#Water&ConflictNew UN Report: Invest in Water to Prevent Conflict
The new report "Water in the World we Want", prepared by the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) in association with the Global Water Partnership and Canada’s McMaster University, warns that without large new water-related investments many societies worldwide will soon confront rising conflicts over life’s most essential resource. Published in the run-up to the adoption this September of post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the report provides an in-depth analysis of 10 countries to show how achieving water and sanitation-related SDGs offers a rapid, cost effective way to achieve sustainable development. Among top recommendations: Hold the agriculture sector (roughly 70% of world water supplies) and the energy sector (15%) accountable for making efficiencies while transitioning to clean energy including hydropower. The report underscores the need for clearly defined anti-corruption protocols enforced with harsh penalties.
>> More information
>> Download the report
#Post2015DPI launches new website '2015: Time for Global Action'
The Department of Public Information (DPI) launched "2015: Time for Global Action", the UN system-wide campaign that aims to build public support for the sustainable development agenda and show how the issues behind some of this year’s most important events are interconnected. As part of the campaign, a new website is now live and will shortly be available in all six official UN languages. This website will serve as a source of news, as a portal to UN system websites, and as the anchor for a robust social media campaign. It will also link to the extensive civil society mobilization under way through the concurrent Action 2015 campaign.
>> Access the website!
#WaterFootprint Southeast Asia Water Footprint Training Course
UNESCO-IHP Malaysia in collaboration with UNESCO Jakarta, Water Footprint Network, Malaysian Water Partnership and Malaysian Capacity Development Network in Sustainable Water Management (MyCDNet), private organisations, lecturers and NGOs organised the Southeast Asia (SEA) Water Footprint Training Course from 24 to 26 February 2015 at Ampang, Malaysia. Participants previously trained in Pretoria, South Africa, under the Cap-Net UNDP funded initiative in 2013 were the facilitators for invited lead trainer Dr. Ashok Chapagain from the Water Footprint Network. A total of 47 participants took part in this course and had the opportunity to learn about water footprint assessment concepts and methodology; exchange knowledge and good practices in water footprint assessment approaches at the Malaysian level; and promote networking for capacity building in water footprint approaches in water management. Cap-Net selected participants for a video interview on the immediate impacts and their plans to apply the new knowledge back at their home country.
>> More information
#Irrigation&Risk ADB publishes Guidance Note on Irrigation Subsector Risk Assessment
This guidance note aims to explain key features of the irrigation subsector and identify entry points for mapping governance risks. It is part of a series of guidance notes for selected sectors and subsectors of the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The guidance note offers a framework for mapping governance risks to inform the preparation of future country partnership strategies, and supplements ADB’s Guidelines for Implementing the Second Governance and Anticorruption Action Plan. Section 2 highlights the significance of irrigation and its challenges. Section 3 presents a descriptive overview of the key features of the irrigation subsector, mainly for governance specialists involved in risk assessments who may not be familiar with this subsector. Section 4 outlines subsector risks that include priorities of public financial management, procurement, and combating corruption.
>> More information
|
#Gender&Water International Women's Day 2015: Empowering Women, Empowering Humanity
Date: 8 March 2015
Place: Worldwide
International Women’s Day takes place on 8 March each year to reflect on progress made, to call for change and to celebrate acts of courage and determination by ordinary women who have played an extraordinary role in the history of their countries and communities. This year’s theme, "Empowering Women - Empowering Humanity: Picture It!" envisions a world where each woman and girl can exercise her choices, such as participating in politics, getting an education, having an income, and living in societies free from violence and discrimination. In developing nations the responsibility for collecting water every day falls disproportionately on women and girls. On average women in these regions spend 25% of their day collecting water for their families. ’Water is Equality’ is one of this year’s World Water Day topics. To make the linkages between World Water Day 2015 and International Women's Day 2015, UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education, together with Women for Water Partnership, is organizing its annual Women's Day conference with a World Water Day twist: 'Women and Water Make Sustainable Food Security Happen', on 12 March 2015.
>> Access the International Women's Day 2015 website
>> More information on the ’Women and Water Make Sustainable Food Security Happen’ Conference
>> Read more on water and equality at the World Water Day website
#Gender&Post2015 Unlocking multiple benefits for women and girls through sanitation and hygiene in the Post-2015
Date: 13 March 2015
Place: UN Headquarters, New York, United States
Organisers: Permanent Missions of Singapore and Senegal to the United Nations, co-sponsored by the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) and UN Women
This event seeks to (i) raise awareness and break the taboo surrounding sanitation and menstrual hygiene management; and (ii) highlight country case studies to better understand the nature and consequences of the problem, and how to address them. It draws on the Open Work Group on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Secretary General’s Synthesis Report on the Post -2015 development agenda. SDGs 3, 4, 5, 6 and 11 clearly articulate the need for health, education, water and sanitation services and human settlements to be prerequisites to achieving Goal 5 - gender equality in all its forms. The experience-sharing and presentations will be followed by a moderated discussion with Government representatives, policymakers and other practitioners, which will address the relevance of this issue in the post-2015 agenda.
>> More information
#Water&Energy&FoodExpert Group Meeting on the Water, Energy, Food Security Nexus in the Arab Region
Date: 24-25 March 2015
Place: Amman
Organisers: United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) in partnership with the League of Arab States
The objective of the meeting is to increase understanding of the water, energy and food security nexus and foster discussion on how this conceptual framework can support efforts to improve integrated natural resources management and progress towards sustainable development in the Arab region. The meeting is organized back-to-back with the 10th Session of the ESCWA Committee on Energy (Amman, 22-23 March 2015) and the 11th Session of the ESCWA Committee on Water Resources (Amman, 26-27 March 2015).
>> Information note
>> Meeting agenda
|