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GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES, GEOSPATIAL INFORMATION & THE WORLD BANK GROUP Ede Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez Senior Director Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience.

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Presentation on theme: "GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES, GEOSPATIAL INFORMATION & THE WORLD BANK GROUP Ede Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez Senior Director Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience."— Presentation transcript:

1 GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES, GEOSPATIAL INFORMATION & THE WORLD BANK GROUP Ede Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez Senior Director Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience Global Practice

2 Contents  World Bank Group  Global Trends  Use of Geospatial Information in WB  Key Messages 2

3 The World Bank Group Structure International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) 1944 1956 International Development Association (IDA) 1960 1988 1966 Over 10,000 employees Over 5,000 consultants 120 country offices 3 Private sector engagement Guarantees to crowd in private sector investments

4 4 The World Bank’s Twin Goals

5 How do we serve our clients? How do we serve our clients? Our Bundles of Services A Bundle of Services Leveraged For Impact 5 A Bundle of Services Leveraged For Impact Financial services Knowledge services Convening services Learning and Capacity Building services Advocacy and outreach

6 Growing Prosperity Urbanization Food production Climate Change Sustainable Land Management Global Trends 6

7 Global Trends: Growing Prosperity 7 But… 1.2 billion people are still living in extreme poverty Since 1990, the number of the poor living on $1.25 per day was significantly reduced by 700 million, mostly in China and Asia

8 8 Global Trends: Urbanization 2 billion residents & 1.2 million km 2 (Urban expansion)

9 Today’s Urban Realities 9

10 Global Trends: Food production  Increase of population (2 to 3 billion, 60% more)  Needs of… -another 2 billion tons of cereals -another 200 million of meat -another 130 million of oilseeds 10

11 11 Global Trends: Climate Change 11

12 Increasing Risks in the World: A relentless increase in disaster loss Overall and insured losses from Natural Disasters (2011 values) Source: Munich Re, Geo Risks Research and NatCatSERVICE. 2011 losses = $380 billion Disaster loss has tripled in 30 years 2,275,000 fatalities US$3.5 trillion of economic losses 12

13 Global Trends: Sustainable Land Tenure  Social peace & Good governance  Sustainable economic growth  Poverty reduction GEOSPATIAL WORLD Magazine (June 2012) 13

14 Contents  World Bank Group  Global Trends  Use of Geospatial Information in WB  Key Messages 14

15 Use of Geospatial Information in WBG A recognition of central role of geospatial information in development, but also the need for a Paradigm Shift From… 14 To… Flat mapsMultiple dimensions Single mapping agencyWhole of government Public sector focusPPPs and Society at large Multilaterals and donor agenciesBroad development platforms

16 Use of multiple tools for… Use of the Cloud Aerial and satellite imagery Indoor positioning UAVs (drone) 3D/4D visualization LiDAR & GPS  Legal and Policy frameworks  Institutional capacities and skills training  Developing and meeting standards  Sharing good experience across countries  Bringing the private sector as a key stakeholder in service provision and investments 15

17 Case Study in WB projects: DRM Event Generation Intensity Calculation Exposure information Damage estimation Loss calculation  Provide the Pacific Island Countries with disaster risk modeling and assessment tools  Largest collection of geo- referenced dataset  Disaster Risk Planning  Post-disaster damage assessment  Public access to information  Disaster Risk Financing with private sector reinsurance industry [Pacific Risk Management Initiative] 17

18 Case Study in WB projects: Urban Land Use & Urban Structure Land Use & Urban Structure Ecosystem & Green Space Ecosystem Low-Carbon Energy System Low-Carbon Green Transportation Green Lifestyle Complex land use for low-carbon urban structure Reducing Carbon thru greening buildings & expanding green space Reducing Carbon based on renewable energies & green home Reducing Carbon Thru u-bike & green car Reducing Carbon By circulating water & resources & building waterfront space Water Circulation Reducing Carbon system Based on movements on green consumption & green start Railway Bus Bicycle Acess Complex Use Residential (High density) Residential (Low density) Neighborhood Square District Square Waterfront 16

19 Case Study in WB projects: Land Also available on Mobile devices Russian Public Cadastral Map’(PCM) e-service  Over 15 million visits in 2013  Over 25 million pages viewed in 2013  Average length of PCM visiting is 29 minutes 18

20 20 Global Partnerships 20

21 GEO and WBG PARTNERSHIP Knowledge exchange From pilots to scale Technical advocacy Technical assistance

22  Growing prosperity, urbanization, food, and climate change require: Accurate location of land, people and resources with Geospatial information Transparent and inclusive institutions  We need strong collaboration between national and local governments, the private sector, civil society and international partners  Geospatial tools fundamental to support global efforts in poverty elimination and boosting shared prosperity  We look forward to a strong partnership with GEO and its members Key Messages 23

23 Thank You For further information, please contact: Jorge Muñoz - jmunoz@worldbank.orgjmunoz@worldbank.org Practice Manager, Land and Geospatial Unit Wael Zakout – wzakout@worldbank.orgwzakout@worldbank.org Global Lead, Land and Geospatial The World Bank


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