Key Messages Day 2 Roundtable Group discussion Formulating action axes for a capacity development plan Action Plan outcomes.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Key messages from the e- consultation in Europe Olivier Chartier (EUROQUALITY) 26 September 2009.
Advertisements

ClimDev-Africa Program & African Climate Policy Center (ACPC)
Gap Analysis >> Next Steps
WMO Strengthening and Sustaining National Meteorological Service J. Lengoasa Deputy Secretary-General Chairperson of the Steering Committee
Summary of theme 1 CHALLENGES Uta Wehn de Montalvo 30 May 2013.
Expanding Engagement with the Private Sector on GEF Projects 1 ECW Nicaragua 3-5 March 2015.
High level expert meeting to develop the Near East Regional Action Plan to Implement the Global Strategy to improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics.
Volta and Niger basins. Decreasing rainfall and water availability. Decreasing vegetation cover and soil organic matter/fertility. Increasing risks from.
Maize Lethal Necrosis Disease FAO supported interventions in the region Aisja Frenken – Regional DRR Expert 21 August, 2013.
Building a knowledge platform for agriculture and rural development: Evidence-based learning and results based management in Myanmar. Livelihoods and Food.
Cross-cutting M&E functions in MENARID MENARID Knowledge Exchange workshop 24th to 28th of March, Hammamet, Tunisia 1.
The Millennium Development Goals the fight against global poverty and inequality.
High Level Executive Round Table of the 08 th Nov The Kilimo Trust: regional solutions to local problems 1 Presented by Prof. Joseph Mukiibi.
LUTHERAN WORLD RELIEF To Others, Through Others Lisa Negstad Director for Organizational Effectiveness.
OPTIONS AND REQUIREMENTS FOR ENGAGEMENT OF CIVIL SOCIETY IN GEF PROJECTS AND PROGRAMMES presented by Faizal Parish Regional/Central Focal Point GEF NGO.
Module 3: Education Leaders Innovation Forum and Learning (ELIF) Lead Center: SEAMEO RETRAC, Vietnam.
Seeking Livelihood Adaptation through Communication for Development Mario Acunzo Research and Extension Division Natural Resources Department Food and.
Encourage Investment, Technical Cooperation, Policy, Education, Awareness and Extension PLAN OF ACTION FOR PILLAR TWO FOR THE EUROSIAN SOIL PARTNERSHIP.
ZEST Gender issues in Agriculture. ZEST This is the state of being male or female (typically used with reference to social and cultural differences rather.
AGENDA ITEM 4: FOLLOW-UP ON THE DECISIONS OF THE WORLD METEOROLOGICAL CONGRESS ON THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL BOARD ON CLIMATE SERVICES AGENDA ITEM 4.1.2: INITIAL.
IRAN (HAMYARAN) LOCAL DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE DRAFT PROPOSAL FOR IDS-HAMYARAN COOPERATION JULY 2008.
WLE and the INTEGRATING ECOSYSTEM SOLUTIONS INTO POLICY and INVESTMENTS (IES) FLAGSHIP Nathanial Matthews Global Research Coordinator IES Flagship Leader.
Including the Productive Poor in Agricultural Development Escaping Poverty Traps: Connecting the Chronically Poor to Economic Growth Cheryl Morden Director,
Title: Transition from Climate Risk to Climate Smart Agriculture.
«Проект по экономической реабилитации и построению мер доверия» Integrating interests and institutions in water resource management 25 th June, 2013 Eng.
WMO 3.2 WMO Strategic Plan role and links to WWRP and GAW CAS MG meeting WMO Geneva April 2014 Øystein Hov Norwegian Meteorological Institute.
1 Robert S. Webb and Roger S. Pulwarty NOAA Climate Service.
Science for Agricultural Development Changing contexts and new opportunities AGM 05, Marrakech Lisa Sennerby Forsse Science Council.
Training of Trainers Integrated Water Resources Management Enabling Environment and Institutions.
Rural poverty reduction: IFAD’s role and focus Consultation on the 7 th replenishment of IFAD’s resources.
GROUP 4 (JM, Carlos, Pieter, Esther, Taigbenu & Yasmina ) Which technologies are being developed – or are they already used in water productivity and management?
Key Messages Day 1 Objectives Themes Identifying main trends and challenges Session discussions and outcomes Bridging the gap.
Building Community Partnerships to Serve Immigrant Workers Funded by the Ford Foundation Nonprofit and Community College Collaborations.
Government IAM Ministerial Conference Participants Virtual Water Forum Water Voice Sessions interaction Ministerial Declaration Interaction Session Reports,
R ECAP DAY 2. Priority sectors for Green Growth – Overview Sustainable Construction Water Management Waste Recycling Sustainable Agriculture Renewable.
NIGERIA Developing CSA within the NAIP while reinforcing inter-sectoral consistency: progress, bottlenecks and support needs With technical facilitation.
Adaptation knowledge needs and response under the UNFCCC process Adaptation Knowledge Day V Session 1: Knowledge Gaps Bonn, Germany 09 June 2014 Rojina.
KEY MESSAGES EMERGING FROM NBDC Presented at National Platform on Land and Water Management, February 2013 Douglas J. Merrey.
MAINSTREAMING MONITORING AND EVALUATION IN EDUCATION Can education be effectively managed without an M & E system in place?
Outcomes-based Commissioning. What is commissioning? What is an outcome? How will we want to work with you?
Hydropower development and livelihoods: supporting new cassava varieties for local farmers around the Yali reservoir Sonali Senaratna Sellamuttu and Trun.
PARTNERSHIPS IN SUPPORT OF CAADP Progress Report Brief Progress Report AUC Page 1 of 14.
GROUP 4 (JM, Carlos, Pieter, Esther, Taigbenu & Yasmina) CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME – FOOD SECURITY:WHAT PRODUCT -Suite of short courses (depending.
Title: Transition from Climate Risk to Climate Smart Agriculture.
WHAT Title: Supporting the use of Big Data for Water Filling in the knowledge gap Delivery available data/information to users Environment for product.
Plan © Plan An introduction. © Plan It starts with ambition… Plan’s Vision is of a world in which all children realise their full potential in societies.
Decadal Scale Climate Information, Climate Risk Management & Adaptation.
Presented by: Steve Litke, Fraser Basin Council Winnipeg, Manitoba June 18, 2012 Collaborative Approaches to Watershed Governance – Lessons from BC.
Food and agriculture organization of the United Nations (FAO)
Ready to Raise PowerPoint Resource The Work of Early Years Community Developers Please feel free to adapt these PowerPoint slides to your needs. Credit.
1 About the network and opportunities for collaboration.
CAI-Asia is building an air quality management community in Asia Investment Implications of the Action Plan Sustainable Urban.
South and East Africa Regional Working Group. Charge to Regional Working Groups Each Regional Group identifies: Strengths – Gaps –Opportunities, towards.
Focus on Governance and territorial achievements in Leader Plus period European Commission Évora, Portugal, 2007 Jela Tvrdonova.
ROAD MAP FOR E2S RESEARCH. MAPPING E2S RESEARCH WHAT HAS BEEN DONE GAPS WHO IS DOING WHAT.
Connecting Risk, Opportunity and Knowledge for Innovation in Water Management Bernadette Conant Executive Director Canadian Water Network CEC JPAC Meeting.
CLUSTERING PROJECT Oto Hudec Faculty of Economics Technical University of Košice.
Sustainable Financing of MPA Networks Scott E. Smith The Nature Conservancy November 2005.
Agricultural (rain and irrigation) water management across landscape for sustainable intensification and smallholders resilience building.
C4EO – Ways of Working Heather Rushton, Planning and Performance 1.
Outcomes Measurement in Service Enriched Housing: What it is, Why it Matters, & How to do it Joelle K. Greene, Ph.D. Director of Community Assessment &
U N I T E D S T A T E S D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M E R C E N A T I O N A L O C E A N I C A N D A T M O S P H E R I C A D M I N I S T R A T I O N.
OutcomeObjectivesResearch questionsOutputs Activities Smallholder families adopt technology packages that improve food, nutrition and income security 1.To.
1 Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Developing Countries: Impact Assessment and Lessons Learned from InfoDev’s Global Network of Business Incubators June.
Using Analysis and Tools to Inform Adaptation and Resilience Decisions -- the U.S. national experiences Jia Li Climate Change Division U.S. Environmental.
Monitoring and Evaluating Rural Advisory Services
13th Governing Council of SIAP 4-5th December,2017 Chiba, Japan
WaterNet & Capacity building in water resources Management in Africa
Implementation of SAPCC:
Centre for Civil Society and Non-profit Management
Presentation transcript:

