- The Forum will also consider some of the
outstanding success stories among the 3,000 water programs put into action in
recent years to address the global water crisis.
Some of these programs include:
Case study #1: Central Asia -- International Water Management Institute
Central Asia and Caucasus Sub Office (IWMI-CAC).
The "Best Practices" project of IWMI-CAC was designed to promote programs that
both save water and bring water to wider circles of users. These principles were
applied in Central Asia, where economic development has not been strong enough
to implement programs of improvements to irrigation -- drainage infrastructure
in the context of counteracting the Aral Sea Crisis. The primary strategy was to
encourage water users themselves to apply inexpensive technology and measures to
save water. During the first stage of the project, 11 district water management
organizations, eight water users associations, and 42 collective farms,
joint-stock companies, private farms located in the upper, middle, and low
reaches of the Syr-Darya River basin were participating in the project.
Case study #2: Honduras -- Water supply in provinces of Cololaca, Gualcea,
La Quesera, San Isidro, San Marcos and Santa Rita.
The objective of this project is to improve the health and lives of the
communities through the construction of a sustainable, potable water system,
with user participation, training in community-level participation and
organization. The project included the installation of a complete and
functioning water system, latrines, health and hygiene education, and protection
of the watershed supplying the new water system. Proper use of chlorine in the
system was instituted. All beneficiary families in the construction of the
system participated in the installations. The organization and training of the
entire community in administration and maintenance of the community's potable
water system was also undertaken
One requirement was that women would form part of the project's water and
sanitation committee. The community was also required to maintain a daily
project diary, as well as books of income, expenses, and balances, along with
monthly financial reports.
The project, at a minimum, will assure the protection of the existing forest in
the recharge area of the spring in the region, while the people will receive
sufficient water in the dry season from the supply.
Case study #3: Senegal -- Sustainable management of wetlands in the
Saloum delta.
The project was undertaken because of the persistence of drought, development of
tourism, extension of urban areas and high demography, which threaten this
region.
Specific objectives of the project are:
- raise awareness of local people using traditional beliefs and current
knowledge
- develop and implement local management plans for community wetlands in three
pilot villages;
- establish a training center.
Other water innovations include new crops, including:
Hardy Corn: Researchers at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement
Center, known as CIMMYT, one of 16 CGIAR centers, have created hardy new breeds
of tropical corn that can increase harvests by 40 percent in the tough
environments of the developing world.
New Rice: New, water-saving techniques are being developed that could
save up to 25 percent of the water now used to grow rice, according to
scientists at two CGIAR centers -- the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI),
based in Manila, the Philippines, and the International Water Management
Institute (IWMI), based in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Durable Wheat -- Researchers have been able to modify wheat, once mostly
restricted to temperate and subtropical zones, to make it productive even in hot
climates. One main reason for growing wheat is it requires less water than rice.
Key Topics and Expected Actions at the 3rd
World Water Forum
Governance who decides how water is utilized may be the most
important topic for the Forum. Many water experts say that the world faces a
governance crisis rather than a water crisis.
"Good water governance" requires effective socio-political and administrative
systems that use an integrated water management approach with an open process in
which all can participate. Forum participants are expected to conclude that
primary responsibility rests with governments to make water a priority.
Supply and Quality will be one of the major topics at the Forum.
Water experts say that increasing water use efficiency and improved demand
management are essential, but environmental and social costs must also be
addressed in order to make water advances "sustainable."
"Accelerated groundwater development over the past few decades has resulted in
great social and economic benefits for many people," says Dr. Abu Zeid. "But
excessive depletion, combined with uncontrolled urban and industrial waste, have
caused widespread degradation of surface waters and aquifers, which has hurt
economic and social development, poverty alleviation and sustenance of
ecosystems."
Capacity Building means not only to increase a countrys ability to tap
more water, but to manage it effectively. The Forum will address how this
critical element of the water development process is often treated as an add-on
to programs, with scant regard to local capacity-building institutions, or to
long-term commitment. Such efforts would be much more efficient if they are an
integral part of community-driven investment programs.
Financing is crucial. Water experts say that developing and transitional
countries will require $180 billion annually in order to produce global water
security over the next 25 years. Current levels of investment are estimated at
only $80 billion. The Forum will debate how greater efficiency, better financial
management, risk reduction and the creation of new models for combining public,
donor, NGO and private funding can help meet this goal.
Participation The Forum will debate how to give large segments of
society, especially women and the poor, a voice in water issues. Many regions,
countries and local communities have come to realize that water issues should
allow partnerships of all interested and affected parties in order to make water
management viable.
Monitoring
Objectives to improve access to water and water management will not be met
unless a system is put in place that assesses the current situation and what
progress is being made. While a global "watchdog" may be required to highlight
findings, such systems must be built from the bottom up and involve parties
independent of governments and implementing agencies.
The Forum organizers will ask all participants to return home and work on a wide
variety of programs to bring water security to all, in the fields of
alliances, partnerships, networking, participation and dialogue; financing and
investment; policy and strategic planning; institutions and legislation; data
gathering and sharing; public private partnerships; and international trade.
* * *
History of the World Water Forums
The World Water Forum is a global meeting every three years of
governments, international organizations such as UN agencies and donor
organizations, scientists, water experts and non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) to deal with growing worldwide water issues.
To deal with the world water crisis, governments, international organizations,
scientists and non-governmental organizations formed an international think tank
on water in 1996, the World Water Council (WWC). The Council proposed that a
World Water Forum should be held every three years to discuss the worlds
important water-related issues.
At the 1st World Water Forum held in Marrakech, Morocco in 1997, the Marrakech
Declaration was adopted and it was decided to draw up a 'Vision for Water, Life
and the Environment in the 21st Century. The World Water Vision was
presented at the 2nd World Water Forum held in The Hague, The Netherlands in
March 2000, and the concurrent Ministerial Meeting adopted the Declaration of
The Hague. Attached References 1 :
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