Tag Archives: transboundary waters

Wikileaks: US political interests in water issues

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Leaked diplomatic cables from US embassies published to date by Wikileaks give an indication of US political interests in international water issues. These generally relate to transboundary water disputes and terrorism, corruption, political instability, and US business interests.

Transboundary water disputes and terrorism

When US Senator John Kerry spoke to Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari on 16 February 2010, he suggested that “cooperation on counter terrorism with the Indians could lead to Indian compromises on key Pakistani issues such as Kashmir and water use” [1]. Pakistan claims that the Baglihar Dam in the Indian-administered part of the disputed state of Jammu and Kashmir is obstructing the flow of the Chenab river into their country [2].

A 2006 cable on the bioterror threat in India, quoted experts saying that biological warfare agents would be diluted in municipal water supplies, but could threaten smaller bodies of water such as apartment water tanks, urban water trucks and rural wells [3].

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Water at core of climate change impacts-UN experts

The main impact of climate change will be on water supplies and the world needs to learn from past cooperation such as over the Indus or Mekong Rivers to help avert future conflicts, experts said on 7 February 2010.

Desertification, flash floods, melting glaciers, heatwaves, cyclones or water-borne diseases such as cholera are among the impacts of global warming inextricably tied to water. And competition for supplies might cause conflicts.

“The main manifestations of rising temperatures…are about water,” said Zafar Adeel, chair of UN-Water which coordinates work on water among 26 U.N. agencies.

“It has an impact on all parts of our life as a society, on natural systems, habitats,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview. Disruptions may threaten farming or fresh water supplies from Africa to the Middle East.

“Therein lies the potential for conflicts,” he said. Shortage of water, such as in Darfur in Sudan, has been a contributing factor to conflict.

But Adeel said that water had often proven a route for cooperation. India and Pakistan have worked to manage the Indus River despite border conflicts and Vietnam, Thailand, Laos and Cambodia have cooperated in the Mekong River Commission.

“Water is a very good medium (for cooperation). It’s typically an apolitical issue that can be dealt with,” said Adeel, who is also director of the U.N. University’s Canada-based Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-IWEH)

A Meeting of UN-Water Senior Programme Managers was held from 2-4 February 2010 at UNU-IWEH in Hamilton, Canada.

250 Million

Regions likely to become drier because of climate change include Central Asia and northern Africa. Up to 250 million people in Africa could suffer extra stress on water supplies by 2020, according to the U.N. panel of climate experts.

“There are many more examples of successful transboundary cooperation than conflict over water,” said Nikhil Chandavarkar, of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs and Secretary of UN-Water.

“We are trying to take the examples of good cooperation — the Mekong, the Indus are examples. Even where there were hostilities in the surrounding countries the agreements did function,” he told Reuters.

Adeel said that water should have a more central role in debates on food security, peace, climate change and recovery from the financial crisis. “Water is central to each of these debates but typically isn’t seen as such,” he said.

And efforts to combat global warming will themselves put more strains on water because of rival economic demands — such as for irrigation, biofuels or hydropower. Adeel noted efforts to manage water supplies by counting how much water goes into products — from beef to coffee.

One study showed that it took 15,000 litres to produce a pair of blue jeans, he said. Making industries aware of water use could help shift to conservation. He said the world might reach a “millennium goal” of halving the proportion of people without access to safe water by 2015 but was failing in a related target of improving sanitation. About 2.8 billion people lack access to basic sanitation.

Source: Alister Doyle, Reuters, 07 Feb 2010

The popular myth of ‘water wars’

[In March 2009] the UN warned that climate change could spark conflicts over water. But the idea of future ‘water wars’ is a myth, says Wendy Barnaby. [In her essay "Do nations go to war over water?" published in Nature, Barnaby describes how she had to drop the idea of writing a book on "water wars" after speaking to water experts].

Neither Egypt, Israel nor Jordan produce enough water for their needs. But while they have fought wars with each other, it has not been over water, says Barnaby. Instead, areas in need of water import food as a ‘virtual’ boost to water supplies. Tony Allan, a scientist at Kings College London, says more [virtual] water flows into the Middle East embedded in grain each year than down the Nile to Egyptian farmers.

International agreements also help solve water shortages, says Barnaby. Israeli and Palestinian water professionals cooperate through a Joint Water Committee. Similarly, the Indus Waters Treaty between India and Pakistan helps diffuse tensions over water. Barnaby argues that although water management will need to adapt in the face of climate change, the basic mechanisms of trade, international agreements and economic development that currently ease water shortages will persist.

Source: SciDev.Net, 25 Mar 2009

Reactions to Barnaby’s essay posted in May 2009 in Nature reveal that not everyone is convinced that “water shortages can and will be resolved through international trade and economic development” and warn that “the potential for water conflict is on the increase”. Unfortunately the full text of the comments, unlike Barnaby’s essay, are only available to subscribers or by pay-per-view (to read all 5 comments would cost non-subscribers US$ 90).

To learn more about water conflict management go to the web site of Oregon State University’s Program in Water Conflict Management and Transformation (PWCMT). Project Director Aaron T. Wolf is a world-renowned expert in the field of political conflict and cooperation in transboundary water management.

2009 World Water Week: Call for Workshop Abstracts and Seminar Proposals

The First Announcement for the 2009 World Water Week in Stockholm, August 16-22, provides  information on the theme, structure, and special focus of the 2009 Week. It also provides guidelines for convening a seminar or side event or submitting an abstract for presentation during the 8 workshops. The theme for 2009 is Water – Responding to Global Change: Accessing Water for the Common Good  with Special Focus on Transboundary Waters.

