Agenda 21
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Chapter 18. Protection of the Quality and Supply of Freshwater Resources:
Application of Integrated Approaches to the Development, Management and Use of Water
Resources
Introduction
18.1. Freshwater resources are an essential component of the earth's hydrosphere and an
indispensable part of all terrestrial ecosystems. The freshwater environment is
characterized by the hydrological cycle, including floods and droughts, which in some
regions have become more extreme and dramatic in their consequences. Global climate change
and atmospheric pollution could also have an impact on freshwater resources and their
availability and, through sea-level rise, threaten low-lying coastal areas and small
island ecosystems.
18.2. Water is needed in all aspects of life. The general objective is to make certain
that adequate supplies of water of good quality are maintained for the entire population
of this planet, while preserving the hydrological, biological and chemical functions of
ecosystems, adapting human activities within the capacity limits of nature and combating
vectors of water-related diseases. Innovative technologies, including the improvement of
indigenous technologies, are needed to fully utilize limited water resources and to
safeguard those resources against pollution.
18.3. The widespread scarcity, gradual destruction and aggravated pollution of
freshwater resources in many world regions, along with the progressive encroachment of
incompatible activities, demand integrated water resources planning and management. Such
integration must cover all types of interrelated freshwater bodies, including both surface
water and groundwater, and duly consider water quantity and quality aspects. The
multisectoral nature of water resources development in the context of socio-economic
development must be recognized, as well as the multi-interest utilization of water
resources for water supply and sanitation, agriculture, industry, urban development,
hydropower generation, inland fisheries, transportation, recreation, low and flat lands
management and other activities. Rational water utilization schemes for the development of
surface and underground water-supply sources and other potential sources have to be
supported by concurrent water conservation and wastage minimization measures. Priority,
however, must be accorded to flood prevention and control measures, as well as
sedimentation control, where required.
18.4. Transboundary water resources and their use are of great importance to riparian
States. In this connection, cooperation among those States may be desirable in conformity
with existing agreements and/or other relevant arrangements, taking into account the
interests of all riparian States concerned.
18.5. The following programme areas are proposed for the freshwater sector:
(a) Integrated water resources development and management;
(b) Water resources assessment;
(c) Protection of water resources, water quality and aquatic ecosystems;
(d) Drinking-water supply and sanitation;
(e) Water and sustainable urban development;
(f) Water for sustainable food production and rural development;
(g) Impacts of climate change on water resources.
Programme Areas
A. Integrated water resources development and management
Basis for action
18.6. The extent to which water resources development contributes to economic
productivity and social well-being is not usually appreciated, although all social and
economic activities rely heavily on the supply and quality of freshwater. As populations
and economic activities grow, many countries are rapidly reaching conditions of water
scarcity or facing limits to economic development. Water demands are increasing rapidly,
with 70-80 per cent required for irrigation, less than 20 per cent for industry and a mere
6 per cent for domestic consumption. The holistic management of freshwater as a finite and
vulnerable resource, and the integration of sectoral water plans and programmes within the
framework of national economic and social policy, are of paramount importance for action
in the 1990s and beyond. The fragmentation of responsibilities for water resources
development among sectoral agencies is proving, however, to be an even greater impediment
to promoting integrated water management than had been anticipated. Effective
implementation and coordination mechanisms are required.
Objectives
18.7. The overall objective is to satisfy the freshwater needs of all countries for
their sustainable development.
18.8. Integrated water resources management is based on the perception of water as an
integral part of the ecosystem, a natural resource and a social and economic good, whose
quantity and quality determine the nature of its utilization. To this end, water resources
have to be protected, taking into account the functioning of aquatic ecosystems and the
perenniality of the resource, in order to satisfy and reconcile needs for water in human
activities. In developing and using water resources, priority has to be given to the
satisfaction of basic needs and the safeguarding of ecosystems. Beyond these requirements,
however, water users should be charged appropriately.
18.9. Integrated water resources management, including the integration of land- and
water-related aspects, should be carried out at the level of the catchment basin or
sub-basin. Four principal objectives should be pursued, as follows:
(a) To promote a dynamic, interactive, iterative and multisectoral approach to water
resources management, including the identification and protection of potential sources of
freshwater supply, that integrates technological, socio-economic, environmental and human
health considerations;
(b) To plan for the sustainable and rational utilization, protection, conservation and
management of water resources based on community needs and priorities within the framework
of national economic development policy;
(c) To design, implement and evaluate projects and programmes that are both
economically efficient and socially appropriate within clearly defined strategies, based
on an approach of full public participation, including that of women, youth, indigenous
people, local communities, in water management policy-making and decision-making;
(d) To identify and strengthen or develop, as required, in particular in developing
countries, the appropriate institutional, legal and financial mechanisms to ensure that
water policy and its implementation are a catalyst for sustainable social progress and
economic growth.
18.10. In the case of transboundary water resources, there is a need for riparian
States to formulate water resources strategies, prepare water resources action programmes
and consider, where appropriate, the harmonization of those strategies and action
programmes.
18.11. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could set the following targets:
(a) By the year 2000:
(i) To have designed and initiated costed and targeted national action programmes, and
have put in place appropriate institutional structures and legal instruments;
(ii) To have established efficient water-use programmes to attain sustainable resource
utilization patterns;
(b) By the year 2025:
(i) To have achieved subsectoral targets of all freshwater programme areas.
It is understood that the fulfilment of the targets quantified in (i) and (ii) above
will depend upon new and additional financial resources that will be made available to
developing countries in accordance with the relevant provisions of General Assembly
resolution 44/228.
Activities
18.12. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities to improve
integrated water resources management:
(a) Formulation of costed and targeted national action plans and investment programmes;
(b) Integration of measures for the protection and conservation of potential sources of
freshwater supply, including the inventorying of water resources, with land-use planning,
forest resource utilization, protection of mountain slopes and riverbanks and other
relevant development and conservation activities;
(c) Development of interactive databases, forecasting models, economic planning models
and methods for water management and planning, including environmental impact assessment
methods;
(d) Optimization of water resources allocation under physical and socio-economic
constraints;
(e) Implementation of allocation decisions through demand management, pricing
mechanisms and regulatory measures;
(f) Flood and drought management, including risk analysis and environmental and social
impact assessment;
(g) Promotion of schemes for rational water use through public awareness-raising,
educational programmes and levying of water tariffs and other economic instruments;
(h) Mobilization of water resources, particularly in arid and semi-arid areas;
(i) Promotion of international scientific research cooperation on freshwater resources;
(j) Development of new and alternative sources of water-supply such as sea-water
desalination, artificial groundwater recharge, use of marginal-quality water, waste-water
reuse and water recycling; (k) Integration of water (including surface and underground
water resources) quantity and quality management;
(l) Promotion of water conservation through improved water-use efficiency and wastage
minimization schemes for all users, including the development of water-saving devices;
(m) Support to water-users groups to optimize local water resources management;
(n) Development of public participatory techniques and their implementation in
decision-making, particularly the enhancement of the role of women in water resources
planning and management;
(o) Development and strengthening, as appropriate, of cooperation, including mechanisms
where appropriate, at all levels concerned, namely:
(i) At the lowest appropriate level, delegation of water resources management,
generally, to such a level, in accordance with national legislation, including
decentralization of government services to local authorities, private enterprises and
communities;
(ii) At the national level, integrated water resources planning and management in the
framework of the national planning process and, where appropriate, establishment of
independent regulation and monitoring of freshwater, based on national legislation and
economic measures;
(iii) At the regional level, consideration, where appropriate, of the harmonization of
national strategies and action programmes;
(iv) At the global level, improved delineation of responsibilities, division of labour
and coordination of international organizations and programmes, including facilitating
discussions and sharing of experiences in areas related to water resources management;
(p) Dissemination of information, including operational guidelines, and promotion of
education for water users, including the consideration by the United Nations of a World
Water Day.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.13. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $115 million from
the international community on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative and order
of magnitude estimates only and have not been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and
financial terms, including any that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.14. The development of interactive databases, forecasting methods and economic
planning models appropriate to the task of managing water resources in an efficient and
sustainable manner will require the application of new techniques such as geographical
information systems and expert systems to gather, assimilate, analyse and display
multisectoral information and to optimize decision-making. In addition, the development of
new and alternative sources of water-supply and low-cost water technologies will require
innovative applied research. This will involve the transfer, adaptation and diffusion of
new techniques and technology among developing countries, as well as the development of
endogenous capacity, for the purpose of being able to deal with the added dimension of
integrating engineering, economic, environmental and social aspects of water resources
management and predicting the effects in terms of human impact.
