Progress on Waste Water, Economics and Role of Operators25/03/2009 |
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| The Istanbul World Water Forum concluded on World Water Day with a landmark Ministerial Declaration. Country governments met in Istanbul for three days, reviewing the forum's outcomes and building upon a UN-type preparatory process with open participation from all ‘major groups', including NGOs, business, youth representatives, trade unions, etc. |
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The International Water Community was not able to make progress on all the numerous topics that were discussed. However, this 5th World Water Forum has achieved significant progress by building shared visions on many important water-related challenges. These include:
The role of waste water collection and treatment to protect public health and economic development in addition to ecosystems has been widely recognised by Forum participants. For the first time in a declaration of all governments, the Istanbul Ministerial Statement aims at developing wastewater collection, treatment and reuse. This complements the sanitation MDG that targets access to toilets only.
AquaFed worked together with a multi-stakeholder consortium to organize the WWF5 sessions on water finance. These sessions attracted far more people than in previous fora and resulted in shared vision on many topics. This was helped significantly by a new simplified approach to financing issues based on the 3 Ts (Tariffs, Taxes and Transfers) and Sustainable Cost-Recovery. These two concepts are included in the Ministerial Statement that is more detailed on financial matters than ever before. They are key tools on the road to attract more funds to the water and sanitation sector.
In Istanbul some continued to advocate for water systems being compulsorily operated by the public sector and, as such, opposed to the Local authorities that claim their freedom to choose between all 5th World Water Forum management options on a case-by-case basis. However, in the Forum sessions on management and governance, it has become better understood that the challenges in the water sector have nothing to do with ownership of operators, but rather with the efficient management of utilities. The 10-hour multistakeholder sessions on optimising roles of public and private sectors allowed for serious discussions in a working atmosphere. Unnecessary polemics were avoided. This resulted in a broad consensus on the need for public and private operators to work together to remove the numerous obstacles they all face and to focus their respective energies on solving water challenges better.
Forum participants discussed progress on the Right to Safe Water and Sanitation in several sessions. Some interest groups unsuccessfully tried to take advantage of the discussions on the right to water to pursue other political goals. A Ministerial Roundtable was specifically dedicated to this matter. It highlighted progress in the world where rights-based approaches have gained a high degree of support since the Mexico World Water Forum. More and more countries are supporting this right and some have started to focus on its implementation. This fits with Aquafed's call in March 2006 for targeting implementation of the Right to Water and Sanitation. The Ministerial Statement, adopted unanimously, does not reflect this growing support from countries and stakeholders.
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