M3.19-1 Nexus Regional Perspectives Obeng

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The Water, Energy and Food Security Nexus: Understanding the Nexus

Contribution from: The Global Water Partnership

The Global Water Partnership (GWP1) welcomes the initiative by the German Government to focus on
the Water, Energy and Food Security Nexus, and solutions for the Green Economy, as key issues to be
addressed in Bonn and taken forward to the Rio +20 Summit in 2012. The “priority questions” of the
Conference were discussed during the GWP Consulting Partners meeting in August 2011 attended by
representatives from all 13 GWP Regions, and at the Regional Steering Committee meetings in the
following regions: Central and Eastern Europe (representatives of 13 countries), Southern Africa
(representatives of 12 countries) and South East Asia (representatives of 9 countries).

With Partner organizations in 157 countries, working through regional, country, city and river basin
partnerships, GWP brings together multi-sectoral groups from government, the private sector, and
civil society to find better solutions to water challenges and conflicts, making a difference locally.

GWP’s mission is to support the sustainable development and management of water resources at all
levels, and we have as our vision a water secure world2. GWP defines water security as “the reliable
availability of an acceptable quantity and quality of water resources for health, livelihoods and
production coupled with an acceptable level of water-related risks” (‘acceptable’ being defined by the
people concerned). We see a close connection among all the development sectors that use water
resources. We see especially powerful interconnections among water, food and energy security.

Today, more people than ever before are working together to explore how our world’s water
resources can be managed in a more sustainable way. Water is a critical resource for sustainable
development in our rapidly changing world – a world into which the 7 billionth baby was born just last
month, in October 2011. This is a world in which there is an increasing demand for many natural
resources, in particular water. As stated in the Thematic Profile for this conference, water is “running
through the veins of our economies”. By considering water resources in the triple context of water
security, food security and energy security, rather than as “water” per se, we here in Bonn and world
leaders in Rio next year are likely to understand better why this nexus requires urgent political
attention.

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The Global Water Partnership is a global network devoted to the sustainable development and management of water
resources at all levels. It has 13 Regional Water Partnerships, 80 country Water Partnerships, and over 2400 multi sectoral
stakeholder partner organizations.
2
The definition of water security which GWP uses is broader than the MDG definition (used in the background paper for
this conference) which focuses on “access to safe drinking water and sanitation” .

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Over the past five years, people around the world have faced up to a daunting array of new and
increasingly inter-connected crises (the food, energy, and financial crises, together with extreme
climate events such as drought and floods). These crises and events are impacting heavily on
households, communities, natural resources, and national economies around the world, and are
hitting the poor hardest. During these crises, we are becoming conscious of the immense risks
associated with the negative impacts of climate change on the sustainability of the world’s natural
resources and on political stability. The lasting consequences of the financial and economic crises
have drawn more attention to long term risks in the global economy. The issues of economic risk and
natural resources degradation are coming together in a way that has created unprecedented
opportunities for fundamental policy changes, in various economic, institutional, technological, social
and political arenas.

Water security underpins many of the global risk scenarios. The failure to achieve water security has
its roots in political, economic, social and environmental issues specific to each country. These issues
are intertwined and cannot be solved unless a broader set of actors get involved. Water security is a
“Society” subject. It is bigger than the water “sector” itself. Encouraging other sectors to take water
resources more into account and to get more involved with water creates the possibility for changes
on the scale at which they are needed. In the light of these challenges, GWP’s message to the world is
that better water resources management is fundamental to continued economic growth and
development progress. The goal of achieving water security can become part and parcel of all
strategies for sustainable development, poverty reduction, and green economies in the years ahead.

The interest and focus on Integrated Water Resources Management which came out of collective
government decisions at Rio in 1992 and Johannesburg in 2002 led to GWP’s current contribution to
sustainable development. Recognition has grown all over the world of the need for better
coordination in the “development and management of water, land and related resources in order to
maximise economic and social welfare without compromising the sustainability of ecosystems and the
environment” (GWP’s definition of Integrated Water Resources Management or IWRM).

The Integrated Water Resources Management approach is about achieving and maintaining a balance
among the three “Es”3: – economic efficiency, social equity and environmental sustainability. There
are many lessons which have been learned about the application of the IWRM process. A key, indeed
one of the most poignant, is that unless integrated management is fully owned by national
governments, above and beyond sectoral preoccupations, there will be no sustainable

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Economic efficiency - making water resources go as far as possible and allocating water strategically to different
economic sectors and uses. Social equity – ensuring equitable access to water and to the benefits for all children, women
and men. Environmental sustainability – protecting the resource base and related ecosystems and helping to address
global environmental challenges.