18.15. Pursuant to the recognition of water as a social and economic good, the various
available options for charging water users (including domestic, urban, industrial and
agricultural water-user groups) have to be further evaluated and field-tested. Further
development is required for economic instruments that take into account opportunity costs
and environmental externalities. Field studies on the willingness to pay should be
conducted in rural and urban situations.
18.16. Water resources development and management should be planned in an integrated
manner, taking into account long-term planning needs as well as those with narrower
horizons, that is to say, they should incorporate environmental, economic and social
considerations based on the principle of sustainability; include the requirements of all
users as well as those relating to the prevention and mitigation of water-related hazards;
and constitute an integral part of the socio-economic development planning process. A
prerequisite for the sustainable management of water as a scarce vulnerable resource is
the obligation to acknowledge in all planning and development its full costs. Planning
considerations should reflect benefits investment, environmental protection and operation
costs, as well as the opportunity costs reflecting the most valuable alternative use of
water. Actual charging need not necessarily burden all beneficiaries with the consequences
of those considerations. Charging mechanisms should, however, reflect as far as possible
both the true cost of water when used as an economic good and the ability of the
communities to pay.
18.17. The role of water as a social, economic and life-sustaining good should be
reflected in demand management mechanisms and implemented through water conservation and
reuse, resource assessment and financial instruments.
18.18. The setting afresh of priorities for private and public investment strategies
should take into account (a) maximum utilization of existing projects, through
maintenance, rehabilitation and optimal operation; (b) new or alternative clean
technologies; and (c) environmentally and socially benign hydropower.
(c) Human resources development
18.19. The delegation of water resources management to the lowest appropriate level
necessitates educating and training water management staff at all levels and ensuring that
women participate equally in the education and training programmes. Particular emphasis
has to be placed on the introduction of public participatory techniques, including
enhancement of the role of women, youth, indigenous people and local communities. Skills
related to various water management functions have to be developed by municipal government
and water authorities, as well as in the private sector, local/national non-governmental
organizations, cooperatives, corporations and other water-user groups. Education of the
public regarding the importance of water and its proper management is also needed.
18.20. To implement these principles, communities need to have adequate capacities.
Those who establish the framework for water development and management at any level,
whether international, national or local, need to ensure that the means exist to build
those capacities. The means will vary from case to case. They usually include:
(a) Awareness-creation programmes, including mobilizing commitment and support at all
levels and initiating global and local action to promote such programmes;
(b) Training of water managers at all levels so that they have an appropriate
understanding of all the elements necessary for their decision-making;
(c) Strengthening of training capacities in developing countries;
(d) Appropriate training of the necessary professionals, including extension workers;
(e) Improvement of career structures;
(f) Sharing of appropriate knowledge and technology, both for the collection of data
and for the implementation of planned development including non-polluting technologies and
the knowledge needed to extract the best performance from the existing investment system.
(d) Capacity-building
18.21. Institutional capacity for implementing integrated water management should be
reviewed and developed when there is a clear demand. Existing administrative structures
will often be quite capable of achieving local water resources management, but the need
may arise for new institutions based upon the perspective, for example, of river catchment
areas, district development councils and local community committees. Although water is
managed at various levels in the socio-political system, demand-driven management requires
the development of water-related institutions at appropriate levels, taking into account
the need for integration with land-use management.
18.22. In creating the enabling environment for lowest-appropriate-level management,
the role of Government includes mobilization of financial and human resources,
legislation, standard-setting and other regulatory functions, monitoring and assessment of
the use of water and land resources, and creating of opportunities for public
participation. International agencies and donors have an important role to play in
providing support to developing countries in creating the required enabling environment
for integrated water resources management. This should include, as appropriate, donor
support to local levels in developing countries, including community-based institutions,
non-governmental organizations and women's groups.
B. Water resources assessment
Basis for action
18.23. Water resources assessment, including the identification of potential sources of
freshwater supply, comprises the continuing determination of sources, extent,
dependability and quality of water resources and of the human activities that affect those
resources. Such assessment constitutes the practical basis for their sustainable
management and a prerequisite for evaluation of the possibilities for their development.
There is, however, growing concern that at a time when more precise and reliable
information is needed about water resources, hydrologic services and related bodies are
less able than before to provide this information, especially information on groundwater
and water quality. Major impediments are the lack of financial resources for water
resources assessment, the fragmented nature of hydrologic services and the insufficient
numbers of qualified staff. At the same time, the advancing technology for data capture
and management is increasingly difficult to access for developing countries. Establishment
of national databases is, however, vital to water resources assessment and to mitigation
of the effects of floods, droughts, desertification and pollution.
Objectives
18.24. Based upon the Mar del Plata Action Plan, this programme area has been extended
into the 1990s and beyond with the overall objective of ensuring the assessment and
forecasting of the quantity and quality of water resources, in order to estimate the total
quantity of water resources available and their future supply potential, to determine
their current quality status, to predict possible conflicts between supply and demand and
to provide a scientific database for rational water resources utilization. 18.25. Five
specific objectives have been set accordingly, as follows:
(a) To make available to all countries water resources assessment technology that is
appropriate to their needs, irrespective of their level of development, including methods
for the impact assessment of climate change on freshwaters;
(b) To have all countries, according to their financial means, allocate to water
resources assessment financial resources in line with the economic and social needs for
water resources data;
(c) To ensure that the assessment information is fully utilized in the development of
water management policies;
(d) To have all countries establish the institutional arrangements needed to ensure the
efficient collection, processing, storage, retrieval and dissemination to users of
information about the quality and quantity of available water resources at the level of
catchments and groundwater aquifers in an integrated manner;
(e) To have sufficient numbers of appropriately qualified and capable staff recruited
and retained by water resources assessment agencies and provided with the training and
retraining they will need to carry out their responsibilities successfully.
18.26. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including cooperation with the United Nations and
other relevant organizations, as appropriate, could set the following targets:
(a) By the year 2000, to have studied in detail the feasibility of installing water
resources assessment services;
(b) As a long-term target, to have fully operational services available based upon
high-density hydrometric networks.
Activities
18.27. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could undertake the following activities:
(a) Institutional framework:
(i) Establish appropriate policy frameworks and national priorities;
(ii) Establish and strengthen the institutional capabilities of countries, including
legislative and regulatory arrangements, that are required to ensure the adequate
assessment of their water resources and the provision of flood and drought forecasting
services;
(iii) Establish and maintain effective cooperation at the national level between the
various agencies responsible for the collection, storage and analysis of hydrologic data;
(iv) Cooperate in the assessment of transboundary water resources, subject to the prior
agreement of each riparian State concerned;
(b) Data systems:
(i) Review existing data-collection networks and assess their adequacy, including those
that provide real-time data for flood and drought forecasting;
(ii) Improve networks to meet accepted guidelines for the provision of data on water
quantity and quality for surface and groundwater, as well as relevant land-use data;
(iii) Apply standards and other means to ensure data compatibility;
(iv) Upgrade facilities and procedures used to store, process and analyse hydrologic
data and make such data and the forecasts derived from them available to potential users;
(v) Establish databases on the availability of all types of hydrologic data at the
national level;
(vi) Implement "data rescue" operations, for example, establishment of
national archives of water resources;
(vii) Implement appropriate well-tried techniques for the processing of hydrologic
data;
(viii) Derive area-related estimates from point hydrologic data;
(ix) Assimilate remotely sensed data and the use, where appropriate, of geographical
information systems;
(c) Data dissemination:
(i) Identify the need for water resources data for various planning purposes;
(ii) Analyse and present data and information on water resources in the forms required
for planning and management of countries' socio-economic development and for use in
environmental protection strategies and in the design and operation of specific
water-related projects;
(iii) Provide forecasts and warnings of flood and drought to the general public and
civil defence;
(d) Research and development:
(i) Establish or strengthen research and development programmes at the national,
subregional, regional and international levels in support of water resources assessment
activities;
(ii) Monitor research and development activities to ensure that they make full use of
local expertise and other local resources and that they are appropriate for the needs of
the country or countries concerned.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.28. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $355 million,
including about $145 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.29. Important research needs include (a) development of global hydrologic models in
support of analysis of climate change impact and of macroscale water resources assessment;
(b) closing of the gap between terrestrial hydrology and ecology at different scales,
including the critical water-related processes behind loss of vegetation and land
degradation and its restoration; and (c) study of the key processes in water-quality
genesis, closing the gap between hydrologic flows and biogeochemical processes. The
research models should build upon hydrologic balance studies and also include the
consumptive use of water. This approach should also, when appropriate, be applied at the
catchment level.
