Summary
This session focuses on managing coastal wastewater to protect marine environments, highlighting sustainable treatment technologies and nature-based solutions. It will cover case studies of successful strategies, emphasizing cross-sectoral collaboration. The aim is to reduce ocean pollution, restore natural water cycles, and support resilient coastal communities through innovative, integrated management approaches.
Session Description
This session aims to introduce several different approaches to managing coastal wastewater sources in a manner that protects vital coastal and marine environments. Participants will explore innovative, sustainable wastewater treatment technologies and nature-based solutions that aim to reduce pollution, restore natural water cycles, and support local economies. The session will feature case studies demonstrating successful implementation of integrated wastewater management strategies from source to sea, highlighting the importance of collaboration among governments, industries, NGOs, and communities. Key case studies will include policy frameworks that have supported scalable and replicable solutions, emphasizing the role of cross-sectoral partnerships in achieving significant reductions in ocean pollution. This session seeks to empower stakeholders with the tools and insights needed to contribute to healthier oceans and more resilient coastal communities.
Programme
0-5 min: Introduction to session, Amy Zimmer-Faust, The Nature Conservancy
5-18 min: Finding Direction: Evaluating Wastewater Technologies, Jillian Maxcy-Brown, Auburn University
18-30 min: Katie Williamson, RARE
30-42 min: Ali Carter, Urban Ocean Lab
42-47 min: Closing remarks, Jasmine Fournier, Ocean Sewage Alliance
47-60 min: Q&A/Discussion
Files
Convenors
Ocean Sewage Alliance
The Nature Conservancy
speaker



session_host


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
USAID STAWI Project
USAID/KEA
Winrock International
session_host

Moderator

speaker




Summary
Featuring high-level experts and officials, this session presents the current state of water insecurity and food and nutrition security, at the intersection with peace and human-wellbeing. A human rights perspective is introduced to elevate water for food as a priority in establishing human security and peace.
Session Description
There is a growing need to prioritise water for food, nutrition and human security. A human rights perspective serves to elevate water for food as a priority in efforts to establish human security and peace. This session will feature high-level experts and officials presenting the current state of water insecurity and food and nutrition security at the intersection with peace and human-wellbeing. Addressing water resources for food and nutrition is one necessary path to ensure multiple human rights, such as food, clean water, and basic security, while also safeguarding sustainable and productive landscapes for future generations. These multi-dimensional targets (SDG 2,3, 6, 15) are off-track in many geographic regions affected by water insecurity and social instability. By addressing the human rights perspective, we can provide an approach to ensure water for food is embedded into efforts toward enduring peace and security.
Programme
Welcome and introduction (Dr. Claudia Ringler, IFPRI)
Speakers:
A human rights perspective to water, food, and peace (Lyla Metha, IDS Sussex)
Current state of water security and food (David Nabarro, Scaling Up)
Perspective from the grassroots: Coupling agricultural development with water and land to address the linkages between poverty and conflict resolution (Arely Morales, Colibri Program, El Salvador)
Lars Anders Jagerskog, World Bank Group
H.E. Ambassador Nosipho Nausca-Jen Jezile, Chair, Committee on Food Security
Q & A and audience engagement: To what extent does water insecurity contribute to food insecurity and to conflict?
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
International Finance Corporation-The World Bank Group (IFC-WB)
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), CGIAR
Catholic Relief Services (CRF)
session_host



Moderator






speaker




Summary
Long-time partners, Xylem and Mercy Corps discuss how private philanthropy can allow humanitarian organizations to test and scale new ideas to build the evidence base required for systems-level change and expand proven solutions to reach millions more people, unlocking barriers for further catalytic philanthropic support towards bold climate action.
Session Description
Identifying and funding solutions to help communities around the world cope, adapt, and thrive in the face of the climate crisis will require unprecedented commitment, creativity, and collaboration. Private philanthropy has a unique and crucial role to play in helping address the climate crisis. Private giving creates the flexibility to take bigger, bolder actions to try new ideas and replicate innovative solutions. Xylem, a leader in developing innovative water solutions, and Mercy Corps, a global humanitarian organization, partner to respond to water, sanitation, and hygiene needs after disaster strikes. After 15 years of successful partnership, and in light of the urgency of the climate crisis, we asked ourselves how we could do even more together to help address the greatest issue of our time. In 2021, Xylem funded Mercy Corps’ pilot project in Jordan to conduct in-depth research on the impact of climate change as it relates to water security, agricultural production, and livelihoods. This enabled us to co-design an innovative water-focused proof concept to strengthen agricultural production and livelihoods in a vulnerable village. Thanks to Xylem’s catalytic investment, the project was fully funded by the Australian and Swiss governments and can now be replicated across the country.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Mercy Corps
Xylem
speaker



Summary
Delving into the results of a comprehensive analysis of various existing & future water usage and users to identify opportunities for supporting self-sustaining aquifers. Through diverse case studies, we'll explore water usage across sectors, climates, highlighting risks and fostering dialogue for sustainable management. Join us in creating collaborative, innovative solutions.
Session Description
As we confront pressing water management challenges, we must gauge our current consumption patterns to anticipate and prepare for the scenarios awaiting us in 2035. Our proposed session will identify opportunities to create self-sustaining aquifers by that date while exploring the results of a comprehensive analysis of various existing and future water usage and users. Central to our discussion will be the projections for 2035, considering factors such as population growth, urbanization trends, climate change impacts, and innovation. Through this foresight, we’ll elucidate the risks posed to water resources, highlighting vulnerabilities various stakeholders face. By presenting case studies from regions exhibiting distinct climatic conditions and consumption patterns, we intend to illuminate the multifaceted nature of water utilization across industries, households, and agriculture. The interdisciplinary nature of the sessions is designed to foster dialogue on sustainable and innovative methodologies and collaborative frameworks essential for addressing imminent challenges. Our session endeavours to equip participants with actionable insights and pragmatic solutions. By fostering knowledge exchange and partnerships, we aim to catalyse collective action towards securing water resources essential for future generations.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arcadis
50L Home Coalition
World Business Council for Sustainable Development
session_host


speaker




Summary
In the dynamic water landscape, agriculture is shifting from its resource-intensive reputation to becoming a vital solution and convergence point for stakeholders. Explore how collaboration and technology reshape its role as a guardian of water security in LATAM's stressed basins.
Session Description
Join us for a thought-provoking panel discussion on agriculture's evolving role in water security. Today's water crisis requires urgent attention, particularly in LATAM's stressed basins. Recognizing the interdependence between water availability, irrigation management, and peace promotion is crucial. With 70% of the world's freshwater used for irrigation and food production, enhancing water management in agriculture is essential for achieving water security and sustainable development. Agriculture emerges as a vital component of responsible water management, with producers leading the charge. Incentivizing producers to adopt efficient irrigation practices through technology is key. Organizations setting water security goals and investing in initiatives underscore the importance of cooperation for a sustainable future. Water serves as a unifying force in this endeavor. Our panelists will explore how collaboration and technology are reshaping agriculture's role as a guardian of water security in LATAM's stressed basins. Through insightful discussions and real-world examples, we'll uncover innovative strategies driving this transformative process. This panel offers a unique opportunity to gain insights and contribute to the ongoing dialogue on sustainable water management. Join us as we discuss agriculture's pivotal role in shaping a more resilient and water-secure future for Latin America.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Agua Segura
Bonneville Environmental Foundation
Kilimo
Microsoft
WaterPlan
speaker