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implementation or development. Another important lesson which the GWP regions have learned
through sharing their experiences over 15 years is that every country and region is different (socially,
politically, culturally, and economically), and there is no one magic bullet solution. Here are some
specific responses from GWP and its Regions to the questions posed by the Bonn organizers about the
nexus.

If we consider what issues are seen as key within the nexus of water, food and energy security, we
would suggest three priorities: coordination, infrastructure and ecosystems:

 It is important to recognize first of all that very often, there is little real coordination: policies
and strategies for water, agriculture, land, energy (and others) are not fully complementary
and often do not truly address the three “Es” (efficiency, equity and environmental
sustainability);
 Since infrastructure plays a crucial role in water, food and energy security, it is important that
efforts to address the investments in infrastructure gaps in developing countries are
coordinated, based on sound integrated strategies and plans, if there is to be development
progress that improves livelihoods;
 Several GWP regions emphasize the importance of the ecosystem aspects: that food and
energy sectors both have strong interest groups and a political voice; but that ecosystems do
not. Unless we acknowledge the vital role of our ecosystems in maintaining a sustainable
environment while providing essential goods and services for the livelihood of millions of poor
people, we cannot achieve real “Green Growth”. We need to focus on balancing economic
and social development while maintaining ecosystems functions and services, i.e., focus on
the “triple bottom line”, or the three E’s” of IWRM.

Given the focus and interest in the nexus of water, food and energy security, it is valuable to look at
where there are real opportunities for synergies. We suggest three:

 Again, coordinated investments in infrastructure related to water, food and energy security,
provide real opportunities for synergies;
 Finding the trade-offs which maximize the beneficial uses of water amongst competing uses
and users, not only between the food and energy sectors, but also considering the demands of
an accelerating urban population, and of other sectors such as industry, fisheries, navigation,
tourism, etc., while maintaining respect for essential cultural values. Proper water allocation
mechanisms are important in this respect. Also, such trade-offs and synergies need to focus on
the equitable sharing of these benefits locally, nationally and regionally, in addition to the
allocation and sharing of the water itself;

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 Applied research, capacity building and sharing of practical solutions at national and basin
levels, where professionals working on the management of water resources, the agriculture
sector, and the energy sector, can work together with the common objective of achieving
security. The GWP South Asia Workshop on the Water-Food-Climate nexus in February 2011
focused on the importance of broader dissemination of existing knowledge; generation of new
knowledge; learning lessons for scaling up; longer term and more consistent exchange of
ideas; and targeted messaging to key stakeholders while increasing mutual trust and
confidence among partners.

If we consider what solutions there are for addressing water, energy and food security in a more
integrated way, there are again three that we would like to offer;

 Facilitate investments in infrastructure development that can serve multipurpose needs at


local, basin and national levels, while also helping to mitigate extreme events such as floods
and droughts. The Lower Kafue dam in Zambia for example, is multipurpose, used for
irrigation, domestic water supply and hydropower generation. The Fergana Valley system of
water canal infrastructure (in Central Asia) applied an IWRM approach over the 5 years
and has demonstrated the potential to increase water productivity by 55 to 95%, with a 30%
reduction in water use through effective management of the water at the on-farm level. Such
infrastructure, both existing and future, needs to be planned and operated as multipurpose, in
proper dialogue with all interested parties;
 Extreme water-related events are crucially linked to the issues of food security (e.g., irrigation
needs) and energy security (e.g., hydropower), as well as water security. Food price rises are
connected to these events in many countries. Hydropower generation and cooling of fossil fuel
based power plants are both fundamentally affected by droughts, which pose a real energy
security issue in drought prone countries. ‘No regret’ adaptation actions (including using
IWRM as an adaptation tool) are “a must” to help build resilience to the increasing number of
extreme climatic events;
 Integrate water, food and energy security planning at local, basin and national levels. For
example, the SADC Regional Infrastructure Plan promotes joint planning for water, food and
energy projects. It opens opportunities for specialization within countries, and locating power
generation and agriculture production in the countries that have better comparative
advantages for this. In this way regional efficiencies in water use, energy generation and
agriculture are promoted. Also, a recent GWP regional workshop identified specific
opportunities for synergies and provided groundwork for greater regional collaboration,
particularly cooperative strategies with the private sector to improve lives and livelihoods, as
well as to grow products and profits.