18.30. Water resources assessment necessitates the strengthening of existing systems
for technology transfer, adaptation and diffusion, and the development of new technology
for use under field conditions, as well as the development of endogenous capacity. Prior
to inaugurating the above activities, it is necessary to prepare catalogues of the water
resources information held by government services, the private sector, educational
institutes, consultants, local water-use organizations and others.
(c) Human resource development
18.31. Water resources assessment requires the establishment and maintenance of a body
of well-trained and motivated staff sufficient in number to undertake the above
activities. Education and training programmes designed to ensure an adequate supply of
these trained personnel should be established or strengthened at the local, national,
subregional or regional level. In addition, the provision of attractive terms of
employment and career paths for professional and technical staff should be encouraged.
Human resource needs should be monitored periodically, including all levels of employment.
Plans have to be established to meet those needs through education and training
opportunities and international programmes of courses and conferences.
18.32. Because well-trained people are particularly important to water resources
assessment and hydrologic forecasting, personnel matters should receive special attention
in this area. The aim should be to attract and retain personnel to work on water resources
assessment who are sufficient in number and adequate in their level of education to ensure
the effective implementation of the activities that are planned. Education may be called
for at both the national and the international level, with adequate terms of employment
being a national responsibility.
18.33. Recommended actions include:
(a) Identifying education and training needs geared to the specific requirements of
countries;
(b) Establishing and strengthening education and training programmes on water-related
topics, within an environmental and developmental context, for all categories of staff
involved in water resources assessment activities, using advanced educational technology,
where appropriate, and involving both men and women;
(c) Developing sound recruitment, personnel and pay policies for staff of national and
local water agencies.
(d) Capacity-building
18.34. The conduct of water resources assessment on the basis of operational national
hydrometric networks requires an enabling environment at all levels. The following
national support action is necessary for enhanced national capacities:
(a) Review of the legislative and regulatory basis of water resources assessment;
(b) Facilitation of close collaboration among water sector agencies, particularly
between information producers and users;
(c) Implementation of water management policies based upon realistic appraisals of
water resources conditions and trends;
(d) Strengthening of the managerial capabilities of water-user groups, including women,
youth, indigenous people and local communities, to improve water-use efficiency at the
local level.
C. Protection of water resources, water quality and aquatic ecosystems
Basis for action
18.35. Freshwater is a unitary resource. Long-term development of global freshwater
requires holistic management of resources and a recognition of the interconnectedness of
the elements related to freshwater and freshwater quality. There are few regions of the
world that are still exempt from problems of loss of potential sources of freshwater
supply, degraded water quality and pollution of surface and groundwater sources. Major
problems affecting the water quality of rivers and lakes arise, in variable order of
importance according to different situations, from inadequately treated domestic sewage,
inadequate controls on the discharges of industrial waste waters, loss and destruction of
catchment areas, ill-considered siting of industrial plants, deforestation, uncontrolled
shifting cultivation and poor agricultural practices. This gives rise to the leaching of
nutrients and pesticides. Aquatic ecosystems are disturbed and living freshwater resources
are threatened. Under certain circumstances, aquatic ecosystems are also affected by
agricultural water resource development projects such as dams, river diversions, water
installations and irrigation schemes. Erosion, sedimentation, deforestation and
desertification have led to increased land degradation, and the creation of reservoirs
has, in some cases, resulted in adverse effects on ecosystems. Many of these problems have
arisen from a development model that is environmentally destructive and from a lack of
public awareness and education about surface and groundwater resource protection.
Ecological and human health effects are the measurable consequences, although the means to
monitor them are inadequate or non-existent in many countries. There is a widespread lack
of perception of the linkages between the development, management, use and treatment of
water resources and aquatic ecosystems. A preventive approach, where appropriate, is
crucial to the avoiding of costly subsequent measures to rehabilitate, treat and develop
new water supplies.
Objectives
18.36. The complex interconnectedness of freshwater systems demands that freshwater
management be holistic (taking a catchment management approach) and based on a balanced
consideration of the needs of people and the environment. The Mar del Plata Action Plan
has already recognized the intrinsic linkage between water resource development projects
and their significant physical, chemical, biological, health and socio-economic
repercussions. The overall environmental health objective was set as follows: "to
evaluate the consequences which the various users of water have on the environment, to
support measures aimed at controlling water-related diseases, and to protect
ecosystems". 1/
18.37. The extent and severity of contamination of unsaturated zones and aquifers have
long been underestimated owing to the relative inaccessibility of aquifers and the lack of
reliable information on aquifer systems. The protection of groundwater is therefore an
essential element of water resource management.
18.38. Three objectives will have to be pursued concurrently to integrate water-quality
elements into water resource management:
(a) Maintenance of ecosystem integrity, according to a management principle of
preserving aquatic ecosystems, including living resources, and of effectively protecting
them from any form of degradation on a drainage basin basis;
(b) Public health protection, a task requiring not only the provision of safe
drinking-water but also the control of disease vectors in the aquatic environment;
(c) Human resources development, a key to capacity-building and a prerequisite for
implementing water-quality management.
18.39. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could set the following targets:
(a) To identify the surface and groundwater resources that could be developed for use
on a sustainable basis and other major developable water-dependent resources and,
simultaneously, to initiate programmes for the protection, conservation and rational use
of these resources on a sustainable basis;
(b) To identify all potential sources of water-supply and prepared outlines for their
protection, conservation and rational use;
(c) To initiate effective water pollution prevention and control programmes, based on
an appropriate mixture of pollution reduction-at-source strategies, environmental impact
assessments and enforceable standards for major point-source discharges and high-risk
non-point sources, commensurate with their socio-economic development;
(d) To participate, as far as appropriate, in international water-quality monitoring
and management programmes such as the Global Water Quality Monitoring Programme
(GEMS/WATER), the UNEP Environmentally Sound Management of Inland Waters (EMINWA), the FAO
regional inland fishery bodies, and the Convention on Wetlands of International Importance
Especially as Waterfowl Habitat (Ramsar Convention);
(e) To reduce the prevalence of water-associated diseases, starting with the
eradication of dracunculiasis (guinea worm disease) and onchocerciasis (river blindness)
by the year 2000;
(f) To establish, according to capacities and needs, biological, health, physical and
chemical quality criteria for all water bodies (surface and groundwater), with a view to
an ongoing improvement of water quality;
(g) To adopt an integrated approach to environmentally sustainable management of water
resources, including the protection of aquatic ecosystems and freshwater living resources;
(h) To put in place strategies for the environmentally sound management of freshwaters
and related coastal ecosystems, including consideration of fisheries, aquaculture, animal
grazing, agricultural activities and biodiversity.
