Water is Precious, Fragile and Dangerous - It Can Sustain or Destroy
ROME/DHAKA, Jul 31 (IPS) - Water is precious, fragile, and dangerous. It can sustain or destroy.
This very fact has been clearly stated in the Valuing Water Preamble and principles that have been on the table of the fifth round of meetings of the High Level Panel on Water (HLPW), which took place in Bangladesh on 31 July.
The HLPW has been convened by both UN Secretary-General and World Bank Group President, to accelerate a change in the way governments, societies, and the private sector use and manage water.
Bangladesh has been chosen as one of the several countries to host a HLPW consultation meeting that aims at providing the leadership required championing a comprehensive, inclusive, and collaborative way of developing and managing water resources, and improving water and sanitation related services, reports the Global Water Partnership (GWP), which participated in the meeting.
GWP is a global action network with over 3,000 Partner organisations in 183 countries. The network has 86 Country Water Partnerships and 13 Regional Water Partnerships.
The purpose of the consultations is to obtain views from a wide array of country level stakeholders on the proposals from the HLPW on the Valuing Water Preamble and principles. As well, the Consultations aims to build awareness and examine the regional/country level relevance of global perspectives, and provide inputs, options and recommendations that will enhance resolutions from the HLPW.
The HLPW is aimed at developing a set of shared principles to motivate and encourage governments, business and civil society to consider water's multiple values and to guide the transparent incorporation of these values into decision-making by policymakers, communities, and businesses.
Members of the HLPW are Heads of State from Australia, Bangladesh, Hungary, Jordan, Mauritius (co-chair), Mexico (co-chair), Netherlands, Peru, Senegal, South Africa, and Tajikistan.
Water, More than a Substance
The Valuing Water Preamble include eight key values and facts:
Water is more than a substance. It carries multiple values and meanings. These are expressed in spiritual, cultural and emotional terms and found in the heritage of water language, norms and artefacts.
These reflect the deep perceptions, need for connections and participation of all of society.
Making water available for its many uses and users requires tools and institutions to transform it from a natural resource to one providing services and then to recover and return it safely back to nature.
Water and its sources must be respected, because if neglected it has the power to harm, divide or even destroy societies.
2. Making all the values of water explicit gives recognition and a voice to dimensions that
This is more than a cost-benefit analysis and is necessary to make collective decisions and trade-offs. It is important to lead towards sustainable solutions that overcome inequalities and strengthen institutions and infrastructure.
3. The Valuing Water Initiative of the High Level Panel on Water is a collaborative process aimed at building champions and ownership at all levels. It presents a unique and mutually reinforcing opportunity to meet all 17 of the Sustainable Development Goals.
Access to water services is necessary for equitable and inclusive human development.
This is why the United Nations has recognized universal access to clean, safe drinking water and sanitation as a fundamental human right. Increasingly countries and communities have also recognized the rights of nature.
4. Water resources are finite and are under threat from multiple pressures.
History has been defined by people working together to manage water resources and deliver their services to growing populations.
Today, the world's freshwater systems are facing a growing crisis, these challenges are compounded by extreme events, droughts and floods. Demands are growing from a rising population.
Water sources are threatened by overuse, pollution and climate change. Billions of people lack access to safe water and sanitation services. Water is essential for human health, food security, energy supplies, sustaining cities and the environment.
5. Valuing water means recognising and considering all the benefits provided by water that encompass economic, social and ecological dimensions.
It takes many forms appropriate to local circumstances and cultures. Safeguarding the poor, the vulnerable and the environment is required in all instances.
6. Valuing water can help balance the multiple uses and services provided by water and inform decisions about allocating water across uses and services to maximise well-being.
Allocation can take different forms, such as regulation and economic instruments that signal scarcity, avoid waste and promote conservation. Valuing water can make the cost of pollution and waste apparent and promote greater efficiency and better practices.
Any use of water relies on infrastructure, green or grey. Pricing is not synonymous with value but is one way of covering costs, reflecting part of the value of these uses, and ensuring adequate resources and finance for related infrastructure services.
7. Effective water management presents a transformative opportunity to convert risk to resilience, poverty to well-being, and degrading ecosystems to sustainable ones.
This requires finding ways to collaborate across sectors, communities and nations to manage water more effectively.
8. There is an urgent need for action at scale.
We live in a time of tremendous change and innovation, opening a world of possibilities: ending poverty, managing risks, boosting shared prosperity, and underpinning ecological, economic and social well-being.
Bellagio Principles on Valuing Water
The Bellagio Principles on Valuing Water set the following five main principles:
Recognise Water's Multiple Values
Principle 1. Consider the multiple values to different stakeholders in all decisions affecting water.
There are deep interconnections between human needs, economic well-being, and spirituality and the viability of freshwater ecosystems that must be considered by all
Build Trust
Principle 2. Conduct all processes to reconcile values in ways that are equitable, transparent, and inclusive of multiple values.
Trade-offs will be inevitable, especially when water is scarce.
Inaction may also have costs that involve steeper trade-offs. These processes need to be adaptive in the face of local and global changes. Protect the Sources
Principle 3. Value and protect all sources of water, including watersheds, rivers, aquifers and associated ecosystems for current and future generations.
There is growing scarcity of water. Protecting sources and controlling pollutants and other pressures are necessary for sustainable development.
Educate to Empower
Principle 4. Promote education and public awareness about the essential role of water and its intrinsic value.
This will facilitate better-informed decision-making and more sustainable water consumption patterns.
Invest and innovate
Principle 5. Increase investment in institutions, infrastructure, information and innovation to realize the full potential and values of water.
The complexity of the water challenges should spur concerted action, innovation, institutional strengthening and re-alignment. These should harness new ideas, tools and solutions while drawing on existing and indigenous knowledge and practices in ways that nurture the leaders of tomorrow.
The High Level Panel on Water (HLPW) held its previous meetings in South Africa on 30 May; in Tajikistan on 6 July; in Mexico on 24 July, and in Bangladesh on 31 July. Peru will be the venue for the sixth session to be held on 16 August.
The Global Water Partnership is set to plays an active role during the Stockholm World Water Week (27 August to 1 September). This year's theme is "water and waste – reduce and reuse".
© Inter Press Service (2017) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service