The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation Projects and Initiatives within the Fields of Integrated and
Sustainable Water Ressource Management
The Water Think Tank
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation
HE Bernard FautrierVice President & CEO
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
BiodiversityBiodiversity
Climate Change & Climate Change & EnergyEnergy
Water & Water & DesertificationDesertification
3 Key Concerns
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
The Polar RegionsThe Polar Regions
The Mediterranean The Mediterranean BasinBasin
The Least Developed The Least Developed CountriesCountries
3 Priority Areas
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Partnerships and projects• 82 projects chosen from over 700 submitted proposals • Projects selected based on assessment by an international panel of experts on a
Scientific and Technical Committee• A partnership approach
• To date 13 million euros have been allocated
• Average duration : 3 years
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
The Priority Fields(in % of total funding)
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Where do we act ?(in % of total funding)
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Water : a threatened resource
World population growth Climate change Industrial and agriculture water
use …
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Water experiences
Acces to drinking water
Knowledge management
And Experiences sharing
Sustainable water management
Video
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
The Water Think TankMr Lucien Chabason
PresidentPlan Bleu
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
An Innovative Multi Partners InitiativeHE Bernard Fautrier
The Prince Albert II of Monaco FoundationMr Jocelyn Fenard
UNITARMr Lucien Chabason
Plan BleuMr Dominique Héron
Veolia
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Expression
Mr. Ramiro Martinez CostaCoordinator
MEditerranean Network of Basin Organisation (MENBO)
Side Event – March 17th, 2009
Red Mediterránea de Organismos de Cuenca (REMOC) Mediterranean Network of Basin Organisations (MENBO)
Réseau Méditerranéen des Organismes de Bassin (REMOB)
Ramiro Martínez
OBJECTIFSOBJECTIFS
Le Réseau Méditerranéen des Organismes de Bassin a été crée en 2003
comme Réseau régional du RIOB pour promouvoir la collaboration entre
toutes les agences de bassin de la région Méditerranéenne.
- Promouvoir la GIRE au niveau de bassin comme outil essentiel pour un développement durable
- Renforcer les liens entre les agences de bassin de la Méditerranée.- Intégrer agences de bassin de tous les pays méditerranéens.
(Actuellement compte sur 31 membres de 14 pays différents).- Organiser activités d’intérêt régional.- Supporter projets sur la GIRE et disséminer information et outils associés.
Objectifs
Gouvernance Générale de l’Eau
Usages de l’Eau
Allocation
Environnemental
Irrigation
Industrie
Hydroélectrique
Récréatif
Gouvernement
Ministères Gouvernements Regionaux
Industrie/Mines Environnement Foresterie Agriculture Territoire
Agences de BassinPlanification
GouvernanceGestion
Public Général
ONGsAssociations
d’usagers
Universités
Secteur Privé
Instituts de recherche
31 miembros – 14 países31 miembros – 14 países
PRINCIPALES ACTIVIDAES
• Conférence ministérielle euro-méditerranéenne sur l'eau. Ammán, Dec 2008.
PRÓXIMAS ACTIVIDAES
Secretariado Técnico Permanente REMOC
Avda. Blasco Ibáñez, 48-5ª
46010 Valencia
España
Tel. +34 96 3938942
Fax + 34 96 1125750
Email: [email protected]
UBICACIÓNUBICACIÓN
Otros sitios web: www.inbo.org, www.chj.mma.es, www.mma.es
www.remoc.org
5th World Water Forum – Istanbul 2009Side event organized by the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation:
Cooperation among public and private stakeholdersfor a sustainable management of water resources
A case study from Latin America:
THE EXPERIENCE OF THE CITY OF GUAYAQUIL - ECUADOR
César RodríguezHigh representative of the Mayor of Guayaquil
Josep FernandezManager of Interagua
I.- General background (1/2): I.- General background (1/2): Local water resources under constraintLocal water resources under constraint
Ecuador Province of Guayas City of Guayaquil
• Population: 2,5 million inhabitants
• Rapidly expanding every year…
• Rapid development of the main economic and industrial pole in Ecuador
• High pressure on water resources
• Need for : Infrastructures Funding Technical solutions
BUT…
Río Daule BasinCEDEGE area Río Guayas Basin
Abundant resources :
-Río Guayas Basin 13% of national territory
-Río Daule Basin 5% of national territory
2000: insufficient access to services
POTABLE WATER: 63%• South central district (50% of users)• Discontinuous supply: 10 hours / day• Water losses > 80% on the network
WASTEWATER: 45%• Insufficient maintenance of the
system
I.- General background (2/2): I.- General background (2/2): Abundant resources BUT many challenges for water supplyAbundant resources BUT many challenges for water supply
ECAPAG InteraguaConcession
contract
Protection of the users’ rights with key principles of objectivity, transparency, equity, efficiency.
Commitments: balanced and sustainable management of services, affordable tariffs, follow-up investment …
Regulation and control mechanisms
Public service delegation (30-year concession)
Public ownership of the infrastructure
Commercial risk taken by the private sector
Mandatory investment plan (infrastructures…)
Progressive tariff structure (reviewed every 5 year)
.
.
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II.- Strategy chosen by public authorities: II.- Strategy chosen by public authorities: A tailor-made management modelA tailor-made management model
Access to potable water:
63% 90% (2009) 95% (2011)
Access to wastewater:
45% 80% (2009) 90% (2011)
Other results:
Tariffs: 24% decrease
Protection of the environment:- Consumption: +80% with no extra pressure on raw water resources- Reduction of water losses- Educational program for a responsible use of the resources
III.- Results: III.- Results: Improvement of the access to water and sanitationImprovement of the access to water and sanitation
Main local commitments:
Better services for the city: 100% coverage
Ability to face complex changes (urban growth, climate change, scarcity…)
Reinforce the governance
Foster enhanced risk management
.
.
.
.
IV.- Perspectives: IV.- Perspectives: The Istanbul Pact: a shared commitmentThe Istanbul Pact: a shared commitment
Main international commitments:
Share our experience of resource management (international think tanks…)
Contribute to decentralized cooperation processes
Learn from other best practices launched in other parts of the world
Reinforce the global water governance
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