Activities
18.40. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities:
(a) Water resources protection and conservation:
(i) Establishment and strengthening of technical and institutional capacities to
identify and protect potential sources of water-supply within all sectors of society;
(ii) Identification of potential sources of water-supply and preparation of national
profiles;
(iii) Preparation of national plans for water resources protection and conservation;
(iv) Rehabilitation of important, but degraded, catchment areas, particularly on small
islands;
(v) Strengthening of administrative and legislative measures to prevent encroachment on
existing and potentially usable catchment areas;
(b) Water pollution prevention and control:
(i) Application of the "polluter pays" principle, where appropriate, to all
kinds of sources, including on-site and off-site sanitation;
(ii) Promotion of the construction of treatment facilities for domestic sewage and
industrial effluents and the development of appropriate technologies, taking into account
sound traditional and indigenous practices;
(iii) Establishment of standards for the discharge of effluents and for the receiving
waters;
(iv) Introduction of the precautionary approach in water-quality management, where
appropriate, with a focus on pollution minimization and prevention through use of new
technologies, product and process change, pollution reduction at source and effluent
reuse, recycling and recovery, treatment and environmentally safe disposal;
(v) Mandatory environmental impact assessment of all major water resource development
projects potentially impairing water quality and aquatic ecosystems, combined with the
delineation of appropriate remedial measures and a strengthened control of new industrial
installations, solid waste landfills and infrastructure development projects;
(vi) Use of risk assessment and risk management in reaching decisions in this area and
ensuring compliance with those decisions;
(vii) Identification and application of best environmental practices at reasonable cost
to avoid diffuse pollution, namely, through a limited, rational and planned use of
nitrogenous fertilizers and other agrochemicals (pesticides, herbicides) in agricultural
practices;
(viii) Encouragement and promotion of the use of adequately treated and purified waste
waters in agriculture, aquaculture, industry and other sectors;
(c) Development and application of clean technology:
(i) Control of industrial waste discharges, including low-waste production technologies
and water recirculation, in an integrated manner and through application of precautionary
measures derived from a broad-based life-cycle analysis;
(ii) Treatment of municipal waste water for safe reuse in agriculture and aquaculture;
(iii) Development of biotechnology, inter alia, for waste treatment, production of
biofertilizers and other activities; (iv) Development of appropriate methods for water
pollution control, taking into account sound traditional and indigenous practices;
(d) Groundwater protection:
(i) Development of agricultural practices that do not degrade groundwaters;
(ii) Application of the necessary measures to mitigate saline intrusion into aquifers
of small islands and coastal plains as a consequence of sealevel rise or overexploitation
of coastal aquifers;
(iii) Prevention of aquifer pollution through the regulation of toxic substances that
permeate the ground and the establishment of protection zones in groundwater recharge and
abstraction areas;
(iv) Design and management of landfills based upon sound hydrogeologic information and
impact assessment, using the best practicable and best available technology;
(v) Promotion of measures to improve the safety and integrity of wells and well-head
areas to reduce intrusion of biological pathogens and hazardous chemicals into aquifers at
well sites;
(vi) Water-quality monitoring, as needed, of surface and groundwaters potentially
affected by sites storing toxic and hazardous materials;
(e) Protection of aquatic ecosystems:
(i) Rehabilitation of polluted and degraded water bodies to restore aquatic habitats
and ecosystems;
(ii) Rehabilitation programmes for agricultural lands and for other users, taking into
account equivalent action for the protection and use of groundwater resources important
for agricultural productivity and for the biodiversity of the tropics;
(iii) Conservation and protection of wetlands (owing to their ecological and habitat
importance for many species), taking into account social and economic factors;
(iv) Control of noxious aquatic species that may destroy some other water species;
(f) Protection of freshwater living resources:
(i) Control and monitoring of water quality to allow for the sustainable development of
inland fisheries;
(ii) Protection of ecosystems from pollution and degradation for the development of
freshwater aquaculture projects;
(g) Monitoring and surveillance of water resources and waters receiving wastes:
(i) Establishment of networks for the monitoring and continuous surveillance of waters
receiving wastes and of point and diffuse sources of pollution;
(ii) Promotion and extension of the application of environmental impact assessments of
geographical information systems;
(iii) Surveillance of pollution sources to improve compliance with standards and
regulations and to regulate the issue of discharge permits;
(iv) Monitoring of the utilization of chemicals in agriculture that may have an adverse
environmental effect;
(v) Rational land use to prevent land degradation, erosion and siltation of lakes and
other water bodies;
(h) Development of national and international legal instruments that may be required to
protect the quality of water resources, as appropriate, particularly for:
(i) Monitoring and control of pollution and its effects in national and transboundary
waters;
(ii) Control of long-range atmospheric transport of pollutants;
(iii) Control of accidental and/or deliberate spills in national and/or transboundary
water bodies;
(iv) Environmental impact assessment.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.41. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $1 billion,
including about $340 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.42. States should undertake cooperative research projects to develop solutions to
technical problems that are appropriate for the conditions in each watershed or country.
States should consider strengthening and developing national research centres linked
through networks and supported by regional water research institutes. The North-South
twinning of research centres and field studies by international water research
institutions should be actively promoted. It is important that a minimum percentage of
funds for water resource development projects is allocated to research and development,
particularly in externally funded projects.
18.43. Monitoring and assessment of complex aquatic systems often require
multidisciplinary studies involving several institutions and scientists in a joint
programme. International water-quality programmes, such as GEMS/WATER, should be oriented
towards the water-quality of developing countries. User-friendly software and Geographical
Information Systems (GIS) and Global Resource Information Database (GRID) methods should
be developed for the handling, analysis and interpretation of monitoring data and for the
preparation of management strategies.
(c) Human resource development
18.44. Innovative approaches should be adopted for professional and managerial staff
training in order to cope with changing needs and challenges. Flexibility and adaptability
regarding emerging water pollution issues should be developed. Training activities should
be undertaken periodically at all levels within the organizations responsible for
water-quality management and innovative teaching techniques adopted for specific aspects
of water-quality monitoring and control, including development of training skills,
in-service training, problem-solving workshops and refresher training courses.
18.45. Suitable approaches include the strengthening and improvement of the human
resource capabilities of local Governments in managing water protection, treatment and
use, particularly in urban areas, and the establishment of national and regional technical
and engineering courses on the subjects of water-quality protection and control at
existing schools and education/training courses on water resources protection and
conservation for laboratory and field technicians, women and other water-user groups.
(d) Capacity-building
18.46. The effective protection of water resources and ecosystems from pollution
requires considerable upgrading of most countries' present capacities. Water-quality
management programmes require a certain minimum infrastructure and staff to identify and
implement technical solutions and to enforce regulatory action. One of the key problems
today and for the future is the sustained operation and maintenance of these facilities.
In order not to allow resources gained from previous investments to deteriorate further,
immediate action is required in a number of areas.
D. Drinking-water supply and sanitation
Basis for action
18.47. Safe water-supplies and environmental sanitation are vital for protecting the
environment, improving health and alleviating poverty. Safe water is also crucial to many
traditional and cultural activities. An estimated 80 per cent of all diseases and over one
third of deaths in developing countries are caused by the consumption of contaminated
water, and on average as much as one tenth of each person's productive time is sacrificed
to water-related diseases. Concerted efforts during the 1980s brought water and sanitation
services to hundreds of millions of the world's poorest people. The most outstanding of
these efforts was the launching in 1981 of the International Drinking Water Supply and
Sanitation Decade, which resulted from the Mar del Plata Action Plan adopted by the United
Nations Water Conference in 1977. The commonly agreed premise was that "all peoples,
whatever their stage of development and their social and economic conditions, have the
right to have access to drinking water in quantities and of a quality equal to their basic
needs". 2/ The target of the Decade was to provide safe drinking-water and sanitation
to underserved urban and rural areas by 1990, but even the unprecedented progress achieved
during the Decade was not enough. One in three people in the developing world still lacks
these two most basic requirements for health and dignity. It is also recognized that human
excreta and sewage are important causes of the deterioration of water-quality in
developing countries, and the introduction of available technologies, including
appropriate technologies, and the construction of sewage treatment facilities could bring
significant improvement.