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Finally, in looking at opportunities for institutionalization at local, national international levels, there
are three proposed ways forward:

 Focus on the horizontal and vertical integration through cross-sectoral dialogue and
involvement of all relevant stakeholders, both public and private, civil society and academia -
professionals from the agriculture and energy sectors working closely with water resources
professionals. A particular characteristic of the water, food and energy nexus is the increasing
role of the private sector in both the development and management of water services and
infrastructure, calling for new partnerships between the public and private sectors to be
developed. Such dialogues and stakeholder engagement need to be part of the entire process,
with proper notice and real involvement, and based on adequate and timely information on
the water, food and energy issues concerned. Dialogues are required at all levels, calling for
institutional mechanisms, such as inter-ministerial bodies at the national level, river basin
committees at the basin level and relevant institutional structures at various locals levels, both
rural and urban. Joint water-energy and/or water-agriculture institutions/ministries in some
countries demonstrate the potential for synergies within the nexus. In Mali, the IWRM
planning process included multi-sectoral, multi-stakeholder involvement and the final plan
was integrated into the national development plan for implementation. Linking water and
agriculture is an outcome of years of stakeholders working to find suitable solutions.
 Focus on multi-disciplinary research, development and innovation. Bringing water, energy
and food together is critical for the nexus. We have no excuse not to act on the basis of
available information, but with the rapid increase in demand for food and energy, new
knowledge and new technologies are essential if we are to close the projected gaps between
demand and supply. Related to this, the present disconnect between science and policy is
seen as a major constraint – by both sides. We need to bring the scientific and the
managerial/decision-making communities closer together.
 Finally, a strong focus on the strengthening and development of institutional capacity for all
of this to actually happen! The developing countries need, among other things, to maintain
adequate structures, technical, managerial and financial capacities, and good data generation
and sharing, in order to address the increasing challenges of the water, food and energy
nexus.

The overall outcome of these discussions within GWP has been very clear -- financed infrastructure,
coordination, capacity, and information at all levels and with multi-sectoral stakeholders in an
integrated manner -- are key aspects of successfully addressing the water, food and energy nexus.
Integrating the management of the water resources as they “flow through the veins” of water supply
and sanitation, agriculture, energy sectors, and other sectors is crucial for achieving security, while

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demonstrating the central role of water resources in our economies. This is not an easy task, given
the tendency for the uses and users of water resources to exist and operate in silos.

The responses described here are underpinned by three keys for success with respect to the nexus
and using IWRM as an adaptive management process:

 The first key is measurement to assess and improve performance, supported by clear
policies: in all work to improve water resources management and thereby increase water
security, it pays if practitioners measure the current status and ‘performance’ first, and do so
against clear policies from all water use sectors. Only then can realistic future scenarios be
constructed to guide policy. In that connection, we recommend that more effort is given to
measure water security, study and understand the inter-connected “systems” of water
resources, their quantity, their quality, their current and expected uses, as well as the current
and projected needs and demands.
 The second key is to convene the players needed, supported by institutional arrangements,
to develop better solutions across sectoral boundaries: water can no longer be treated as one
sector of the economy. It must be managed as a resource for the entire economy. In keeping
with 21st century governance, we recommend the establishment of multi-stakeholder
platforms at national, city and river basin level, as the case may be. This will help to
mainstream water in socio-economic development planning, and to allocate, raise and invest
resources to support implementation.
 And the third key is to lead change locally through government-corporate-civil society
partnerships, supported by financial instruments: experience across developing economies in
all regions has shown that, with a better understanding of the issues and possible solutions,
coalitions of partners can be mobilized to make transformational changes happen. For
necessary changes to be sustained, a new generation of financial instruments will be needed
to value water resources, charge for water services and used water emissions, and to help
manage the risks associated with increasing floods and droughts. To make this happen,
governments are encouraged to mobilize inclusive government–corporate sector–civil society
partnerships as coalitions for transformational change.
GWP recalls the important role of the previous Bonn Conference in 2001, in the run-up to the World
Summit for Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in 2002, or Rio +10. The Bonn process
ten years ago was pivotal in confirming the importance of Integrated Water Resources Management
(IWRM) for sustainable development, leading to the important Article 26 in the WSSD Plan of
Implementation by world leaders, calling on all countries to “develop IWRM and Water Efficiency
Plans” and thereby catalyzing action at all levels from international to local. The importance of this
outcome in Johannesburg, as one of the key drivers setting the majority of the world’s countries,

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particularly in the developing world, on a firm course towards adopting and implementing IWRM, can
hardly be underestimated. Furthermore, there needs to be a recommitment to this agenda by
governments. Although 64% of countries worldwide now have IWRM plans, implementation of the
recommendations of those plans is at a much lower level. Real, financially supported action needs to
be taken by all governments.

In conclusion, there needs to be political leadership in developing countries in order to shape the way
forward. Furthermore, the developing countries need the commitment of the bi-lateral and multi-
lateral agencies that support them to make the necessary investments. Bonn 2011 can again help to
shape the future, by drawing the attention of leaders to this development imperative, using the nexus
as a model.

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