session_host

Summary
This session will present research findings on enablers and barriers of constructed wetlands as a nature-based wastewater treatment solution for a sustainable future.
Session Description
The session will discuss various factors identified as enablers and barriers of constructed wetlands (CW) application as a nature-based solution for wastewater treatment. CW are designed to mimic the processes of natural wetlands which naturally filter and improve water quality. While CW have been utilized as a wastewater treatment method for decades and can be much more economical and environmentally friendly than conventional treatment options, adoption rates in low- and middle-income countries remain low. To understand the challenges and promoters of CW adoption as a technical solution, RTI team conducted semi-structured interviews and surveys in five countries as case studies (Senegal, Kenya, the Philippines, Jordan, and Dominican Republic). The research results will be presented and will be followed by a panel discussion to share experiences from each country.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Habitat for Humanity Kenya, German Jordanian University, Global Water Solutions Inc., Plan Yaque Inc., RTI International
moderator

speaker







Summary
In the Food and Beverage sector, it is well recognized that the most of your water footprint is realized at the producer level, but how do companies navigate their large and complex agricultural supply chains?
Session Description
Companies in the Food and Beverage (F&B) sector are increasingly encouraged to engage their agricultural suppliers on water stewardship, as this is where the majority of corporate water impact occurs. But how does a company navigate such complex and opaque supply chains? What if you do not know who your suppliers are? How do you influence suppliers to adopt new practices? These are the types of questions we aim to answer during this session. A panel of companies from the F&B sector will discuss their experiences in analyzing their supply chain risks, tracing and engaging their agricultural suppliers, how they dealt with opacity and traceability constraints, how they have built capacity in their procurement teams, and other topics. The audience will also be given a chance to share their ideas and challenges with agricultural supply chain engagement.
Programme
Files
Convenors
World Wide Fund for Nature
speaker






Summary
Session Description
Programme
Moderator: Jean Boroto, Land and Water Officer, FAO
Jean Boroto, Land and Water Officer, FAO
16:10 -16:20 Overview of the AWSAMe initiative with focus on the compendium of drought resilient and nutritious crops
Rosaida Dolce, Environment and Water Specialist, FAO
16:20 -16:40 Status and implementation of AWSAMe
Nora Helena Ramos Silva, President of Instituto Nacional de Investigação e Desenvolvimento Agrário (INIDA), Cabo Verde / Jacques Tavares, INIDA, Cabo Verde (online)
Vinay Nangia, Research Team Leader on Soils, Waters and Agronomy, International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) (online)
Nakita Aboya, PhD Student in Economics, Sapienza University of Rome
16:40- 17:20 Consultation with partners and other countries’ involvement in the next phase
Claudia Ringler, Director of Natural Resources and Resilience Unit, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Leader of the Water and Nutrition Working Group of WASAG
Interventions from partners and countries attending the session
17:20- 17:30 Wrap up - Moderator
Files
Convenors
French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development
Global Framework on Water Scarcity in Agriculture
Government of Cabo Verde
Government of South Sudan
Ministry of Agriculture of Malawi
Ministry of Agriculture, Morocco
Swiss Federal Office for Agriculture
United States Department of Agriculture
speaker


Summary
The Sustainable Water Sanitation and Hygiene for All (SUSWA) project has been instrumental in fostering effective WASH management practices in remote Local Governments of Karnali Province since 2021. Despite challenges posed by small institutional holdings, LGs have demonstrated high sustainability in mitigating risks and delivering quality water supply, sanitation, and hygiene interventions.
Session Description
This session delves into the Sustainable Water Sanitation and Hygiene for all (SUSWA) project's endeavors in bolstering WASH management and capacity development practices within local governments (LGs) in the Karnali Province of Nepal. The presentation offers insights into SUSWA's initiatives have since 2021, aimed at establishing effective WASH management structures in remote LGs. Through case studies and analyses, attendees will gain a comprehensive understanding of the role played by WASH Management Committees (WASH-MC) and WASH units in overcoming institutional and structural challenges. The session highlights SUSWA's strategies for sustaining WASH services, including the formation of WASH Management Committees, establishment of WASH units, and capacity enhancement training for staff members. Additionally, the session explores the development of sectoral policies and tools to guide municipal WASH management and outlines future collaboration strategies to strengthen support for rural municipalities and municipalities in the region. Attendees will leave with valuable insights into best practices for promoting sustainable WASH activities at the local level.
Programme
35 years of WASH cooperation of Finland in Nepal
The changing landscape of WASH governance in Nepal
SUSWA: Capacitating governments to lead the change in WASH
- Support to municipal institutions and policies
- Suport to good governance
- Support to vertical integration
Open discussion and Q&A
Files
Convenors
Niras Finland Technical Assistance - Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA) Project Support Unit
The SUSWA project is funded by the Government of Nepal, the European Union, and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland and the local governments in the project area.
session_host

speaker


moderator

Summary
To address the evidence gap around water governance, a three-pronged evaluation in rural Honduras will be completed in 2024. Leveraging a natural experiment, the study explores conflict resolution and decision-making to generate findings essential for informing water rights, rural livelihoods, policymaking, SDGs, and addresses the transformative potential of participatory governance.
Session Description
There is a limited understanding of the impacts of water governance interventions given their complexity and difficulty to study, yet they are a critical aspect of securing the human right to water and rural livelihoods. To fill this gap, we are undertaking a three-method evaluation in early 2024 to examine the outcomes of local-level water governance interventions in a Territorial Water Governance project in rural Honduras. We will examine the project's impacts on households, partner stakeholders, and communities across the watershed basin by employing a natural experiment, the Most Significant Change participatory method, and Pause & Reflect workshops. The study explores variables such as conflict resolution, water and sanitation access, livelihoods and household income, perceptions of water management, norms, and decision-making processes. The results will inform an enhanced understanding of the mechanisms driving change and conflict resolution through water governance, and its diverse impacts. This knowledge is vital for crafting effective policies in Central America and informing future water governance interventions in other similar contexts. By focusing on economic and well-being indicators, the findings can amplify the discourse on water governance and inform sector conversations on the human right to water, community prosperity, and the overarching vision of the SDGs.
Programme
Files
Convenors
iDE
speaker


