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Sharing Benefits of Transboundary Waters through Cooperation

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Equal apportionment of flow to each riparian. Prioritization of uses. Payments for water ... Riparian ownership: ownership builds commitment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sharing Benefits of Transboundary Waters through Cooperation


1
Sharing Benefits of Transboundary Waters through
Cooperation
International Conference on Freshwater Bonn, 2001
  • David Grey
  • The World Bank

2
River basin management boundaries
  • Basins within nations with strong central
    government
  • Basins within federal nations with strong state
    governments (transboundary waters)
  • Basins shared by nations (international
    transboundary waters)

Legal complexity
Political complexity
3
International transboundary waters
  • Extent 260 river basins shared by 2 nations
  • Culture river/society, pride, sovereignty
  • Jurisdiction no entity unless negotiated
  • Politics anarchy of international relations
  • Principles UN Convention foundation
  • Tensions longstanding, always, growing with
    demand, water wars.

4
New Geography of Conflict
  • Possible flashpoint for resource conflict
  • Water systems aquifers
  • Jordan
  • Nile
  • Tigris Euphrates
  • Amu Darya
  • Indus
  • Mountain Aquifer (W. Bank/Israel)

5
Overview
  • What are the benefits of cooperation?
  • How can these benefits be shared?
  • Some lessons and conclusions

6
Benefits of International Waters Cooperation
The Challenges
The Opportunities
Limited water resour. management degraded
watersheds, wetlands, biodiversity, water
quality.
Improved water quality, riverflow
characteristics, soil conservation, biodiversity
a pre-requisite
Level 1 Benefits to the river
7
Benefits of International Waters Cooperation
The Challenges
The Opportunities
Limited water resour. management degraded
watersheds, wetlands, biodiversity, water
quality.
Improved water quality, riverflow
characteristics, soil conservation, biodiversity
a pre-requisite
Level 1 Benefits to the river
Sub-optimal water resources development
Improved hydropower agricultural production,
flood-drought management, environmental
conservation water quality
Level 2 Benefits from the river
8
Benefits of International Waters Cooperation
The Challenges
The Opportunities
Limited water resour. management degraded
watersheds, wetlands, biodiversity, water
quality.
Improved water quality, riverflow
characteristics, soil conservation, biodiversity
a pre-requisite
Level 1 Benefits to the river
Sub-optimal water resources development
Improved hydropower agricultural production,
flood-drought management, environmental
conservation water quality
Level 2 Benefits from the river
Policy shift to cooperation development, from
dispute from food energy self-sufficiency to
security reduced conflict risk military
expenditure (/-)
Tense (/-) regional relations political
economy impacts
Level 3 Costs because of the river
9
Benefits of International Waters Cooperation
The Challenges
The Opportunities
Limited water resour. management degraded
watersheds, wetlands, biodiversity, water
quality.
Improved water quality, riverflow
characteristics, soil conservation, biodiversity
a pre-requisite
Level 1 Benefits to the river
Sub-optimal water resources development
Improved hydropower agricultural production,
flood-drought management, environmental
conservation water quality
Level 2 Benefits from the river
Policy shift to cooperation development, from
dispute from food energy self-sufficiency to
security reduced conflict risk military
expenditure (/-)
Tense (/-) regional relations political
economy impacts
Level 3 Costs because of the river
Level 4 Benefits beyond the river
Regional fragmentation
Integration of regional infrastructure, markets
trade
10
Sharing the benefits
  • The Challenge
  • Optimal river development may give unacceptable
    distribution of benefits
  • A mechanism for redistribution compensation
  • Fairness subjective situation specific
  • Potential benefits to be shared
  • Water quantity/quality water supply hydropower
    agricultural production fisheries transport
    eco-tourism trade.
  • Political decisions

11
Sharing the benefits
  • Principles
  • Some international consensus on principles
  • 1997 UN Convention on the Law of the
    Non-navigable Uses of International Watercourses
    (SADC Protocol, etc)
  • Equitable and reasonable utilization
  • No significant harm
  • No consensus on prioritization
  • UN Convention vital human needs
  • No consensus on specific criteria

12
Sharing the benefits
  • Potential Criteria
  • Physical factors geography, hydrology,
    contribution to flow
  • Socioeconomic factors total population,
    dependent population, economic social needs
  • Water Uses existing potential, efficiency of
    use
  • Alternative sources availability costs
  • Externalities upstream downstream
  • Conservation impacts efforts to preserve
  • Formulae Equal (or proportionate) shares of
    flows or benefits

13
Sharing the benefits
  • Past practices
  • Compensation for lost benefits
  • Equal apportionment of flow to each riparian
  • Prioritization of uses
  • Payments for water
  • Absolute sovereignty of tributaries
  • Equal allocation of benefits, and
  • Relinquishing of prior uses
  • (after Wolf)

14
Sharing the benefits
  • Some possible mechanisms
  • Water sharing
  • (Re)assigning rights
  • Payments for water
  • Payment for use rights, bilateral sale or water
    markets
  • Payments for benefits
  • Compensation for lost benefits, payments to allow
    new uses
  • Purchase agreements power, agriculture, etc.
  • Agreed price can effect a transfer of benefits
  • Financing ownership arrangements
  • Agreed terms can effect a transfer of benefits
  • Bundling broader benefits
  • Trade, transport.

15
Lessons in Benefit Sharing
  • Importance of political PROCESS
  • Perception of fairness essential to sustain
    cooperation on transboundary waters
  • Sharing benefits /or water
  • Benefit bundles the broader the better
  • Innovative benefit sharing mechanisms
  • Unique solutions

16
Process the key lesson
  • Imperative of trust
  • Build capacity to level playing field
  • Wide civil society engagement basin community
    of interest
  • Share experiences in the bus
  • Riparian ownership ownership builds commitment
  • Self-financed institutional arrangements
    essential
  • Riparian commitment
  • Shared Vision recognizing win-win
  • Share benefits, not only water
  • Inclusiveness subsidiarity
  • Build basin-wide framework
  • Achieve early results through sub-basin action

17
Conclusions
  • No blueprints from simple to very complex
  • Process as important as product to achieve
    cooperation
  • Twice as long costly as planned - then some
  • From river cooperation to economic integration
  • An instrument to support PROCESS?
    sustainability security (public goods)

18
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19
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