Objectives
18.48. The New Delhi Statement (adopted at the Global Consultation on Safe Water and
Sanitation for the 1990s, which was held in New Delhi from 10 to 14 September 1990)
formalized the need to provide, on a sustainable basis, access to safe water in sufficient
quantities and proper sanitation for all, emphasizing the "some for all rather than
more for some" approach. Four guiding principles provide for the programme
objectives:
(a) Protection of the environment and safeguarding of health through the integrated
management of water resources and liquid and solid wastes;
(b) Institutional reforms promoting an integrated approach and including changes in
procedures, attitudes and behaviour, and the full participation of women at all levels in
sector institutions; (c) Community management of services, backed by measures to
strengthen local institutions in implementing and sustaining water and sanitation
programmes;
(d) Sound financial practices, achieved through better management of existing assets,
and widespread use of appropriate technologies.
18.49. Past experience has shown that specific targets should be set by each individual
country. At the World Summit for Children, in September 1990, heads of State or Government
called for both universal access to water-supply and sanitation and the eradication of
guinea worm disease by 1995. Even for the more realistic target of achieving full coverage
in water-supply by 2025, it is estimated that annual investments must reach double the
current levels. One realistic strategy to meet present and future needs, therefore, is to
develop lower-cost but adequate services that can be implemented and sustained at the
community level.
Activities
18.50. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities:
(a) Environment and health:
(i) Establishment of protected areas for sources of drinking-water supply;
(ii) Sanitary disposal of excreta and sewage, using appropriate systems to treat waste
waters in urban and rural areas;
(iii) Expansion of urban and rural water-supply and development and expansion of
rainwater catchment systems, particularly on small islands, in addition to the reticulated
water-supply system;
(iv) Building and expansion, where appropriate, of sewage treatment facilities and
drainage systems;
(v) Treatment and safe reuse of domestic and industrial waste waters in urban and rural
areas;
(vi) Control of water-associated diseases;
(b) People and institutions:
(i) Strengthening of the functioning of Governments in water resources management and,
at the same time, giving of full recognition to the role of local authorities;
(ii) Encouragement of water development and management based on a participatory
approach, involving users, planners and policy makers at all levels;
(iii) Application of the principle that decisions are to be taken at the lowest
appropriate level, with public consultation and involvement of users in the planning and
implementation of water projects;
(iv) Human resource development at all levels, including special programmes for women;
(v) Broad-based education programmes, with particular emphasis on hygiene, local
management and risk reduction;
(vi) International support mechanisms for programme funding, implementation and
follow-up;
(c) National and community management:
(i) Support and assistance to communities in managing their own systems on a
sustainable basis;
(ii) Encouragement of the local population, especially women, youth, indigenous people
and local communities, in water management;
(iii) Linkages between national water plans and community management of local waters;
(iv) Integration of community management of water within the context of overall
planning;
(v) Promotion of primary health and environmental care at the local level, including
training for local communities in appropriate water management techniques and primary
health care;
(vi) Assistance to service agencies in becoming more cost-effective and responsive to
consumer needs;
(vii) Providing of more attention to underserved rural and low-income periurban areas;
(viii) Rehabilitation of defective systems, reduction of wastage and safe reuse of
water and waste water; (ix) Programmes for rational water use and ensured operation and
maintenance;
(x) Research and development of appropriate technical solutions;
(xi) Substantially increase urban wastewater treatment capacity commensurate with
increasing loads;
(d) Awareness creation and public information/participation:
(i) Strengthening of sector monitoring and information management at subnational and
national levels;
(ii) Annual processing, analysis and publication of monitoring results at national and
local levels as a sector management and advocacy/awareness creation tool;
(iii) Use of limited sector indicators at regional and global levels to promote the
sector and raise funds;
(iv) Improvement of sector coordination, planning and implementation, with the
assistance of improved monitoring and information management, to increase the sector's
absorptive capacity, particularly in community-based self-help projects.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.51. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $20 billion,
including about $7.4 billion from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.52. To ensure the feasibility, acceptability and sustainability of planned
water-supply services, adopted technologies should be responsive to the needs and
constraints imposed by the conditions of the community concerned. Thus, design criteria
will involve technical, health, social, economic, provincial, institutional and
environmental factors that determine the characteristics, magnitude and cost of the
planned system. Relevant international support programmes should address the developing
countries concerning, inter alia: (a) Pursuit of low-cost scientific and technological
means, as far as practicable;
(b) Utilization of traditional and indigenous practices, as far as practicable, to
maximize and sustain local involvement;
(c) Assistance to country-level technical/scientific institutes to facilitate curricula
development to support fields critical to the water and sanitation sector.
(c) Human resource development
18.53. To effectively plan and manage water-supply and sanitation at the national,
provincial, district and community level, and to utilize funds most effectively, trained
professional and technical staff must be developed within each country in sufficient
numbers. To do this, countries must establish manpower development plans, taking into
consideration present requirements and planned developments. Subsequently, the development
and performance of country-level training institutions should be enhanced so that they can
play a pivotal role in capacity-building. It is also important that countries provide
adequate training for women in the sustainable maintenance of equipment, water resources
management and environmental sanitation.
(d) Capacity-building
18.54. The implementation of water-supply and sanitation programmes is a national
responsibility. To varying degrees, responsibility for the implementation of projects and
the operating of systems should be delegated to all administrative levels down to the
community and individual served. This also means that national authorities, together with
the agencies and bodies of the United Nations system and other external support agencies
providing support to national programmes, should develop mechanisms and procedures to
collaborate at all levels. This is particularly important if full advantage is to be taken
of community-based approaches and self-reliance as tools for sustainability. This will
entail a high degree of community participation, involving women, in the conception,
planning, decision-making, implementation and evaluation connected with projects for
domestic water-supply and sanitation.
18.55. Overall national capacity-building at all administrative levels, involving
institutional development, coordination, human resources, community participation, health
and hygiene education and literacy, has to be developed according to its fundamental
connection both with any efforts to improve health and socio-economic development through
water-supply and sanitation and with their impact on the human environment.
Capacity-building should therefore be one of the underlying keys in implementation
strategies. Institutional capacity-building should be considered to have an importance
equal to that of the sector supplies and equipment component so that funds can be directed
to both. This can be undertaken at the planning or programme/project formulation stage,
accompanied by a clear definition of objectives and targets. In this regard, technical
cooperation among developing countries owing to their available wealth of information and
experience and the need to avoid "reinventing the wheel", is crucial. Such a
course has proved cost-effective in many country projects already.
E. Water and sustainable urban development
Basis for action
18.56. Early in the next century, more than half of the world's population will be
living in urban areas. By the year 2025, that proportion will have risen to 60 per cent,
comprising some 5 billion people. Rapid urban population growth and industrialization are
putting severe strains on the water resources and environmental protection capabilities of
many cities. Special attention needs to be given to the growing effects of urbanization on
water demands and usage and to the critical role played by local and municipal authorities
in managing the supply, use and overall treatment of water, particularly in developing
countries for which special support is needed. Scarcity of freshwater resources and the
escalating costs of developing new resources have a considerable impact on national
industrial, agricultural and human settlement development and economic growth. Better
management of urban water resources, including the elimination of unsustainable
consumption patterns, can make a substantial contribution to the alleviation of poverty
and improvement of the health and quality of life of the urban and rural poor. A high
proportion of large urban agglomerations are located around estuaries and in coastal
zones. Such an arrangement leads to pollution from municipal and industrial discharges
combined with overexploitation of available water resources and threatens the marine
environment and the supply of freshwater resources.
Objectives
18.57. The development objective of this programme is to support local and central
Governments' efforts and capacities to sustain national development and productivity
through environmentally sound management of water resources for urban use. Supporting this
objective is the identification and implementation of strategies and actions to ensure the
continued supply of affordable water for present and future needs and to reverse current
trends of resource degradation and depletion.
18.58. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could set the following targets:
(a) By the year 2000, to have ensured that all urban residents have access to at least
40 litres per capita per day of safe water and that 75 per cent of the urban population
are provided with on-site or community facilities for sanitation;
(b) By the year 2000, to have established and applied quantitative and qualitative
discharge standards for municipal and industrial effluents; (c) By the year 2000, to have
ensured that 75 per cent of solid waste generated in urban areas are collected and
recycled or disposed of in an environmentally safe way.