Key Messages Day 2 Roundtable Group discussion Formulating action axes for a capacity development plan Action Plan outcomes

ROUNDTABLE Need to facilitate adaptation: getting old guys onboard Enabling environment: requirements, benefits What technology are we talking about? To what extent? Water related or any time of innovation? Private sector involvement- startups especially in ICT world University collaboration Positive role models and mentorship:

ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION What are the incentives and benefits of increasing capacity? How to use technology to lower costs? How can we use technology to build capacity? Defined approach: agricultural and food security or beyond? Try to make universities more current – start UPS and incubators and then the students are already your trainers Bringing youths into discussion and target groups, especially in ICT Securing funding

Formulating action axes for a capacity development plan What are we going to do? Act or ignore? Three levels which need to be addressed: 1.Individual: 2.Organizational 3.Enabling environment Questions: -Target audience? Primary, secondary, tertiary -Who pays? -Quality assurance? -Engaging private sector? -Monitoring and evaluation (impacts)?

Action Plan Questions WHAT - intervention/ product (title, target, audience, sector, gender, needs) HOW - product description (form, innovation) WHO – roles (partnerships, what resources do they bring, risks and how to mitigate them?) WHY - M&E, benchmarking, tracking and tracing, impacts

Action Plan Outcomes WHAT – Filling knowledge gap – Accessibility in terms of usability and visualization – Sector: hydrological modeling, agriculture, urban water demand, governmental administration – Linking Cap-Net to innovation – Target audience

Action Plan Outcomes HOW – Reduce data gaps – Transfer from science to real world: – Trust – Accessible communication / education – Suite of tailored short courses

Action Plan Outcomes WHO – User communities: institutions, farmer associations, river basic committees, regional centers, governments – EAS, ITC, WMO, FAO, 3R, UNESCO IHE, IWMI – Universities – Start-ups – Foundations – Private sector – Basin authorities

Action Plan Outcomes WHY – Increase use of existing data – Enabling environment for analysis, decision making, innovation (product development) – Improve water resource management efficiency and productivity – Improve livelihoods – Measuring improved access, availability, affordability, security (predictability) – Sustainability (efficiency)

Cap-Tec: Bridging the gap Affordability Ownership Participation Accessibility