Moderator

session_host

Summary
Bangladesh released its National WASH Accounts 2020 recently with WASH sector expenditure being 2.18% of the country's GDP. Low-income households dedicated a significant portion of their income to WASH. This workshop provokes thinking: what and who can supplement public finance to mitigate the financing gap in a pro-poor fashion?
Session Description
The Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), with technical support from WaterAid Bangladesh, released the National WASH Accounts 2020 report in November 2023. The report revealed that in 2020, WASH sector expenditure was BDT 598 billion (aprx. USD 6 billion) which is 2.18% of the country's total gross domestic product (GDP). Around BDT 172 billion (aprx USD 2 billion) which is 28% of the total WASH spending was on capital investment for building new water supply, sanitation of hygiene services, including hardware and software costs such as the procurement of pipes or paying for detailed design or associated training. Households spent an average of BDT 11,574 annually for WASH. This represented 4.3% of citizens' average annual household income. While it is proof of households having willingness to pay for WASH, we can anticipate the expenditure may higher than 4.3% for poor and hard-core poor households. It provokes thinking: 1. What are the sources of financing for WASH for people living in poverty in the exacerbating backdrop of climate change? 2. How is microfinance playing a real role here? 3. Are we missing out other financing options?
Programme
Files
Convenors
BRAC
IRCWASH
WaterAid
speaker



session_host

moderator

Summary
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) considers water management crucial for promoting regional peace through transboundary and regional cooperation, as well as for harmonizing legislation, policies, and strategies. This session will discuss ways to develop groundwater institutions in River Basin Organizations (RBOs) to enhance regional integration and peace.
Session Description
Want to know more about setting up groundwater institutions? This session discusses experiences related to setting up groundwater institutions in River Basin Organizations (RBOs). The SADC-GMI, in partnership with Member States and RBOs, has launched several initiatives to foster groundwater policy, legislation, and institutional arrangements. The intended session presents lessons learned from establishing and training National Focal Groups in Member States, launching strategic partnerships with RBOs, conducting groundwater assessments in transboundary aquifers (TBAs), basin plans, and Gender, Equality, and Social Inclusion (GESI) capacity development to promote sustainable groundwater management. The modality of the session includes keynote speakers, panel discussions, and audience interaction. The distinguished contributors to the session will contribute to our current understanding of promoting regional peace through transboundary and regional cooperation and harmonizing legislation, policies, and strategies. We invite attendees from RBOs and other water management institutions to share their experiences in finding groundwater's voice.
Files
Convenors
BUPUSACOM
Cooperation in International Waters in Africa (CIWA)
CUVECOM
Global Environment Facility (GEF)
Global Water Partnership (GWP) -Tanzania
International Fund for Agriculture Development
KOBWA
Orange-Senqu River Commission
World Bank Group
Moderator


speaker




session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Moderator

session_host


speaker

Summary
The session will discuss on the actions to be taken before, during, and after possible water hazards to foster peace among countries based on a set of recommendations compiled as HELP Principles.
Session Description
Peace and water are interlinked. Throughout history, there are more cases when water-related disaster become opportunities between riparian countries by sharing critical information and extending support to affected neighboring countries. In the past fifty years, water was used as an agent for peace in 1,200 diplomatic events, or two thirds of the 1,800 total events on water. Leaders can position water as strategic means for peace, and discuss diplomatic ways to materialize it. On the other hand, water infrastructure which are vital for human survival may become targets of malicious forces. Construction and repair of water infrastructure in the situation of fragile peace setting is difficult. Facilities and workers related to water and other essential services should be protected from military offense even in wars and conflicts. The session will discuss on the actions at the time of water hazards to foster peace among countries based on a set of recommendations compiled as HELP Principles to Peace before, during and after Water-related Disasters. After the the keynote speech and introduction of the Principles, the cases of shared by the international experts with interaction of participating various stakeholders.
Programme
14:00-14:05 Opening and objectives of the session by the moderator, Prof. Kenzo Hiroki, Coordinator of HELP / Professor, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) of Japan
14:05-14:10 Welcome remarks by the co-organizing organization(s)
• Prof. Mark Zeitoun, Director General, Geneva Water Hub
14:10-14:25 Briefing on the “The Spirit of Bandung: A Call to Actions”
14:25-15:25 Panel Discussion on “fostering Peace before, during and after Water-related Disasters”
Panelists (in alphabetical order)
• Ms. Anesa Colakovic, Member of the World Youth Parliament for Water
• Mr. Satoshi Ishii, Director, Strategy and Partnerships Team, Water and Urban Development Sector Office, Sectors Group, Asian Development Bank
• Mr. Muyatwa Sitali, Head of Country Engagement, Sanitation and Water for All
• Mr. Yosuke Tomizawa, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism of Japan
• Prof. Mark Zeitoun, Director General, Geneva Water Hub
15:25-15:30 Summary and Closing by the moderator
Convenors
- Geneva Water Hub
- High-level Experts and Leaders Panel on Water and Disasters
- Sanitation and Water for All (SWA)
- UNCRD/UNDESA
speaker



session_host

Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Dry Areas International Water Management Institute
speaker




Summary
This session will foster solutions to regional water security challenges in the Himalayan plateau. The discussion will integrate diverse perspectives, from science to policy, emphasizing holistic development goals. We will explore novel policy, scientific, and technology-inspired approaches, learn from failures, and promote stakeholder diversity to advance a peaceful water future.
Session Description
The session will build on insights from the U.S. State Department's 2023 World Water Week event on 'Himalayan Water Security.' The Hindu Kush-Himalayan region crucially supplies one-fifth of global freshwater, sustaining over 1.8 billion people in South and Southeast Asia. However, rapid and ad-hoc development, including plans for large-scale water diversion and hydropower projects, threatens the region's ecological balance, affecting downstream water access and ecosystems. UN General Assembly Resolution 77/158 declared 2025 the "Year of Glaciers’ Preservation," and the 2025 International Conference on Glaciers' Preservation has raised the priority for international cooperation and data sharing in meeting climate adaptation goals and supporting Himalayan nations' socio-economic development. Through interdisciplinary examples and audience dialogue, we'll explore strategies to mitigate development's adverse effects while ensuring fair water distribution and enhancing ecosystem resilience. The session will highlight innovative glacier preservation methods, drawing from real-world examples. Audience engagement will drive interactive discussion and collaborative action, focusing on glacier protection, awareness-raising, scientific understanding, and strengthening policy, with a special emphasis on safeguarding the Tibetan plateau's environment and water resources.
Programme
Opening Speakers:
- Uzra Zeya, U.S. Department of State Under Secretary of Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights
- Rebecca Peters, Senior International Water Policy Advisor, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs
- Sri Kushvinder Vohra, Chairman, Central Water Commission, Ministry of Jal Shakti, Government of India
Panel:
- Alok Sikka (Moderator), Representative for India and Bangladesh, International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
- Austin Lord, Senior Fellow and Environmental Anthropologist, Stimson Center
- Arun Srestha, Strategic Group Lead for Reducing Climate and Environmental Risks, International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)
- Pasang Yangjee Sherpa, Assistant Professor of Lifeways in Indigenous Asia, University of British Columbia
- Shuchi Vora, Resilience Evidence Coalition Lead, Global Resilience Partnership
Closing Discussant:
- Jonathan Lautze, Research Group Leader - Integrated Basin and Aquifer Management, International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
Files
Convenors
United States Department of State
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
speaker