Activities
18.59. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities:
(a) Protection of water resources from depletion, pollution and degradation:
(i) Introduction of sanitary waste disposal facilities based on environmentally sound
low-cost and upgradable technologies;
(ii) Implementation of urban storm-water run-off and drainage programmes;
(iii) Promotion of recycling and reuse of waste water and solid wastes;
(iv) Control of industrial pollution sources to protect water resources;
(v) Protection of watersheds with respect to depletion and degradation of their forest
cover and from harmful upstream activities;
(vi) Promotion of research into the contribution of forests to sustainable water
resources development;
(vii) Encouragement of the best management practices for the use of agrochemicals with
a view to minimizing their impact on water resources;
(b) Efficient and equitable allocation of water resources:
(i) Reconciliation of city development planning with the availability and
sustainability of water resources;
(ii) Satisfaction of the basic water needs of the urban population;
(iii) Introduction of water tariffs, taking into account the circumstances in each
country and where affordable, that reflect the marginal and opportunity cost of water,
especially for productive activities;
(c) Institutional/legal/management reforms:
(i) Adoption of a city-wide approach to the management of water resources;
(ii) Promotion at the national and local level of the elaboration of land-use plans
that give due consideration to water resources development;
(iii) Utilization of the skills and potential of non-governmental organizations, the
private sector and local people, taking into account the public's and strategic interests
in water resources;
(d) Promotion of public participation:
(i) Initiation of public-awareness campaigns to encourage the public's move towards
rational water utilization;
(ii) Sensitization of the public to the issue of protecting water quality within the
urban environment;
(iii) Promotion of public participation in the collection, recycling and elimination of
wastes;
(e) Support to local capacity-building:
(i) Development of legislation and policies to promote investments in urban water and
waste management, reflecting the major contribution of cities to national economic
development;
(ii) Provision of seed money and technical support to the local handling of materials
supply and services;
(iii) Encouragement, to the extent possible, of autonomy and financial viability of
city water, solid waste and sewerage utilities;
(iv) Creation and maintenance of a cadre of professionals and semi-professionals, for
water, waste-water and solid waste management;
(f) Provision of enhanced access to sanitary services:
(i) Implementation of water, sanitation and waste management programmes focused on the
urban poor;
(ii) Making available of low-cost water-supply and sanitation technology choices;
(iii) Basing of choice of technology and service levels on user preferences and
willingness to pay;
(iv) Mobilization and facilitation of the active involvement of women in water
management teams; (v) Encouragement and equipment of local water associations and water
committees to manage community water-supply systems and communal latrines, with technical
back-up available when required;
(vi) Consideration of the merits and practicality of rehabilitating existing
malfunctioning systems and of correcting operation and maintenance inadequacies.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.60. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $20 billion,
including about $4.5 billion from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.61. The 1980s saw considerable progress in the development and application of
low-cost water-supply and sanitation technologies. The programme envisages continuation of
this work, with particular emphasis on development of appropriate sanitation and waste
disposal technologies for low-income high-density urban settlements. There should also be
international information exchange, to ensure a widespread recognition among sector
professionals of the availability and benefits of appropriate low-cost technologies. The
public-awareness campaigns will also include components to overcome user resistance to
second-class services by emphasizing the benefits of reliability and sustainability.
(c) Human resource development
18.62. Implicit in virtually all elements of this programme is the need for progressive
enhancement of the training and career development of personnel at all levels in sector
institutions. Specific programme activities will involve the training and retention of
staff with skills in community involvement, low-cost technology, financial management, and
integrated planning of urban water resources management. Special provision should be made
for mobilizing and facilitating the active participation of women, youth, indigenous
people and local communities in water management teams and for supporting the development
of water associations and water committees, with appropriate training of such personnel as
treasurers, secretaries and caretakers. Special education and training programmes for
women should be launched with regard to the protection of water resources and
water-quality within urban areas. (d) Capacity-building
18.63. In combination with human resource development, strengthening of institutional,
legislative and management structures are key elements of the programme. A prerequisite
for progress in enhancing access to water and sanitation services is the establishment of
an institutional framework that ensures that the real needs and potential contributions of
currently unserved populations are reflected in urban development planning. The
multisectoral approach, which is a vital part of urban water resources management,
requires institutional linkages at the national and city levels, and the programme
includes proposals for establishing intersectoral planning groups. Proposals for greater
pollution control and prevention depend for their success on the right combination of
economic and regulatory mechanisms, backed by adequate monitoring and surveillance and
supported by enhanced capacity to address environmental issues on the part of local
Governments.
18.64. Establishment of appropriate design standards, water-quality objectives and
discharge consents is therefore among the proposed activities. The programme also includes
support for strengthening the capability of water and sewerage agencies and for developing
their autonomy and financial viability. Operation and maintenance of existing water and
sanitation facilities have been recognized as entailing a serious shortcoming in many
countries. Technical and financial support are needed to help countries correct present
inadequacies and build up the capacity to operate and maintain rehabilitated and new
systems.
F. Water for sustainable food production and rural development
Basis for action
18.65. Sustainability of food production increasingly depends on sound and efficient
water use and conservation practices consisting primarily of irrigation development and
management, including water management with respect to rain-fed areas, livestock
water-supply, inland fisheries and agro-forestry. Achieving food security is a high
priority in many countries, and agriculture must not only provide food for rising
populations, but also save water for other uses. The challenge is to develop and apply
water-saving technology and management methods and, through capacity-building, enable
communities to introduce institutions and incentives for the rural population to adopt new
approaches, for both rain-fed and irrigated agriculture. The rural population must also
have better access to a potable water-supply and to sanitation services. It is an immense
task but not an impossible one, provided appropriate policies and programmes are adopted
at all levels - local, national and international. While significant expansion of the area
under rain-fed agriculture has been achieved during the past decade, the productivity
response and sustainability of irrigation systems have been constrained by problems of
waterlogging and salinization. Financial and market constraints are also a common problem.
Soil erosion, mismanagement and overexploitation of natural resources and acute
competition for water have all influenced the extent of poverty, hunger and famine in the
developing countries. Soil erosion caused by overgrazing of livestock is also often
responsible for the siltation of lakes. Most often, the development of irrigation schemes
is supported neither by environmental impact assessments identifying hydrologic
consequences within watersheds of interbasin transfers, nor by the assessment of social
impacts on peoples in river valleys.
18.66. The non-availability of water-supplies of suitable quality is a significant
limiting factor to livestock production in many countries, and improper disposal of animal
wastes can in certain circumstances result in pollution of water-supplies for both humans
and animals. The drinking-water requirements of livestock vary according to species and
the environment in which they are kept. It is estimated that the current global livestock
drinking-water requirement is about 60 billion litres per day and based on livestock
population growth estimates, this daily requirement is predicted to increase by 0.4
billion litres per annum in the foreseeable future.
18.67. Freshwater fisheries in lakes and streams are an important source of food and
protein. Fisheries of inland waters should be so managed as to maximize the yield of
aquatic food organisms in an environmentally sound manner. This requires the conservation
of water-quality and quantity, as well as of the functional morphology of the aquatic
environment. On the other hand, fishing and aquaculture may themselves damage the aquatic
ecosystem; hence their development should conform to guidelines for impact limitation.
Present levels of production from inland fisheries, from both fresh and brackish water,
are about 7 million tons per year and could increase to 16 million tons per year by the
year 2000; however, any increase in environmental stress could jeopardize this rise.
Objectives
18.68. The key strategic principles for holistic and integrated environmentally sound
management of water resources in the rural context may be set forth as follows:
(a) Water should be regarded as a finite resource having an economic value with
significant social and economic implications reflecting the importance of meeting basic
needs;
(b) Local communities must participate in all phases of water management, ensuring the
full involvement of women in view of their crucial role in the practical day-to-day
supply, management and use of water;
(c) Water resource management must be developed within a comprehensive set of policies
for (i) human health; (ii) food production, preservation and distribution; (iii) disaster
mitigation plans; (iv) environmental protection and conservation of the natural resource
base;
(d) It is necessary to recognize and actively support the role of rural populations,
with particular emphasis on women.
