Ngarrindjeri country: Murray-Darling Estuary: fresh water stretch near Point Sturt: relative to The Murray-Darling Plan Will Fail : the time for shuffling chairs is over
UNESCO heavies take huge step beyond Wentworth Group Of Concerned Scientists' devastating report
PRESS RELEASE
from:
Vivienne Seedsman Senior
Project Officer - UNESCO Chair in Water Economics and Transboundary Water
Governance
Experts Sign Magna Carta of Water in Geneva
The Founding Signatories include past
winners of the Stockholm World Water Prize and are in Geneva to sign a 'Magna
Carta' of water because they want to transform how we access, use and reuse water.
The Founding Signatories to the 'Geneva Actions on Human Water Security'
include some of the world’s leading water experts.
In signing on to the Geneva
Actions, they are calling for a dedicated Global Human Water Security Fund.
This Fund would annually invest on water actions an amount equal to US1 cent
per person per day, equivalent to USD27 billion given the world’s current
population of 7.5 billion.
The Global Human Water
Security Fund would support three key actions:
1 Secure the
delivery of basic water needs for people
2 Secure improvements in
the condition of watersheds, streams, rivers and aquifers
3 Secure
better water planning, management and governance
"If each of us spent an amount
equal to the cost of just one cup of coffee per year, we could literally change
the world,' said Convener of the Geneva Actions, UNESCO Chair in Water
Economics and Transboundary Water Governance at the Australian National
University, Prof Quentin Grafton (left).
"As water experts, we’ve come together from
across the globe united because we recognise the urgent need for action: We
know what needs to be done, where, when and most importantly, how."
Founding signatory Dr
Cecilia Tortajada, Winner of the prestigious Crystal Drop Award and past
President of the International Water Resources Association, based at the Lee
Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore, added:
"The Geneva Actions need
to be funded. To understand and manage the interdependencies among the various
sectors and their global impacts, and to secure the necessary water resources
in terms of quantity and quality, will require comprehensive planning and
policy implementation, institutional resilience, partnerships across economic
sectors, and innovation in development."
The Founding Signatories recognise
that many of the world’s water borne deaths are caused by poor access to clean
water and inadequate sanitation. Most of the world's rivers are polluted and
are not suitable for direct human use.
Yet, in most locations, water planning,
management and governance is ineffective and fails to respond to human needs
and environmental demands for water.
The time for action is now," said World
Water Prize Winner Professor Asit K. Biswas of the National University of
Singapore.
"The world needs co-ordinated, prioritised and funded actions to
respond to basic water needs, to the deterioration of watersheds and aquifers
and to failures in water governance."
Murray-Darling Estuary: Ngarrindjeri country: polluted salt ocean water immediately outside the river mouth ... photos Philip White ... read previous commentary here.
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