Moderator

session_host

Summary
The right to safe water and sanitation, anchored in international agreements, is critical for children’s survival. In Ukraine, attacks on civil infrastructure have devastated 1,000 km of water networks, causing power outages and heightening disease risks. With nearly US$4 billion in damage and US$11.6 billion in losses, the Government of Ukraine and partners are addressing emergency needs, which focusing on recovery efforts. This session unpacks the humanitarian-development nexus currently in play in Ukraine, prioritizing clean drinking water access to save lives amidst the conflict and crises.
Session Description
In Ukraine, attacks on civil infrastructure have destroyed 1,000 km of water networks and caused power outages, disrupting access to basic services and raising the already high risks of diseases. 40 percent of the national water and sanitation system was already in critical condition before the full-scale war due to old and decaying infrastructure. The total cost of damage to the sector, as of December 2023, is estimated to be almost US$4 billion, and losses are estimated to be US$11.6 billion.
The right to safe water and sanitation is rooted in the Convention on the Rights of the Child, United Nations resolutions and the Geneva conventions. It is a right that is as critical to the survival of children as food, medical care, and protection from attack. It is critical as ever to unpack the humanitarian-development nexus to improve children's access to clean drinking water, and to save lives in conflicts and crises.
This session focusses on the heightened efforts by the Government of Ukraine, and humanitarian and development partners, in ensuring safe drinking water and sanitation for affected populations, across the nexus. On one hand, interventions are directly responding to the emergency to prevent disruption of services which are purposely targeted, and on the other, focus is placed on the recovery agenda with a lens for Ukraine’s aspirations to join the European Union, giving an opportunity for Ukraine to make the shift from old and decaying Soviet infrastructure and services, to decentralized low-cost, energy-efficient and sustainable water supply and sanitation service delivery.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Government of Ukraine
UNICEF Ukraine
WASH Cluster Ukraine
speaker








session_host


Moderator


Summary
The session will present Development Banks’ experience with financing Nature-based Solutions for water security and discuss challenges and opportunities to mainstream NbS in their portfolio of water-related projects.
Session Description
The accelerating climate change and global water crisis is a planet-sized problem that demands water users and operators to invest in solutions that can achieve multiple objectives. In many cases, this includes the integration of nature-based solutions (NbS), which are actions to protect, sustainably manage and restore natural or modified ecosystems, to address water security challenges effectively and adaptively, while simultaneously providing human well-being and biodiversity benefits. Grey infrastructure remains the dominant type of intervention to improve water security. There is, however, a growing movement to implement large-scale NbS or hybrid investments as these solutions are increasingly seen as cost-effective strategies. Development Finance Institutions are increasingly interested in incorporating NbS into the mix for their investments. The session will showcase what Development Banks are doing to mainstream NbS into their portfolio of water projects, presenting examples of projects incorporating NbS and discussing 1) the benefits and costs of such solutions and their broader impacts in terms of climate mitigation and adaptation, biodiversity, etc.; 2) what made these cases possible and how these experiences could be replicated in other contexts; 3) the challenges and opportunities to do more.
Programme
Participants:
- OECD: Sophie Trémolet, Water team lead
- TNC: Naomi Noel, Senior Partnership Associate, Water & Resilience, and Brooke Atwell, Associate Director, Resilient Watersheds Strategy
- World Bank: Zhimin Mao, Senior Water Specialist
- AFD: Lionel Goujon, Head of Water and Sanitation OR Laurent Raspaud, Senior Water Specialist
- EIB: Peter Szappanos, Senior Water Management specialist
- ADB: Lance Gore, Principal Water Resources Specialist, Agriculture, Food, Nature and Rural Development Sector Group
Files
Convenors
Asian Development Bank
European Investment Bank
French Development Agency
The Nature Conservancy
World Bank Group
OECD
session_host

speaker





Moderator

Summary
The session explores innovative water solutions, emphasizing social cohesion and livelihoods between Syrian Refugees and host communities in Jordan, discussing protecting water reservoirs and initiatives supporting refugees, exploring emerging challenges imposed by refugee influx on water availability and the strategic implementation of data-driven approaches to effectively address sustainable water management.
Session Description
The session consists of two parts: 10 minutes of general introduction followed by 40 minutes for each part including presentation, panels discussion and Q&A.
Part 1: Water Sustainability and Livelihood Enhancement In this part, we will explore innovative solutions to protect water reservoirs while improving livelihoods and promoting social cohesion by creating short-term employment opportunities for vulnerable Jordanian and Syrian refugees to preserve dam storage capacities and reduce soil erosion. Also, provide practical approaches that enhance water sustainability, and support local communities. The Audience, female refugees, and host community members will be actively involved in a panel discussion and Q&A and will share their best practices and lessons learned.
Part 2: Power of Data in times of Conflict Challenges stemming from refugee influx escalating water demand will be addressed. Highlighting operational challenges, exploring practical implementation perspectives, emphasizing the power of data to overcome challenges, and showcasing instrumented data-driven approaches in addressing water sustainability and improving water management practices. Bringing together all the convenors, in addition to water professional to emphasize the role in tackling water challenges in discussions to foster collaboration, knowledge-sharing, and transformative potential of data-driven solutions.
Programme
Agenda:
0-5 mins – welcoming and icebreaker for the audience
5-10 mins – Introduction water situation in Jordan
10-15 mins – introduction GIZ water and energy cluster
Part 1: water sustainability and livelihood enhancement
15-25 mins – Presentation 1: Jordan's experience in protecting water reservoirs through improving the living conditions of local communities and Syrian refugees
25-35mins - Panel discussion 1: Practices for Protecting Water Resources, Livelihood Development, and Enhancing Social Cohesion
35-50 mins: Q&A
Part 2: Jordan Case Study: Power of Data in times of conflict
50 – 55 mins: bridging and introduction
55 - 65 mins – Presentation 2: NRW and the power of Data in tackling the complex challenges
65 - 75mins – Panel discussion 2: innovations and approaches for a water utility in conflict time
75 – 90mins : Q&A
Desired impact and session outcomes:
Our sessions are dedicated to tackling Jordan's water scarcity crisis, exacerbated by the influx of Syrian refugees. Through initiatives aimed at protection of water dams, creating livelihood opportunities, strengthening social cohesion, and provide local operators on the ground with sufficient data and management tools to ensure better impact on service provision to both refugees and the hosting community to achieve sustainability and continuity of the implemented approach.
Files
Convenors
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
Jordan Valley Authority
WAJ
Water Utilities
World Vision
speaker
















session_host



Summary
Transboundary water quality degradation challenges basin states and communities. However, cooperation presents an opportunity to address degradation and promote peaceful dynamics within and across borders. This session explores how transboundary water quality cooperation across the source-to-sea continuum can be developed and maintained in the face of pressing challenges.
Session Description
As part of the triple planetary crisis, pollution and other water quality impairments have a widespread impact on global freshwater and downstream marine systems. An estimated 80% of transboundary rivers are severely affected by water quality degradation and several significantly contribute contaminants to seas. This degradation not only affects basin states, but is often acutely felt locally, impacting the health and livelihoods of basin communities. Given the potential ramifications to ecosystems and communities, states are pressured to respond and navigate these water quality challenges. Transboundary cooperation provides an opportunity to peacefully address water quality concerns including through basin agreements, institutions, and participation in international conventions. However, existing and emerging water quality impacts can challenge these dynamics. Additionally, many transboundary basins still lack cooperative mechanisms, and ineffective action can hamper security in riparian communities. This session will explore how transboundary water quality cooperation can be developed and maintained to peacefully address concerns from source-to-sea.Through a combination of short inputs and panel discussions from a range of stakeholders, the proposed session will explore the state of transboundary water quality cooperation, its impacts, and best practices that build resilient solutions to water quality and related security dynamics at international and local scales.
Programme
Introduction - Dr. Susanne Schmeier, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
Keynote inputs:
- "Status of transboundary water quality degradation and its socioeconomic and ecologic impacts" - Nina Raasakka, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and World Water Quality Alliance
- "Exploring the state of international cooperation over freshwater quality" Alyssa Offutt, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
- "Source-to-sea perspectives in water quality cooperation" Ruth Mathews, Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
- Moderated by: Julien Favier, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE)
Panel: "Best practices of transboundary water quality cooperation"
- Dr. Florence Grace Adongo, Executive Director of the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI) Secretariat
- Astrid Hillers, Senior Environmental Specialist, International Waters, Global Environment Facility (GEF)
- Irina Makarenko, Pollution Monitoring and Assessment Officer, Commission on the Protection of the Black Sea Against Pollution
- María Laura Piñeiros, Water Program Officer for South America, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
- Birgit Vogel, Executive Secretary of the International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River (ICPDR)
- Moderated by: Dimitris Faloutsos, Global Water Partnership (GWP)
Closing remarks - Dr. Malte Grossman, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)
Files
Convenors
Action Platform for Source to Sea Management
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
GEF/IWLEARN
Global Water Partnership
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River
International Union for Conservation of Nature
Nile Basin Initiative
Stockholm International Water Institute
Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management
UN Environment Programme
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
World Water Quality Alliance
session_host