18.69. An International Action Programme on Water and Sustainable Agricultural
Development (IAP-WASAD) has been initiated by FAO in cooperation with other international
organizations. The main objective of the Action Programme is to assist developing
countries in planning, developing and managing water resources on an integrated basis to
meet present and future needs for agricultural production, taking into account
environmental considerations.
18.70. The Action Programme has developed a framework for sustainable water use in the
agricultural sector and identified priority areas for action at national, regional and
global levels. Quantitative targets for new irrigation development, improvement of
existing irrigation schemes and reclamation of waterlogged and salinized lands through
drainage for 130 developing countries are estimated on the basis of food requirements,
agro-climatic zones and availability of water and land.
18.71. FAO global projections for irrigation, drainage and small-scale water programmes
by the year 2000 for 130 developing countries are as follows: (a) 15.2 million hectares of
new irrigation development; (b) 12 million hectares of improvement/modernization of
existing schemes; (c) 7 million hectares installed with drainage and water control
facilities; and (d) 10 million hectares of small-scale water programmes and conservation.
18.72. The development of new irrigation areas at the above-mentioned level may give
rise to environmental concerns in so far as it implies the destruction of wetlands, water
pollution, increased sedimentation and a reduction in biodiversity. Therefore, new
irrigation schemes should be accompanied by an environmental impact assessment, depending
upon the scale of the scheme, in case significant negative environmental impacts are
expected. When considering proposals for new irrigation schemes, consideration should also
be given to a more rational exploitation, and an increase in the efficiency or
productivity, of any existing schemes capable of serving the same localities. Technologies
for new irrigation schemes should be thoroughly evaluated, including their potential
conflicts with other land uses. The active involvement of water-users groups is a
supporting objective.
18.73. It should be ensured that rural communities of all countries, according to their
capacities and available resources and taking advantage of international cooperation as
appropriate, will have access to safe water in sufficient quantities and adequate
sanitation to meet their health needs and maintain the essential qualities of their local
environments.
18.74. The objectives with regard to water management for inland fisheries and
aquaculture include conservation of water-quality and water-quantity requirements for
optimum production and prevention of water pollution by aquacultural activities. The
Action Programme seeks to assist member countries in managing the fisheries of inland
waters through the promotion of sustainable management of capture fisheries as well as the
development of environmentally sound approaches to intensification of aquaculture.
18.75. The objectives with regard to water management for livestock supply are twofold:
provision of adequate amounts of drinking-water and safeguarding of drinking-water quality
in accordance with the specific needs of different animal species. This entails maximum
salinity tolerance levels and the absence of pathogenic organisms. No global targets can
be set owing to large regional and intra-country variations.
Activities
18.76. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities:
(a) Water-supply and sanitation for the unserved rural poor:
(i) Establish national policies and budget priorities with regard to increasing service
coverage;
(ii) Promote appropriate technologies;
(iii) Introduce suitable cost-recovery mechanisms, taking into account efficiency and
equity through demand management mechanisms;
(iv) Promote community ownership and rights to water-supply and sanitation facilities;
(v) Establish monitoring and evaluation systems;
(vi) Strengthen the rural water-supply and sanitation sector with emphasis on
institutional development, efficient management and an appropriate framework for financing
of services;
(vii) Increase hygiene education and eliminate disease transmission foci;
(viii) Adopt appropriate technologies for water treatment;
(ix) Adopt wide-scale environmental management measures to control disease vectors;
(b) Water-use efficiency:
(i) Increase of efficiency and productivity in agricultural water use for better
utilization of limited water resources; (ii) Strengthen water and soil management research
under irrigation and rain-fed conditions;
(iii) Monitor and evaluate irrigation project performance to ensure, inter alia, the
optimal utilization and proper maintenance of the project;
(iv) Support water-users groups with a view to improving management performance at the
local level;
(v) Support the appropriate use of relatively brackish water for irrigation;
(c) Waterlogging, salinity control and drainage:
(i) Introduce surface drainage in rain-fed agriculture to prevent temporary
waterlogging and flooding of lowlands;
(ii) Introduce artificial drainage in irrigated and rain-fed agriculture;
(iii) Encourage conjunctive use of surface and groundwaters, including monitoring and
water-balance studies;
(iv) Practise drainage in irrigated areas of arid and semi-arid regions;
(d) Water-quality management:
(i) Establish and operate cost-effective water-quality monitoring systems for
agricultural water uses;
(ii) Prevent adverse effects of agricultural activities on water-quality for other
social and economic activities and on wetlands, inter alia, through optimal use of on-farm
input and the minimization of the use of external input in agricultural activities;
(iii) Establish biological, physical and chemical water-quality criteria for
agricultural water-users and for marine and riverine ecosystems;
(iv) Minimize soil run-off and sedimentation;
(v) Dispose properly of sewage from human settlements and of manure produced by
intensive livestock breeding;
(vi) Minimize adverse effects from agricultural chemicals by use of integrated pest
management;
(vii) Educate communities about the pollution-related impacts of the use of fertilizers
and chemicals on water-quality, food safety and human health;
(e) Water resources development programmes:
(i) Develop small-scale irrigation and water-supply for humans and livestock and for
water and soil conservation;
(ii) Formulate large-scale and long-term irrigation development programmes, taking into
account their effects on the local level, the economy and the environment;
(iii) Promote local initiatives for the integrated development and management of water
resources;
(iv) Provide adequate technical advice and support and enhancement of institutional
collaboration at the local community level;
(v) Promote a farming approach for land and water management that takes account of the
level of education, the capacity to mobilize local communities and the ecosystem
requirements of arid and semi-arid regions;
(vi) Plan and develop multi-purpose hydroelectric power schemes, making sure that
environmental concerns are duly taken into account;
(f) Scarce water resources management:
(i) Develop long-term strategies and practical implementation programmes for
agricultural water use under scarcity conditions with competing demands for water;
(ii) Recognize water as a social, economic and strategic good in irrigation planning
and management;
(iii) Formulate specialized programmes focused on drought preparedness, with emphasis
on food scarcity and environmental safeguards;
(iv) Promote and enhance waste-water reuse in agriculture;
(g) Water-supply for livestock:
(i) Improve quality of water available to livestock, taking into account their
tolerance limits;
(ii) Increase the quantity of water sources available to livestock, in particular those
in extensive grazing systems, in order to both reduce the distance needed to travel for
water and to prevent overgrazing around water sources;
(iii) Prevent contamination of water sources with animal excrement in order to prevent
the spread of diseases, in particular zoonosis;
(iv) Encourage multiple use of water-supplies through promotion of integrated
agro-livestock-fishery systems;
(v) Encourage water spreading schemes for increasing water retention of extensive
grasslands to stimulate forage production and prevent run-off;
(h) Inland fisheries:
(i) Develop the sustainable management of fisheries as part of national water resources
planning;
(ii) Study specific aspects of the hydrobiology and environmental requirements of key
inland fish species in relation to varying water regimes;
(iii) Prevent or mitigate modification of aquatic environments by other users or
rehabilitate environments subjected to such modification on behalf of the sustainable use
and conservation of biological diversity of living aquatic resources;
(iv) Develop and disseminate environmentally sound water resources development and
management methodologies for the intensification of fish yield from inland waters;
(v) Establish and maintain adequate systems for the collection and interpretation of
data on water quality and quantity and channel morphology related to the state and
management of living aquatic resources, including fisheries;
(i) Aquaculture development:
(i) Develop environmentally sound aquaculture technologies that are compatible with
local, regional and national water resources management plans and take into consideration
social factors;
(ii) Introduce appropriate aquaculture techniques and related water development and
management practices in countries not yet experienced in aquaculture;
(iii) Assess environmental impacts of aquaculture with specific reference to
commercialized culture units and potential water pollution from processing centres;
(iv) Evaluate economic feasibility of aquaculture in relation to alternative use of
water, taking into consideration the use of marginal-quality water and investment and
operational requirements.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.77. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $13.2 billion,
including about $4.5 billion from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.78. There is an urgent need for countries to monitor water resources and
water-quality, water and land use and crop production; compile inventories of type and
extent of agricultural water development and of present and future contributions to
sustainable agricultural development; evaluate the potential for fisheries and aquaculture
development; and improve the availability and dissemination of data to planners,
technicians, farmers and fishermen. Priority requirements for research are as follows:
(a) Identification of critical areas for water-related adaptive research;
(b) Strengthening of the adaptive research capacities of institutions in developing
countries;
(c) Enhancement of translation of water-related farming and fishing systems research
results into practical and accessible technologies and provision of the support needed for
their rapid adoption at the field level.
