Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI): Water and Sanitation Looms Behind Food, Energy and Climate Crisis Concludes World Water Week
The World Water Week in Stockholm concluded today with 2400 scientists, leaders from governments and civil society declaring that slow progress on sanitation will cause the world to badly fail the Millennium Development Goals while weak policy, poor management, increasing waste and exploding water demands are pushing the planet towards the tipping point of global water crisis.
Action is crucial, stakes are high and time is running out were key messages coming from the World Water Week in Stockholm. Sanitation and hygiene, climate, water management, ecosystems and business issues were prominent programme focal points throughout the week. SIWI itself released new research that showed half of food is lost after it is produced and called for governments and individuals around the world to reduce by half the amount of food that is lost to ease pressure on water and land resources.
The World Water Week, which included 200 co-convening organisations, witnessed the launch of a number of new and groundbreaking studies, reports and initiatives designed to improve a global situation where billions of people are without sustainable access to safe drinking water or suffering ill health due to poor sanitation, where bio-energy demands are diverting water from food production, and where global climate change is shaking the overall water balance.
Preliminary conclusions taken from the week written by subject experts following the key themes of Sanitation, Water Resources Management, Climate, Environment and Ecosystems, Transboundary Waters, are available at www.worldwaterweek.org.
Some of the studies, reports, initiatives and announcements made during
the week included:
- SIWI, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) released the report, "Saving Water: From Field to Fork - Curbing Losses and Wastage in the Food Chain."
- The Asia Development Bank, International Water Association and USAID signed a collaboration agreement entitled "Waterlinks" in Stockholm to collaborate on Water Operation Partnerships initiatives in Asia.
- The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change presented "The IPCC Technical Report on Water and Climate."
- World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) launched 4 new reports (1) UK Water Footprint: the effect our consumption has on water resources, (2) Everything you need to know about the UN Watercourses Convention, (3) Water for life: Lessons for climate change adaptation from better, management of rivers for people and nature, (4) Adapting freshwater to a changing climate.
- Borealis & Borouge and Uponor launched the first water footprint initiative in the water sector.
- ITT and Water For People unveiled new partnership to provide clean water, sanitation, and hygiene education in schools.
- WaterAid presented the findings of its latest research from Madagascar and Zambia on how the aid system can better respond to public health imperatives and get the MDG for child mortality back on track.
- The Bremen Overseas Research and Development Association (BORDA) launched the handbook "Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems (DEWATS) and Sanitation in Development Countries."
- The Japan Water Forum in collaboration with the Water Web Alliance launched a renewal version of the "World Sanitation Project Map" on Google Map/Earth.
Press Releases during World Water Week (available at http://www.worldwaterweek.org/press/index.asp)
- Virtual Water Innovator Receives Stockholm Water Prize
- 50 Percent of Food is Wasted Causing Water, Food and Hunger Crisis, Says SIWI, FAO and IWMI
- Californian Prodigy, Utilities Win Stockholm Junior and Industry Water Prizes
- Now hear this: Radio and women take top honours in water, sanitation and hygiene media competition
- United States Wins Stockholm Junior Water Prize / pictures
- Poor Sanitation Still Causes Heavy Health and Economic Losses in Indonesia
- Climate Change in the Himalayas: Increased hazards and reduced water security
- IFC CEO Says Public-Private Partnerships Can Avert Water Crisis
- UK citizens using 58 baths of water a day
- Flow plan for less talk and more action as climate change hits rivers
- Asia Water Day highlights leadership role in solving region's water problems
- World needs global water agreement now
- Borealis and Uponor launch first water footprint initiative in the plastics industry
- Stockholm World Water Week: WECF puts Europe's sanitation problems on the agenda
- Agreement signed with WaterLinks to accelerate the delivery of safe drinking water and sanitation to the people of Asia / pictures
- ITT unveils ITT Watermark, announces strategic partnership with Water For People
- Behind world food crisis is a world water crisis
- The State of Wetlands and Their Role in a World of Global Climate Change
- Afripump: A sustainable solution for Rural Water Supply
High quality video content, including expert interviews on water, sanitation, Asia, climate, food and related issues from the World Water Week are available to registered journalists at www.thenewsmarket.com/siwi. For more information, contact Stephanie Blenckner, +4673914 3986, stephanie.blenckner@siwi.org.
Contact information |
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
(email: josh.paglia@siwi.org) |
---|---|
News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.worldwaterweek.org |
Source of information | Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) |
Keyword(s) | climate change, Sanitation, Water Resources Management, Climate, Environment and Ecosystems, Transboundary Waters |
Subject(s) | DRINKING WATER AND SANITATION : COMMON PROCESSES OF PURIFICATION AND TREATMENT , ENERGY , NATURAL MEDIUM , POLICY-WATER POLICY AND WATER MANAGEMENT , RISKS AND CLIMATOLOGY , SANITATION -STRICT PURIFICATION PROCESSES |
Geographical coverage | Sweden |
News date | 22/08/2008 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |