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The EU Water Initiative and its research component

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Title: The EU Water Initiative and its research component


1
The EU Water Initiative and its research component
Marialuisa Tamborra European Commission - DG
Research International Cooperation Marialuisa.Tamb
orra_at_ec.europa.eu
2
Introducing the EU Water initiative Water for
life
  • EU initiative launched at the WSSD (2002)in
    Johannesburg
  • Contributing to MDG and WSSD on water
  • Halve by 2015 the proportion of people without
    access to safe drinking water and basic
    sanitation
  • develop Integrated Water manag. and efficiency
    plans.
  • EUWI at present under review

3
EUWI Objectives
  • Reinforcing political committment towards action
    and innovation-oriented partnership
  • Promoting improved water governance, capacity
    building awareness
  • Promoting improved efficiency effectiveness of
    water management through multi-stakeholder
    dialogue
  • Strengthening cooperation through promoting river
    basin approaches in national and transboundary
    waters
  • Identifying additional financing resources to
    ensure sustainable financing

4
EUWI structure
  • Governing bodies
  • Secretariat (Commission DGs),
  • Steering Group and
  • Multi-stakeholder Forum
  • Regional components/WGs
  • Africa,
  • EECCA,
  • Latin America,
  • Mediterranean
  • Horizontal components/WGs
  • Research,
  • Finance,
  • Monitoring

5
Research in Integrated Water Resources Management
(IWRM)
  • The EU Water initiative (EUWI) has given boost to
    IWRM research and its global dimension, with FP6
    introducing topics in its calls for proposals
    since 2002 in support of EUWI and the MDGs.
  • IN FP5 IWRM research involving international
    cooperation was carried out essentially under
    INCO.
  • In FP6 funding was available both under INCO
    priority Global Change Ecosystems with a
    budget of 130Mio
  • IN FP7 this area of research will be carried out
    mainly under the Environment Theme (areas
    Sustainable Management of Resources and also
    Environmental Technologies)
  • Possible contribution from Health Theme Food,
    Agriculture, Fisheries and Biotechnologies theme.

6
Examples of ongoing RTD activities with expected
lasting impact
  • Coordinating Member States and EU Research
    Programmes in Water Science and technology for
    the Developing World
  • The EU WI ERA-NET, the main achievement of the
    EUWI Research Working Group
  • Contributing to the analysis of joint European
    and developing Countries approaches to IWRM
  • The Review EU-INCO water research from FP4 to
    FP6 (1994-2006)
  • Contributing to capacity building and awareness
    raising through the uptake of research results at
    the local level
  • The River Twinning projects under FP6 - Thematic
    Priority Global Change and Ecosystems
  • Networking and co-ordination activities FP6
    Co-ordination actions

7
EU WI ERA-NET Co-ordination of MS Research
Programmes in Water Science and technology for
the Developing World
  • Objective To improve communication,
    collaboration and coordination of water research
    funded by Member States in developing countries
    to increase the effectiveness and benefits,
    reduce duplication and repetition and enhance
    synergy between actions under the Commission
    Framework Programme for RTD and Member State
    research programmes
  • 15 research programme owners/managers from 11
    Countries UK (Department of International
    Development - Co-ordinator), Austria, Belgium,
    Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Czech
    Rep., Norway, Switzerland
  • Several international organisations as observers

8
EU WI ERA-NET Strategic objectives
  • Systematic exchange of information and good
    practices on existing research programmes and
    improvement of access to this information
  • Identification of common strategies on specific
    thematic and/or regional reseaarch activities
    through mapping of activities
  • Development of joint activities between national
    and regioanl programmes (personnel exchanges,
    workshops, sharing research facilities,
    clustering of programmes)
  • Explorative analysis in view of implementing
    joint research programmes (towards ERA-NET plus?)

9
Introducing the Review EU-INCO water research
from FP4 to FP5
  • Background Stronger commitment at EU level not
    only at the project level but also at programme
    policy level towards Impact Assessment
    (COM(2002)276 of 5/6/2002)
  • A sample of 67 international ST cooperation
    projects supported by the INCO Programme through
    Research Framework Programmes (FP4, 5, 6) have
    been reviewed by a panel
  • This represents an investment of gt50 MEuro
  • International expert group to analyse what we
    have learnt through this cooperation.

10
International Review Panel of the Review
  • Pragya Dipak Gyawali, Nepal (Chair)
  • Prof. Anthony Allan, UK (Rapporteur)
  • Prof. Paula Antunes, Portugal
  • Dr. Basim Dudeen, Palestinian Authority
  • Dr. Pietro Laureano, Italy
  • Prof. Cassio Luiselli, Mexico
  • Dr. Pedro Monteiro, South Africa
  • Dr. Hong Khanh Nguyen, Vietnam
  • Prof. Pavel Novácek, Czech Republic
  • Prof. Claudia Pahl-Wostl, Germany

11
Scoring methodology of the Review
  • Has research addressed social, economic
    environmental priorities (Sust)? E.g. Was
    Sustainable Development at the core of research?
  • Was an integrated approach practiced (Intg)? E.g.
    Was co-dependence of the water sector and other
    sectors clear?
  • Were there policyrelevant impacts (Impc)? E.g.
    Contribution to societal problem solving? What
    was the uptake by others? Legacy capacity
    building, educational etc.
  • Was there constructive engagement (Comm)? E.g.
    with governments, civil society, private sector,
    education system etc.
  • Was there communication with the society (Narr)?