Download the First Announcement and learn more about the 2009 World Water Week at www.worldwaterweek.org.

World Water Day 2009 – Transboundary Water

In 2009, the theme for World Water Day (22 March) is “Shared Water – Shared Opportunities”. Special focus will be placed on transboundary waters. Nurturing the opportunities for cooperation in transboundary water management can help build mutual respect, understanding and trust among countries and promote peace, security and sustainable economic growth. The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) are the lead agencies for World Water Day 2009.

Campaign materials – desktop wallpapers, mobile content, photo galleries, T-Shirt templates, and banners & buttons – are available on the World Water Day 2009 web site.

Read the UN-Water Thematic Paper: Transboundary Waters – Sharing Benefits, Sharing Responsibilities.

The IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre maintains its own World Water Day web site since 1998. You can add your own WWD event here.

New Treaty Aims to Protect Shared Transboundary Aquifers

Underground aquifers contain 100 times the volume of fresh water found on the Earth’s surface but they have been neglected under international law despite their environmental, social, economic and strategic importance.

On Monday [27 Oct 2008], that will change as the UN General Assembly receives the draft of a new international treaty to safeguard these enormous pools of underground water shared by more than one country.

The draft Convention on Transboundary Aquifers applies to 96 percent of the planet’s freshwater resources – those that are to be found in underground aquifers, most of which straddle national boundaries.

[...] The draft treaty requires that aquifer states not harm existing aquifers and cooperate to prevent and control their pollution. Prepared over the past six years by the UN International Law Commission with the assistance of experts from UNESCO’s International Hydrological Programme, the treaty is intended to fill a gap in the law.

To accompany the draft treaty, UNESCO is publishing the first-ever world map of shared aquifers. It shows the aquifer locations and provides information about the quality of their water and rate of replenishment by rainfall.

So far, the inventory includes 273 shared aquifers – 68 are in the Americas, 38 in Africa, 65 in eastern Europe, 90 in western Europe and 12 in Asia.

The growth in the demand for water since 1950 has been met by the increased use of underground resources. Globally, 65 percent of this water is devoted to irrigation, 25 percent to the supply of drinking water and 10 percent to industry.

Read more: ENS, 23 Oct 2008

Water and Sanitation Looms Behind Food, Energy and Climate Crisis Concludes World Water Week

22 Aug 2008

The World Water Week in Stockholm concluded today with 2400 scientists, leaders from governments and civil society declaring that slow progress on sanitation will cause the world to badly fail the Millennium Development Goals while weak policy, poor management, increasing waste and exploding water demands are pushing the planet towards the tipping point of global water crisis.

Action is crucial, stakes are high and time is running out were key messages coming from the World Water Week in Stockholm. Sanitation and hygiene, climate, water management, ecosystems and business issues were prominent programme focal points throughout the week. SIWI itself released new research that showed half of food is lost after it is produced and called for governments and individuals around the world to reduce by half the amount of food that is lost to ease pressure on water and land resources.

The World Water Week, which included 200 co-convening organisations, witnessed the launch of a number of new and groundbreaking studies, reports and initiatives designed to improve a global situation where billions of people are without sustainable access to safe drinking water or suffering ill health due to poor sanitation, where bio-energy demands are diverting water from food production, and where global climate change is shaking the overall water balance.

Preliminary conclusions taken from the week written by subject experts following the key themes of Sanitation, Water Resources Management, Climate, Environment and Ecosystems, Transboundary Waters, are available at www.worldwaterweek.org.
Some of the studies, reports, initiatives and announcements made during the week included:

  • SIWI, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) released the report, “Saving Water: From Field to Fork – Curbing Losses and Wastage in the Food Chain.”
  • The Asia Development Bank, International Water Association and USAID signed a collaboration agreement entitled “Waterlinks” in Stockholm to collaborate on Water Operation Partnerships initiatives in Asia.
  • The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change presented “The IPCC Technical Report on Water and Climate.”
  • World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) launched 4 new reports (1) UK Water Footprint: the effect our consumption has on water resources, (2) Everything you need to know about the UN Watercourses Convention, (3) Water for life: Lessons for climate change adaptation from better, management of rivers for people and nature, (4) Adapting freshwater to a changing climate.
  • Borealis & Borouge and Uponor launched the first water footprint initiative in the water sector.
  • ITT and Water For People unveiled new partnership to provide clean water, sanitation, and hygiene education in schools.
  • WaterAid presented the findings of its latest research from Madagascar and Zambia on how the aid system can better respond to public health imperatives and get the MDG for child mortality back on track.
  • The Bremen Overseas Research and Development Association (BORDA) launched the handbook “Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems (DEWATS) and Sanitation in Development Countries.”
  • The Japan Water Forum in collaboration with the Water Web Alliance launched a renewal version of the “World Sanitation Project Map” on Google Map/Earth.

Press Releases during World Water Week (available at
http://www.worldwaterweek.org/press/index.asp
)

High quality video content, including expert interviews on water, sanitation, Asia, climate, food and related issues from the World Water Week are available to registered journalists at www.thenewsmarket.com/siwi. For more information, contact Stephanie Blenckner, +4673914 3986, stephanie.blenckner@siwi.org.

Source: SIWI, 22 Aug 2008