An Introduction: Integrated Water Resources Management
An Introduction: Integrated Water Resources Management
An Introduction
Course Objectives
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To provide training in key principles and themes of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM). To show IWRMs key linkages to development and to addressing poverty reduction, water and health, and water and food (MDGs). To train trainers to apply IWRM principles for awareness raising and capacity building in advising decision makers and in preparing curriculum in IWRM training. To plan implementation strategy and actions for training of trainers in IWRM at the network and regional level.
About Water .
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A Single Resource has no substitute A Limited Resource A Scarce Resource (or is it?) Has Social, Economic, and Environmental Value (social and environment are recent)
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A Unique Resource
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Every organism, individual, and ecosystem on the planet depends on water for survival. Water impacts all aspects of life on the planet Poor water management and water shortages can lead to disease, malnutrition, reduced economic growth, social instability, conflict, and environmental disaster.
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Resources are scarce Demands are outstripping supplies Environmental/Ecological issues are serious Policy and institutional issues are complicated Current approach is sectoral and fragmented Financing is poor and options are expensive
Decreasing per-capita availability Degrading water quality Increasing competition/conflict within sectors and within society
Urban versus agriculture Haves versus have nots Upstream versus downstream National versus international
Water crisis has steadily moved up the global agenda The process is driven by
water-related health impacts, rapid industrialization, water security, and awakening environmental consciousness
Water is a single, finite resource Water management and development should include stakeholders Water is an economic good Women play a central role in management and conservation of water The Dublin Principles have served as guide for the global water dialogue
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Integrated management of water Water resources economics Political economy of water Water supply and sanitation services Irrigation/drainage NRM and environment
Water pricing and cost recovery Water entitlement and rights Water users empowerment Sharing of water and its benefits Cooperation and conflict resolution Energy
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Economic Analysis -- Single Project or Basin Multi-Objective Planning Comprehensive Multi-Purpose River Basin Planning and Management Strategic Planning and Implementation through IWRM
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IWRM
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A coordinating framework for integrating sectoral needs, water and water-related policy, resource allocation, and management within the context of social, economic, and environmental development objectives.
Why IWRM?
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Globally accepted and makes good sense. Key element in national water policy. Incorporates social and environmental considerations directly into policy and decision making. Directly involves the stakeholders. Is a tool for optimizing investments under tight financing climate.
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A process, not a product Scale independent - applies at all levels of development A tool for self assessment and program evaluation A tool for policy, planning, and management A mechanism for evaluating competing demands, resource allocation, and tradeoffs
Dimensions of IWRM
Infrastructure for management of floods and droughts, multipurpose storage, water quality and source protection Policy/ Institutional framework Management instruments Political economy of water management GWP
Energy
Environmental services
Water Uses
Floods/Droughts
Agriculture
Energy
Industry
Health
Ecosystem Mgt.
Pollution Prev
Coastal Mgt.
Social Development
Economic Development
Floods/Droughts
Water Quality
Agriculture
IWRM
Energy
Ecosystem Mgt.
Pollution Prev
Water Supply
Industry
Health
Coastal Mgt.