speaker








Moderator



Summary
Critical infrastructure like water, wastewater treatment and electricity are increasingly at risk. How can we ensure that services function despite extreme weather events, cyberattacks or war? In this workshop we draw on experiences from different countries, sectors and technologies. Participants collaborate to identify solutions and develop strategies.
Session Description
Critical infrastructures face multifaceted threats, ranging from potential armed conflicts, terrorism or cyber-attacks to risks posed by extreme weather events. This hands-on workshop helps participants understand and respond to these threats.
Through expert presentations and group discussions, participants will learn about the vulnerabilities of services like water, wastewater treatment and the electricity needed to provide them. Drawing on global best practice examples, we identify plausible solutions and strategies to enhance the preparedness of critical infrastructures. Participants will share knowledge and experiences to overcome common challenges, connecting people worldwide regardless of location or level of development.
This is a chance to explore new technologies and services that can function without necessarily being connected to a centralized grid, reimagine our infrastructures for the safe provision of water and wastewater services to new generations, and learn from real-world crises where preparedness was put to the test. We want to include as many perspectives as possible, not least addressing cascading risks that are often forgotten. The aim is to enable participants to design effective strategies in their communities and foster collaboration after World Water Week. We hope to form a global community creating a roadmap for infrastructure preparedness.
Programme
Four keynote speakers will set the scene and outline challenges related to climate change, cyber risks, armed conflict, and socioeconomic change. Participants will thereafter be divided into groups that develop effective responses to one of the challenges.
Keynote speakers:
Climate change – Dr. Ashok Swain Professor and Head of the Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Uppsala University
Cyber risks - Dr. Heather A. Harrison Dinniss, Department of International and Operational Law, Swedish Defence University
Armed conflict – Debora Falk, risk management specialist Norconsult
Socioeconomic change – Diego Rodriguez, Lead Water Economist World Bank
Files
Convenors
IWA Sweden
RISE Research Institutes of Sweden
Stockholm Environment Institute
Svenskt Vatten
Sweden Water Research
speaker




session_host

Moderator

Summary
This session focuses on collaborative actions for sustainable shared water management in Latin America and the Caribbean. It explores successful examples, discusses challenges, and emphasizes the need for building strong institutions, legal frameworks, and knowledge sharing towards better Hydro-Diplomacy.
Session Description
This critical session will dive deep into the need for collaboration to ensure the equitable and sustainable use of shared water resources in Latin America and the Caribbean. It will present successful examples in transboundary water cooperation and engage the audience in a dynamic discussion about overcoming challenges and seizing opportunities. The focus will be on building stronger institutional frameworks that foster dialogue, information-sharing, and coordinated decision-making. It will also delve into the importance of developing clear legal agreements and effective policy frameworks that guarantee equitable access to water resources. Sharing technical knowledge and best practices will be key to building capacity and fostering effective cooperation across borders. Through collaboration with diverse stakeholders and the exchange of diverse experiences, this session seeks to bridge the divide in water management, ultimately creating a water-secure future for all.
Programme
Welcome and Opening Focus on the Americas 2024
- Tomas Serebrisky, Manager, Infrastructure, IDB
Setting the stage
- “What is hydro-diplomacy?” Antonio Embid, Professor of Administrative Law at the University of Zaragoza, Spain
Presentation of the UN Water Convention
- Sonja Koeppel, Secretary of the Water Convention, UNECE
SDG indicator 6.5.2 on transboundary cooperation: status and perspectives
- Julien Favier, Associate Environmental Affairs Officer, Water Convention Secretariat, UNECE
Case studies: Opportunities and Challenges in Hydro-Diplomacy
- “International Treaty Trifinio”, Liseth Hernández, Executive Secretary, Comisión Trinacional del Plan Trifinio
- “River Dajabon/Masacre Basin”, Andrés Sánchez, Manager of the Water Programme of the Americas, OAS
- "The Guaraní", Alberto Manganelli, Executive Director, CEREGAS
- "The Amazon Basin", Maria Apostolova, Regional Coordinator, OTCA
- "The Sixaola River Basin shared by Panama and Costa Rica", Yarid Guevara, Ministry of Environment, Panama
Files
Convenors
Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization
Comisión Trinacional del Plan Trifinio
Organization of American States
Inter-American Development Bank
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
Moderator

speaker








session_host


Summary
Engagement of people in decision-making improves sustainable management of water resources, ensuring access to clean water and sanitation. Despite a variety of approaches across the world, it is based on international human rights law. We compare human rights-based approaches through case stories, and how they are reflected in national legislation.
Session Description
The session brings insightful case studies from Africa, Asia and Latin America, demonstrating community-level examples of inclusive decision-making. Highlighting the human rights-based principles of public-participation, non-discrimination, data transparency, accountability and sustainability, the case-studies will be used to show how international human rights standards can be brought to play in local policy, reflecting national and international standards. This 90-minute session will include presentations that highlight the needs of different vulnerable groups, and how a structured and inclusive approach to decision-making can be used to create more successful projects that stand the test of time. It will bring representatives from each of the regions to tell their stories, with stories from indigenous groups, women, people with disabilities, and migrant communities. The stories will be told in different media, using music, performance and storytelling to explain how the projects have succeeded with participative approaches, where others might have failed.
Programme
Files
Convenors
African Development Bank
Asian Development Bank
Human Right 2 Water
Water Research Commission
session_host

speaker
Summary
SDG 6 mandates holistic inclusion, placing gender, disability, and social factors at the forefront, not as an afterthought. Inclusive water management is imperative for sustainability, especially amid a changing climate. Indo-Pacific leaders will reveal strategies to embed inclusion into policy and practice, recognising its centrality in combating water security challenges.
Session Description
Gender, disability, and social inclusion stand as imperatives in international development, embodying the core ethos of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – to leave no one behind. Despite evolving from technical disciplines, water resources management is fundamentally a social and political realm. Decisions in this domain, rooted in engineering and science, undergo intricate negotiations and power dynamics, necessitating a deeper exploration of whose interests are prioritised. In the aftermath of COVID-19, compounded by climate change and global conflicts, marginalised groups, particularly women and persons with disabilities, face severe setbacks in accessing essential resources like water. This session will explore the practical integration of gender, disability and social inclusion principles in the context of water resources management projects. It will emphasise collaboration with local organisations representing marginalised communities, enabling the identification and resolution of contextual barriers. This approach ensures the development of locally fitting solutions to combat water and climate crises, concurrently influencing national policies. As we navigate these challenges, the session will aim to crystallise a path forward where equity, resilience, and sustainable water management form the cornerstone of global development.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Australian Water Partnership
Water Aid
Oxfam
speaker


