-advertisements-

The Water Footprint is


- advertisements -
Spacer
Climate and Water
Climate and Water > Water Essential Link in Climate Change Context

Water Essential Link in Climate Change Context

  14/12/2010
World economic growth and social welfare depend on sustainable management of the world's water resources within the context of climate change, said Global Water Partnership (GWP) chair Dr Letitia A. Obeng in a statement to a high-level session of the world climate-change conference on Friday 10th December 2010.


Letita Obeng
"When world leaders speak about climate, they invariably speak of water - of floods, droughts and failed harvests - and express their alarm. They are right to do so: because climate change is primarily about water," the statement says. The statement calls on the 193 countries that participate in the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to make sustainable water resources management and disaster risk management an integral part of the global response to climate change.


The statement responds to the objections by climate negotiators that sectoral issues complicate negotiations by arguing that water resources management is not a sector, but a "cross-cutting concern for the achievement of mitigation objectives around forestry, agriculture, and energy, many of which rely on [water's] availability." The statement continues, "The water supply and sanitation sector, agriculture or any other sector should not be singled out for sectoral discussion. But the world's water resources and their management should be singled out because the potential impact of climate change on society will, in many cases, be transmitted through the medium of water."


"Failure to recognize the role of sustainable water management in adapting to climate change could prove disastrous to people's livelihoods and economic development," said Dr. Obeng in comments delivered earlier in the week. The GWP statement outlines the potential consequences of inaction including insufficient water to support economic growth and the world's food supply.


"GWP's delegation came to Cancun to highlight the seamless link among water resources management, climate change, and sustainable development," said Dr. Obeng, noting that GWP's statement reflected the views of similar agencies. GWP is a network of more than 2,300 partner organisations, works in nearly 80 countries, and has observer status to the UNFCCC as an intergovernmental organisation.


"We have to remember that the ones most vulnerable to the impact of climate change are those in lower income countries, indigenous groups, and those in extreme poverty," said Dr. Obeng. "World leaders need to understand that investments in sustainable water resources management will deliver important benefits to vulnerable populations today, while strengthening resilience to longer-term climate risks.

 







Read more about:  energy  sanitation  conference  climate 
Supplier: Global Water Partnership (GWP)

More news from this supplier:
International Water Law Scholarship Programme
Engaging Students in Rainwater Harvesting
Water is Cross-cutting Resource
‘Global Climate Challenge Is Global Water Challenge’
Technical Committee Chair GWP
Handbook on Integrated Water Resources Management in Basins
Pushing Water Higher up the Development Agenda


Opportunities In Asia’s Fast-Growing Environmental Protection Markets
WaterLink International will Cease to Exist
Water & Wastewater Balancing Act at EWWMC
Portable Water Quality Monitoring System
Toxic Mine Waste Threatens Waters
Drought Happens
Blue Economy to Protect Mediterranean Sea and Oceans
Mine Wastewater Pump Deliveries
Danish Nationwide Sea Level Rise Flooding Tool
Milestone Stormwater Flooding Project Completed


     


Comments (0):
There are no comments yet.
Make your comment:
Name:
Your comment:
Type over the 2 words (or number) from the picture
 
Popular news Events Job ads
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
 

Interactive


Stuart Orr: Water - the Solvable Crisis

 

In a TEDx WWF session held in Geneva, Switzerland, Stuart Orr talked about water which is a solvable crisis. Stuart Orr is freshwater programme director for WWF International.

 

 Last 5 items:
 Stuart Orr: Water - the Solvable Crisis
 Microbubbles Assisting Treatment Process
 Mangroves Recover from Spill
 Reusing Greywater and Stormwater in California
 TEDx Woods Hole: Ecological Design and Water Reuse
 
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer
Spacer