12
Some Findings (1)
The aggregated average scores on the six main
indicators to evaluate the performance of 67
EU-INCO water research projects
13
Some Findings (2)
The standard deviation data reflecting the
scatter of results of the FP4, FP5 and FP6 scores
14
Main conclusions of the Review EU-INCO water
research from FP4 to FP6
  • Increased role in raising awareness among
    societal actors of the challenges facing
    political leaders, policy-makers water users.
  • Enhanced integration of science with policy
    priorities
  • Increased emphasis on environmental, societal
    economic impacts of research
  • Promotion of new approaches to water policy and
    policy-relevant water science thanks to stronger
    interplay between EU 3rd countries research
    teams.

15
Introducing the River Twinning initiative under
FP6
Overall objective Promote twinnings of European
and third countries river basins for the
development of IWRM to underpin the
implementation of the EUWI
  • Regions involved
  • Europe Spain (Guadalentin River Basin), UK
    (Thames), Sweden (Norrstrom), Germany (Neckar),
    Austria (Mur), Upper Danube River Basin (UDRB),
    Norway (Glomma), Spain/Portugal (Tejo/Tagus) and
    various RBOs in France, Netherlands, Italy,
    Poland, Hungary
  • Mediterranean countries RBOs in Algeria,
    Morocco, Israel (Nahal Zin Catchment - Negev
    Desert)
  • Africa Namibia (Kuiseb Catchment), South Africa
    (Western Namaqualand), Botswana (Okavango), Benin
    (Queme), RBOs in Niger and Senegal
  • EECCA Countries Uzbekistan (Chirchik/Upper
    Syrdaria), Kazakhstan (Nura)
  • Latin America Chile (Bio Bio) and RBOs from
    Mexico and Brasil
  • Asia RBOs in Indonesia, Upper Brahmaputra River
    Basin, Vietnam/Cambodia (Sesan), India (Tunga
    Bahdra)

16
The River Twinning initiative facts and figures
in FP6
  • Total EU contribution for this initiative of 13.8
    Million with 1.3 to 2.8 Million per project
  • Seven  twinning  projects RIVERTWIN,
    TWINBAS,WADE, TWINLATIN, TWINBASINxn,
    BRAHMATWINN, STRIVER
  • TWINBASINxn multi-regional CA co-ordinated by
    the Office International de lEau with Algeria
    (BO of Algerois-Hodna-Soummam) and Morocco (BO of
    Sebou) promoting exchanges among Basin
    organisations (http//www.twinbasin.org)
  • Its success is also demonstrated by its
    continuation under FP7 present call on South
    America under Theme Environment (published on
    22/12/2006).

17
Some Important Features of the River Twinning
initiative
  • Emphasis on global change concept
  • On-the-job training, capacity building
  • Public participation and End-Users
  • Blueprints for integrated river basin management
    plans adapted to local conditions
  • Replicability

18
Introducing Coordination Actions in IWRM
  • Objective connecting different strands of
    knowledge and translating scientific knowledge in
    policy terms
  • A number of Coordination actions have been set up
    in different regions, e.g.
  • Mediterranean MELIA, NOSTRUM-DSS
  • Asia ASEMWATERNET, MAI-TAI
  • Latin America WAFLA

19
Coordination Actions in the Mediterranean
  • NOSTRUM-DSS (http//www.feem-web.it/nostrum)
  • Objectives
  • To establish durable links between scientific
    institutions, governments, NGOs, and other
    stakeholders and improve public awareness on
    water management
  • To improve scientific knowledge and applied
    methodologies in IWRM
  • To promote the development of suitable DSS tools
    built upon real needs of policy making.
  • Algeria, Croatia, Egypt, Lebanon, Tunisia, Turkey
  • MELIA (http//www.meliaproject.eu/)
  • Objectives
  • Establish a dialogue and connect with other
    research projects dealing with IWRM in view to
    enhange dissemination and improve uptake of
    research results in local contexts
  • Improve water regional planning and management
    under scarcity to enhance Sustainable development
    in the Mediterranean region
  • Involve stakeholders from the UE and
    Mediterranean countries in view of understanding
    and applying the principles of the EU Water
    Framework Directive
  • Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco,
    Israel/Palestine, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey

20
Expectations towards futureresearch
  • High impact through integrating previously
    disconnected knowledge strands and perspectives
    along sustainability dimensions
  • High impact through connecting policy objectives
    (sustainability, equity) to actionable lessons
  • High impact through constructive engagement with
    different social actors and their empowerment
  • Increasingly effective use of the internet and a
    range of other communication modes, to enable
    broad-based social learning and use in practice.
  • Awareness of political nature of water
    allocation, of cultural preferences and contexts,
    and of traditional knowledge
  • Targeted networking with other European, national
    and international projects for critical mass,
    accountability impact.

21
To conclude
  • Research has a great potential in contributing
    to solve water challenges in the World if
    research results are translated into policy
    terms. Science should devote more efforts to
    this effect.

22
Information
  • EU Water Initiative
  • EUWI web Site http//www.euwi.net/
  • EUWI Research Web Site http//ec.europa.eu/resear
    ch/water-initiative
  • EUWI ERA-NET http//www.euwi-era.net
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