Summary
How can cities achieve water resilience through Nature-based solutions? Imagine a workshop where nature-driven urban water management thrives. Government officials, financial experts, designers, private sector leaders, and community members unite to integrate innovative design, financing, and strategies, laying the foundation for global initiatives.
Session Description
Water as Leverage (WaL) is a Dutch-founded public-private partnership (PPP) for international collaborative water management. In 2023, two multidisciplinary teams joined WaL Cartagena to develop conceptual designs and strategies to significantly enhance the city's water system. The program aims to promote innovative designs to address climate change adaptation and urban water management challenges while leveraging infrastructure investments and incorporating significant social components. These proposals are mandated to tackle climate adaptation through local collaboration and to build comprehensive solutions grounded in local knowledge and Cartagena's tradition of living with water.
This experience underscores the importance of collaboration in driving innovation and sustainability in water projects, including a strong need of focusing on Nature-based Solutions (NbS). Therefore during the workshop role-playing will be employed to foster innovative water management strategies.
Participants will assume various roles to explore the critical role of designers in water management. This exercise will deepen their understanding of the complexities, challenges, and opportunities in water design and policy, promoting informed dialogue and integrated solutions. The implementation strategy emphasizes stakeholder synergy, linking planning with financing for realistic, feasible solutions. Final presentations will showcase how integrated design addresses real-world challenges through diverse perspectives, creating sustainable outcomes.
Programme
1- Introduction
Robert Proos (Government of the Netherlands – RVO) presents the "WaL Cartagena" methodology and workshop goals: bridging the gap between investors and government through an integrated design approach, benefiting all stakeholders.
2- About Cartagena
Felixx and W+B present the WaL assignment in Cartagena, focusing on ‘La Ciénaga de la Virgen’. They will also explain the game.
3- Designing for Water ‘Role-Playing Game’
Participants assume roles such as government officials, investors, private sector representatives, NGO members, academics, engineers, and climate change analysts. Divided into groups and guided by a designer, they brainstorm solutions for water-related tasks using Role, Task, Obstacle, and NbS and water-sensitive measures cards.
- Defining the Strategy
Groups develop strategies by selecting water task and obstacle cards, aiming to integrate diverse perspectives in water design to foster innovation and address complex challenges.
- Implementing and Designing the Strategy
Participants translate their strategies into practical measures and interventions through sketches and NBS cards, planning for both short-term and long-term implementation.
- Group Presentation
Groups present their strategies, discussing tasks, approaches, tools used, and financial and policy opportunities, reflecting on challenges and how gaps were bridged.
WaL Team Presentation
Felixx, W+B, and Robert Proos present their design proposals for WaL Cartagena emphasizing the integration of diverse perspectives and practical solutions, and sharing obstacles encountered.
4- Final Reflection
The audience reflects on outcomes and effectiveness of the role-playing approach, followed by a final wrap-up.
Files
Convenors
Felixx Landscape Architects & Planners
Government of the Netherlands Netherlands
Enterprise Agency
Witteveen+Bos
speaker



Summary
Explore innovative tools for tackling crucial water issues, and promoting collaborative solutions for peace and security. Discover practical approaches for sustainable water management, emphasising accountability, transparency, and democratisation.
Session Description
This interactive session showcases innovative tools that enable efficient and collaborative water management. With case studies from around the world, we explore solutions for optimizing lake and reservoir operations, monitoring and managing water quality and quantity, enhancing water governance and achievement of the SDGs. The discussion focuses on multiple perspectives, emphasizing the crucial role of clear communication between tool developers and users, the incorporation of local knowledge, and the importance of effective implementation, not just the adoption of cutting-edge technologies. Join our panellists: Cayelan Carey (Virginia Tech, USA), Bethlehem Mengistu (Agenda for Change, Ethiopia), Rozemarijn ter Horst (Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands), Elias Munthali (Northern Region Water Board, Malawi), and Dennis Trolle (WaterITech, Denmark) as they engage on water challenges in their own contexts from distinct perspectives.
Programme
-
11:00 - 11:10 Introduction of conveners and Icebreaker
-
11:10 - 11:40 1 min Introduction + 5 min presentation (per panellist)
-
11:40 - 12:10 Panel discussion
-
12:10 - 12:25 Q&A from audience
-
12:25 - 12:30 Takehome message and closing remarks
Files
Convenors
- inventWater - H2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions grant agreement ID: 956623
- Wageningen University, The Netherlands
- Catalan Institute for Water Research - ICRA, Spain
- Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Germany
- University of Stirling, United Kingdom
- Centre d’Estudis Avancats de Blanes - CSIC-CEAB, Spain
session_host




speaker





Summary
Water is at the centre of effective climate action. The Just Transitions for Water Security partners will share approaches for triggering social, economic and ecosystem resilience at scale, and new opportunities for transformative action emerging through collaboration with Water Tracker for National Climate Planning, the Resilient Water Accelerator, and Fair Water Footprints.
Session Description
Why have efforts to increase water security thus far failed to bring about the desired outcome? What role does climate resilience play in this? The session will promote multi-faceted approaches to transforming governance to achieve water security for all under a new global initiative called Just Transitions for Water Security. Partners will share evidence and lessons learned from early experiences implementing strategies which strengthen policy, investment, and accountability to catalyze improved water governance and climate resilience.
Through a panel discussion and audience engagement, the session will demonstrate new collaborative opportunities for strengthening governance, policy coherence, regulatory instruments, and investment incentive structures to stimulate the urgent action needed for shared water security and climate resilience.
The session will inspire collaboration and action. Session attendees will be empowered to increase cross-sector communication and build multi-sector programmes. Participants will also gain awareness of the three initiatives under the Just Transitions for Water Security programme and thus be able to access and engage with the resources and outcomes from the programme in the years ahead.
Programme
Welcoming Remarks: Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Organization of the United Kingdom (FCDO)
Scene setting: A new vision for global water security: Upending traditional water governance
Speaker: Virginia Newton-Lewis, Director of Water Sustainability, Grundfos Foundation
Levers of Change Discussion
Moderator: Kate Hughes, WaterAid
- Policy & Advocacy
- Speaker 1: Idrees Malyar, Director, Water Resilience Tracker, Alliance for Global Water Adaptation (AGWA)
- Speaker 2: Sareen Malik, Executive Director, African Civil Society Network on Water and Sanitation (ANEW)
- Finance & Private Sector Engagement
- Speaker 1: Nick Hepworth, Executive Director, Water Witness International
- Speaker 2: Phillip Obosi, Nigeria Country Coordinator, Resilient Water Accelerator
Audience Q&A
Files
Convenors
African Civil Society Network on Water and Sanitation
Alliance for Global Water Adaptation
Arup
CDP Worldwide
Chatham House
Deltares
Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, UK
international institute for environment and development
International Water Management Institute
Water Witness International
WaterAid
speaker