18.79. Transfer of technology, both horizontal and vertical, needs to be strengthened.
Mechanisms to provide credit, input supplies, markets, appropriate pricing and
transportation must be developed jointly by countries and external support agencies.
Integrated rural water-supply infrastructure, including facilities for water-related
education and training and support services for agriculture, should be expanded for
multiple uses and should assist in developing the rural economy.
(c) Human resource development
18.80. Education and training of human resources should be actively pursued at the
national level through: (a) assessment of current and long-term human resources management
and training needs; (b) establishment of a national policy for human resources
development; and (c) initiation and implementation of training programmes for staff at all
levels as well as for farmers. The necessary actions are as follows:
(a) Assess training needs for agricultural water management;
(b) Increase formal and informal training activities;
(c) Develop practical training courses for improving the ability of extension services
to disseminate technologies and strengthen farmers' capabilities, with special reference
to small-scale producers;
(d) Train staff at all levels, including farmers, fishermen and members of local
communities, with particular reference to women;
(e) Increase the opportunities for career development to enhance the capabilities of
administrators and officers at all levels involved in land- and water-management
programmes.
(d) Capacity-building
18.81. The importance of a functional and coherent institutional framework at the
national level to promote water and sustainable agricultural development has generally
been fully recognized at present. In addition, an adequate legal framework of rules and
regulations should be in place to facilitate actions on agricultural water-use, drainage,
water-quality management, small-scale water programmes and the functioning of water-users'
and fishermen's associations. Legislation specific to the needs of the agricultural water
sector should be consistent with, and stem from, general legislation for the management of
water resources. Actions should be pursued in the following areas:
(a) Improvement of water-use policies related to agriculture, fisheries and rural
development and of legal frameworks for implementing such policies;
(b) Review, strengthening and restructuring, if required, of existing institutions in
order to enhance their capacities in water-related activities, while recognizing the need
to manage water resources at the lowest appropriate level;
(c) Review and strengthening, where necessary, of organizational structure, functional
relationships and linkages among ministries and departments within a given ministry;
(d) Provision of specific measures that require support for institutional
strengthening, inter alia, through long-term programme budgeting, staff training,
incentives, mobility, equipment and coordination mechanisms;
(e) Enhancement of involvement of the private sector, where appropriate, in human
resource development and provision of infrastructure;
(f) Transfer of existing and new water-use technologies by creating mechanisms for
cooperation and information exchange among national and regional institutions.
G. Impacts of climate change on water resources
Basis for action
18.82. There is uncertainty with respect to the prediction of climate change at the
global level. Although the uncertainties increase greatly at the regional, national and
local levels, it is at the national level that the most important decisions would need to
be made. Higher temperatures and decreased precipitation would lead to decreased
water-supplies and increased water demands; they might cause deterioration in the quality
of freshwater bodies, putting strains on the already fragile balance between supply and
demand in many countries. Even where precipitation might increase, there is no guarantee
that it would occur at the time of year when it could be used; in addition, there might be
a likelihood of increased flooding. Any rise in sealevel will often cause the intrusion of
salt water into estuaries, small islands and coastal aquifers and the flooding of
low-lying coastal areas; this puts low-lying countries at great risk.
18.83. The Ministerial Declaration of the Second World Climate Conference states that
"the potential impact of such climate change could pose an environmental threat of an
up to now unknown magnitude ... and could even threaten survival in some small island
States and in low-lying coastal, arid and semi-arid areas" (A/45/696/Add.1, annex
III, preamble, para. 2). The Conference recognized that among the most important impacts
of climate change were its effects on the hydrologic cycle and on water management systems
and, through these, on socio-economic systems. Increase in incidence of extremes, such as
floods and droughts, would cause increased frequency and severity of disasters. The
Conference therefore called for a strengthening of the necessary research and monitoring
programmes and the exchange of relevant data and information, these actions to be
undertaken at the national, regional and international levels.
Objectives
18.84. The very nature of this topic calls first and foremost for more information
about and greater understanding of the threat being faced. This topic may be translated
into the following objectives, consistent with the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change:
(a) To understand and quantify the threat of the impact of climate change on freshwater
resources;
(b) To facilitate the implementation of effective national countermeasures, as and when
the threatening impact is seen as sufficiently confirmed to justify such action;
(c) To study the potential impacts of climate change on areas prone to droughts and
floods.
Activities
18.85. All States, according to their capacity and available resources, and through
bilateral or multilateral cooperation, including the United Nations and other relevant
organizations as appropriate, could implement the following activities:
(a) Monitor the hydrologic regime, including soil moisture, groundwater balance,
penetration and transpiration of water-quality, and related climate factors, especially in
the regions and countries most likely to suffer from the adverse effects of climate change
and where the localities vulnerable to these effects should therefore be defined;
(b) Develop and apply techniques and methodologies for assessing the potential adverse
effects of climate change, through changes in temperature, precipitation and sealevel
rise, on freshwater resources and the flood risk;
(c) Initiate case-studies to establish whether there are linkages between climate
changes and the current occurrences of droughts and floods in certain regions;
(d) Assess the resulting social, economic and environmental impacts;
(e) Develop and initiate response strategies to counter the adverse effects that are
identified, including changing groundwater levels and to mitigate saline intrusion into
aquifers;
(f) Develop agricultural activities based on brackish-water use;
(g) Contribute to the research activities under way within the framework of current
international programmes.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost evaluation
18.86. The Conference secretariat has estimated the average total annual cost
(1993-2000) of implementing the activities of this programme to be about $100 million,
including about $40 million from the international community on grant or concessional
terms. These are indicative and order of magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any that are
non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and programmes
Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological means
18.87. Monitoring of climate change and its impact on freshwater bodies must be closely
integrated with national and international programmes for monitoring the environment, in
particular those concerned with the atmosphere, as discussed under other sections of
Agenda 21, and the hydrosphere, as discussed under programme area B above. The analysis of
data for indication of climate change as a basis for developing remedial measures is a
complex task. Extensive research is necessary in this area and due account has to be taken
of the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the World Climate
Programme, the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) and other relevant
international programmes.
18.88. The development and implementation of response strategies requires innovative
use of technological means and engineering solutions, including the installation of flood
and drought warning systems and the construction of new water resource development
projects such as dams, aqueducts, well fields, waste-water treatment plants, desalination
works, levees, banks and drainage channels. There is also a need for coordinated research
networks such as the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme/Global Change System for
Analysis, Research and Training (IGBP/START) network.
(c) Human resource development
18.89. The developmental work and innovation depend for their success on good academic
training and staff motivation. International projects can help by enumerating
alternatives, but each country needs to establish and implement the necessary policies and
to develop its own expertise in the scientific and engineering challenges to be faced, as
well as a body of dedicated individuals who are able to interpret the complex issues
concerned for those required to make policy decisions. Such specialized personnel need to
be trained, hired and retained in service, so that they may serve their countries in these
tasks.
(d) Capacity-building
18.90. There is a need, however, to build a capacity at the national level to develop,
review and implement response strategies. Construction of major engineering works and
installation of forecasting systems will require significant strengthening of the agencies
responsible, whether in the public or the private sector. Most critical is the requirement
for a socio-economic mechanism that can review predictions of the impact of climate change
and possible response strategies and make the necessary judgements and decisions.
Notes
1/ Report of the United Nations Water Conference, Mar del Plata, 14-25 March
1977 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.77.II.A.12), part one, chap. I, sect. C,
para. 35.
2/ Ibid., part one, chap. I, resolution II.
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