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UNEP and wastewater including linkages to pro-poor wastewater management (PPWM)

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Presentation on theme: "UNEP and wastewater including linkages to pro-poor wastewater management (PPWM)"— Presentation transcript:

1 UNEP and wastewater including linkages to pro-poor wastewater management (PPWM)

2 “UNEP’s mission: To provide leadership and encourage partnership in caring for the environment by inspiring, informing, and enabling nations and peoples to improve their quality of life without compromising that of future generations.”

3 Loss of Biodiversity Loss of blue carbon sinks Loss of food securityLoss of shoreline protection

4 Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine Environment from Land-based Activities (GPA) The GPA is a flexible global programme to protect coastal and marine environment from land-based activities, which was adopted in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. in 1995; Its implementation is reviewed every five years; Intergovernmental mechanism explicitly addressing the linkages between freshwater, coastal and marine environments; Source categories include, among others, sewage, nutrients, marine litter, and physical alteration and destruction of habitats (PADH); National implementation through the development and implementation of National Programmes of Action (NPAs); and Regional implementation facilitated and supported by/through Regional Seas Conventions and Action Plans and other regional bodies.

5 UNEP activities to date Capacity building: ”Improving Municipal Wastewater Management for Coastal Cities” for municipal wastewater managers (1800 trainees/ 67 countries)  Objective Oriented Planning (the project identification part of the project cycle),  Innovative Technological and Financial Approaches,  Stakeholder Involvement (benefits of stakeholder involvement and how to do it),  Presentation Techniques and feasibility reporting, Publications - Sick Water(2010), Building the foundations for sustainable nutrient management (2010); Demo projects (WIOLAB, IWCAM, etc.) 7 LBS/A Protocols - Regional Seas Action Plans and Conventions Lead – UN-Water Taskforce on wastewater – collaborative agenda

6 3 rd Inter-governmental Review of GPA (IGR-3) Review the progress of GPA implementation since IGR2, adopt the Programme of Work for next five years, Receive policy guidance on further implementation of GPA, Manila Declaration; Held in Manila during 25-27 January 2012 Seeking discussion and adoption on policy direction for further implementation of GPA, also in connection with green economy in a blue world. The results should feed into Rio+20, meaning alignment of discussion to green economy, governance and emerging issues. The last inter- governmental meeting on marine and freshwater related issues before the Rio+20.

7 Global Conference on Land-Ocean Connections (GLOC) Scientific and Technical Sessions, 23-24 January 2012 to discuss emerging issues and science-policy linkages, feeding results into the IGR-3 More flexible arrangements, involving our governmental, international and regional organisations A number of emerging issues will be highlighted. Emerging issues selection in alignment with UNEP Foresight Process Science-policy linkage discussion from the green economy perspective, governance/policy perspective (Integrated Coastal Management, River Basin Management)

8 Wastewater Proposal Objective: to promote and demonstrate pro-poor, environmentally-friendly and resource-recycling approaches to wastewater, while maintaining hygienic and health aspects of wastewater management. A series of components will collectively result in:  50 more partners will join this initiative, assisting in information on good practices;  Demonstration of at least 80% nutrient removal and 70% nutrient recycling rates in a selected demonstration sites;  An agreed guidance document on the re-use of wastewater among concerned UN agencies; and  The web-based information platform will be accessed frequently (at least more than 20,000 hits per day).

9 Component 1: Development of an international forum on pro-poor wastewater management Multiple stakeholders (international organisations, Governments (Health, Agriculture, Environment and Economic development), NGOs/CBOs.)  collecting and disseminating good practices linking wastewater management with climate change mitigation, agricultural production, poverty alleviation and water use efficiency.  Development of possible international guidance documents. UN-Water Task Force on Wastewater work with the forum to develop:  a multi-stakeholder agenda for action – implementation through the forum;  international guidance on wastewater reuse;  matrix of PPWM technologies, so that the developing country participants can more easily choose appropriate technologies that can meet their hygienic, resource-recycling, climate change and environmental concerns. Global Partnership on Wastewater Management (inter-sectoral focus)

10 Component 2: Development of information exchange platform closely linked with the international forum Disseminate good practices and lessons learnt that have been collected and collated through the forum; Promote any available and internationally/regionally accepted guidelines/guidance documents; Linkage with the existing information system, such as SEI (Swedish Environment Institute) EcoSan Knowledge Hub system, Sustainable Sanitation network, etc. will be sought.

11 Component 3: Demonstration of pro-poor wastewater management (PPWM) with focus on urban and peri-urban areas 5-10 demonstration areas will be selected to test and apply the PPWM approaches; Focus on providing specific economic and social benefits to the demonstration site population through, inter alia, recycling of nutrients, pursuing climate change/ energy benefits, enhancing water efficiency in wastewater systems, establishing ownership of wastewater management systems. A combination of ecological sanitation (urine diversion, compost toilet, feaces reuse, etc.), biogas generation, phytotechnologies, community based wastewater management will be tested and demonstrated. Urban-rural partnership on the exchange of wastewater and agricultural produce will also be sought.

12 How? Initiate partnership through UN agencies and collaborative agenda; Expansion of partnership at regional levels through UNEP’s Regional Seas Programme, SEI EcoSan knowledge hubs and other regional platforms to facilitate inter-sectoral collaboration; 7 LBS/A protocols regional policy mechanisms; Wider Caribbean Region: LBS Protocol – CreW – assist countries through financial, technical and information support to meet their obligations under the protocol

13 Summary Endorsement of Governments at the IGR-3 Limited scope of proposal due to limited mandate/resources; Open to broaden the scope;

14 Way forward IGR-3: Partnership approach for wastewater, marine litter and nutrients Global Partnership on Wastewater Management (inter-sectoral focus) Online forum/ matrix/guidelines Projects on pro-poor approaches (ecological sanitation, phyto- technologies, low-tech biogas generation, composting technologies, environmental friendly septage management, or combination of these)

15 Benefits Nutrient recycling –closing the loop – contribute to food security – economic benefits Closing the carbon loop climate change Mitigation of environmental impacts GPWM – inter-sectoral collaboration

16 Thank you www.gpa.unep.org

17 LBS Protocol Caribbean Adopted 1999, entered into force 2010; Promotes the establishment of pollution standards and schedules for implementation; Annex III establishes specific regional effluent limitations for domestic sewage; Annex IV requires each Contracting Party to develop plans, programmes etc. for prevention, reduction and control of agricultural non-point sources respectively)

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20 Caribbean Revolving Fund for Wastewater (CReW) Caribbean: LBS Protocol – CreW – assist countries through financial, technical and information support to meet their obligations under the protocol;  Improve the capacity of countries in wastewater management;  Development of a prototype Regional Revolving Fund  Possible modality for providing sustainable financing for wastewater management projects in the region while also  Addressing key capacity constraints within existing legal, institutional, educational and policy frameworks for wastewater management Components: Investment & innovative financing for waste water management; Policy reforms for wastewater management; Regional dialogue; project management


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