session_host

Moderator

Summary
In a world facing unprecedented water challenges, from scarcity to pollution, the paths to sustainability and peace through water management are as diverse as the stakeholders involved. "Uniting Streams" is a 90-minute session designed to explore the multifaceted approaches to achieving sustainability and peace through water.
Session Description
The speakers in this session share a similar experience from their youth. Their education, just like this year’s World Water Week, focused specifically on peace and a sustainable future. Having developed their own paths in life, their case studies span a diverse array of sectors and perspectives, while maintaining a shared and central goal. Encompassing youth, experts, various cultures, and representatives from the public, private, and academic spheres, they showcase how many of us in the water sector, with our diversity, work towards a shared set of values. The results are the unique contributions and perspectives each stakeholder brings to the table. Through a blend of individual presentations and a dynamic panel discussion, "Uniting Streams" underlines the importance of collective action and mutual understanding in fostering water security and cooperation across all border. Cases: Fire and Water: Building Climate Resilience in the High Desert Environment Financing for Water Security and Drought Engineering Water Futures Sustainable Solutions from a School Born of Hope Navigating Waters: The Role of Law in Enhancing Transboundary Water Cooperation Waves of Change: Securing Clean Water for the Future of Kakuma Refugee Cam How research shapes impact – Lessons from East and Southern Africa
Programme
Welcome
Case studies
Networks 1
Panel Discussion
Networks 2
Files
Convenors
Antea Group
International Water Management Institute
United World College
UWC Dilijan
UWC International Office
UWC Waterforld Kamhlaba
speaker




session_host


Summary
This session aims to investigate which factors prove to be particularly relevant for effective and sustainable cooperation and reduce the potential for conflict – such as robust agreements and RBOs, good working relations, and healthy economies – and how these factors could underscore future directions for other shared basins towards water-based peace by bridging science and policy.
This session will explore this topic through the academic and research lens through lightning talks, as well as learn from real-world experiences from a panel of practitioners. In person and online participants will be able to contribute to the discussion through Mentimeter polls and in an interactive discussion section.
Session Description
Water is a powerful tool for peacebuilding, yet political and environmental factors can complicate relations in transboundary waters. Stressors, such as increasing infrastructure development and shifts in geopolitical dynamics, interact and obfuscate pathways to build resilience and enhance cooperation. Will transboundary basins be resilient to change? Will they be able to deal with these stressors in a way that minimizes negative impacts on people, ecosystems, and countries, as well as preventing conflict over these resources? This question is important not only for the future of sustainable water resources management but also for cooperation and peace more broadly. We respond to this urgent question by identifying factors that shape conflict and cooperation dynamics over shared waters – from research and practice. This session convenes a diverse panel of academics and practitioners with global and basin-level perspectives on the sustainable use of water resources and building peace through transboundary water cooperation. Bridging science and policy, we investigate which factors prove to be particularly relevant for effective cooperation and reducing the potential for conflict – such as robust agreements and RBOs, good working relations, and healthy economies – and how these factors could underscore future directions for other shared basins towards water-based peace.
Programme
Welcome Remarks, Cassandra Schneider, USIP
Introduction and Scene Setting, Melissa McCracken, Tufts University
Lightning Talks
- Alexandra Turgul and Aaron T. Wolf, Oregon State University
- Susanne Schmeier, IHE Delft
- Caroline Pellaton, Geneva Water Hub
Moderated Discussion with Practitioners
- Anders Jagerskog, World Bank
- Astrid Hillers, GEF/IW: Learn
- Norest Ndawana, Government of Zimbabwe
- Tanja Miškova, Government of Slovenia
Audience Q&A with Speakers and Panelists
Concluding Remarks, Melissa McCracken, Tufts University
Files
Convenors
Cooperation on International Waters in Africa (CIWA)/World Bank Group
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University
GEF/IWLEARN
Geneva Water Hub
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia
Oregon State University
United States Institute of Peace
Zimbabwe Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Resettlement
session_host


Moderator

speaker







Summary
LimnoTech, Bluerisk, Bonneville Environmental Foundation (BEF), The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and World Resources Institute (WRI) will introduce approaches for evaluating water stewardship activities. This session will dive into forthcoming guidance on 1) Volumetric Water Benefit Accounting and 2) Water Quality Benefit Accounting. Participants will discuss challenges and opportunities for applying these approaches.
Session Description
Companies are seeking clear and updated guidance related to selecting, implementing, accounting for and reporting effective water stewardship projects that meet the evolving water challenges landscape. This session will showcase forthcoming guidance on Volumetric Water Benefit Accounting (VWBA) 2.0 and Water Quality Benefit Accounting (WQBA) that can assist companies in developing more transformational solutions to pressing water challenges, consider the quantifiable multi-benefits of projects, and do their part in contributing to more resilient water resources for a peaceful and sustainable future. This session includes VWBA 2.0’s updated approaches and the new WQBA methods, case studies of these methods in practice, and invites panelists to share insights on the challenges and opportunities for applying these methods. The session allows participants to discuss next steps and linkages to cooperation, partnerships or collective action approaches. This discussion shares possible pathways to positive water outcomes beyond water volumes and quality including multi-benefits that help increase resilience, improve trust, and decrease risks for water conflict. Co-conveners include the project team (LimnoTech, Bluerisk, Bonneville Environmental Foundation, The Nature Conservancy, World Resources Institute) and corporate partners supporting these efforts will be invited (AB InBev, Amazon Web Services, Apple, Cargill, Coca-Cola, Constellation Brands, Diageo, Ecolab, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nestle, P&G, PepsiCo, and Starbucks).
Programme
11:00 – 11:10 Welcome and Context Setting
11:10 – 11:30 Updates on Volumetric Water Benefit Accounting (VWBA) 2.0 and Water Quality Benefit Accounting (WQBA)
11:30 – 12:10 Panel Discussion: Insights on Application and Future Use of VWBA and WQBA
12:10 – 12:25 Questions and Answers with Participants
12:25 – 12:30 Summary and Close
Convenors
Bonneville Environmental Foundation
LimnoTech
The Nature Conservancy
World Resources Institute
Cargill
The Coca-Cola Company
Meta
Starbucks
Nestle Waters
Diageo
Apple
Microsoft
P&G
Ecolab
PepsiCo
Constellation Brands
speaker





Moderator


Summary
This session will feature an UN-Habitat led Adaptation Fund project that addresses water scarcity in displaced communities in Jordan and Lebanon through rainwater harvesting. It will also include similar cases of RWH from other vulnerable areas in the Arab region, focusing on best practices, guidelines, and upscaling strategies.
Session Description
Rainwater harvesting is the process of collecting and storing rainwater for later use. In countries of the Arab region such as Jordan and Lebanon, where a large portion of the population depends on agriculture and where water scarcity is a constant challenge, rainwater harvesting presents itself as a sustainable solution to augment dwindling water resources.
The objective of the session is to illustrate the viability of rainwater harvesting (RWH) in alleviating water scarcity for vulnerable communities, including the displaced and their hosts. The session will feature cases of rainwater harvesting from various contexts in the Arab region including a UN-Habitat led Adaptation Fund project in Lebanon and Jordan, a UNDP led and Government of Germany/KfW-funded project in Lebanon, and various FAO RWH projects in Jordan, in particular the recent first GCF funded project entitled “Building resilience to cope with climate change in Jordan through improving water use efficiency in the agriculture sector (BRCCJ).” The session panellists will delve into the achieved water savings, financial and environmental implications, pairing with greywater treatment systems, challenges faced in implementing RWH systems, the development of incentive systems to upscale RWH activities, and suggestions for the sustainable maintenance (including the sustainable finance) of implemented systems.
Programme
Welcome + introduction remarks on the importance of RWH as an unconventional water source in the Arab region
Moderator- Sara Hess, Associate Economic Affairs Officer, ESCWA (in-person)
Lebanon’s enabling environment for the implementation of RWH systems (overview of current policies related to RWH, legal provisions, incentive mechanisms (including financial incentives), and suggestions for policy improvement)
Najib Abi Chedid, Environmental Expert, Ministry of Environment, Lebanon (in-person)
Jordan’s enabling environment for the implementation of RWH systems (overview of current policies related to RWH, legal provisions, incentive mechanisms (including financial incentives), and suggestions for policy improvement)
Maysoon Al Zoubi, Project Manager, FAO Jordan (virtual)
Q&A
Moderator- Sara Hess, Associate Economic Affairs Officer, ESCWA
Description of RWH implemented as part of the UN-Habitat led Adaptation Fund project in Jordan and Lebanon, including description of site selection (suitability of RWH to various areas)
Hussien Muhsen, Regional Project Coordinator, UN-Habitat (in-person)
Women empowerment in RWH systems and water saving impacts based on pilot projects in North Lebanon
Jihan Seoud, Environment Programme Analyst, UNDP Lebanon (virtual)
Youth and Water Scarcity: Overcoming Challenges with Rainwater Harvesting in Iraq
Zahraa Al Goybar, Climate Change Advisor, GIZ Iraq (in-person)
Q&A and Closing remarks
Moderator- Sara Hess, Associate Economic Affairs Officer, ESCWA
Files
Convenors
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
UN Habitat
United Nations Development Programme
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia
speaker





session_host

moderator

Summary
Water and earth observation data provided by conventional measurements, remote sensing, and emerging approaches using Citizen Science provide critical information needed to monitor, model, and forecast hydrologic systems. This session explores a wide range of data types and applications supporting good water management and governance.
Session Description
With a thematic focus on "Data and Monitoring for Peace and Security," this session brings together experts, policymakers, and practitioners to explore critical topics shaping water governance. The discussion emphasizes the critical role of good data collection, cutting-edge technologies like remote sensing and AI, low-cost sensors and Citizen Science, and the strategic implementation of early warning systems. Furthermore, we highlight open-access data initiatives for cooperation. Key areas of focus include the significance of data accessibility in water resource management, innovative approaches to transboundary water cooperation, and the role of data-driven solutions in conflict prevention and resolution.
Through engaging presentations and panel discussions, participants will delve into success stories, challenges, and best practices that highlight the transformative potential of data-driven strategies in water management. This session serves as a catalyst for collaboration, knowledge exchange, and actionable insights aimed at enhancing global water security and resilience in the face of emerging challenges.
Programme
· Keynote - DOI DAS Annelisse Blum
· Gabrielle Senay - USGS
· Sheila Chemjor - Red Cross
· Kate French - Segura
· Morgan Shimabuku - Pacific Insitute.
· Tom Doyle - Arup.
· Petri Autio - mWater
SPC:
Stefan Uhlenbrook - WMO
Jose Castro - Segura
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
USAID
Red Cross
World Meteorological Organization
US Geological Survey
Segura
World Youth Parliament for Water
session_host


speaker


Summary
This session will describe tools and planning processes used in the southeastern USA to facilitate watershed management and decision making for cross-border water decisions related to resilience, climate change, and environmental justice. After a series of case study presentations, open discussion will be encouraged for knowledge transfer.
Session Description
Conflicts around water management often exist because upstream actions cause downstream harm. Therefore, solutions also often require investment in areas and communities different from those receiving the benefits. This session shows how models and model-based tools are being used to foment cross-border water-management cooperation by illustrating the interconnectedness of watershed issues and solutions. We show options for using Nature-Based Solutions to help communities across the southeastern United States reduce flood risk, adapt to climate change, preserve biodiversity, and promote environmental justice. We review cross-border US State water management issues and the approaches, science, evaluation methods, and model-based tools used to solve them in Louisiana, which saw the first US climate refugees, and across the US Gulf of Mexico and southern Atlantic coasts, where climate change is affecting regional ecology, society, and economy. Finally, we explore the co-development process of working with communities, industries, and government partners to make practical use of complex data to create a common bond around solutions and discuss a broader holistic vision of using science to bridge borders to adapt to climate change globally, especially in data-poor regions of the world.
Programme
Convenors
RTI International
The Nature Conservancy
speaker




session_host

Moderator

Summary
Water science can help build cooperative and resilient futures among diverse stakeholders by creating shared understanding. We will discuss experience using water science for diplomatic engagement, convening to build a strong scientific foundation for decision-making, and translating complex water science for operational use by federal policymakers.
Session Description
The science of water has tremendous potential for building cooperative and resilient futures among diverse stakeholders. Water science sheds light on challenges and potential solutions to resilient and sustainable water supply, food and energy security, and good health in the face of scarce resources, but science can’t be used if it isn’t specific to the problem at hand, transparent, and accessible. The process of creating shared understanding is itself a diplomatic act, and water science can be a tool for engagement, transparency, and shared understanding. This session will bring together practitioners and experts from diplomatic, science policy, and science translation organizations to discuss experience using water science for diplomacy. We plan to engage high-level officials from several countries to discuss technical capacity sharing to build trust. The panel following will include perspectives from both diplomacy and water science, including other ways diplomats have used science for engagement and benefited from open data sharing; how the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine convenes scientists and policymakers to build a strong scientific foundation for decision-making, and how the Global Water Security Center translates complex water science for operational use.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Global Water Security Center (University of Alabama)
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
United States Department of State
Moderator


session_host




speaker





Summary
Better understanding sources of embedded water is essential for sustainable and equitable supply chains.
Session Description
The trade of virtual water, or water embedded in goods or services, is expected to triple by the end of the century. In parts of the world where the production of agricultural or industrial commodities is out of sync with freshwater planetary boundaries, depleting and degrading the freshwater systems upon which local people and ecosystems depend, the trade of these goods to places of relative water abundance calls the environmental justice of this practice into question. However, from agricultural commodities to critical minerals, complex global supply chains make it difficult to understand how goods or services contribute to water insecurity and climate vulnerability around the world. Traceability and transparency along value chains are essential to improving how virtual water is managed, but data on both is currently limited. With this information, companies can proactively manage their water footprint, and improved trade standards and regulations can be brought to life. Join WRI, Trase/SEI, Mars, Deltares and the Water Footprint Network to discuss the importance of shifting how virtual water is traced and managed, and to explore a roadmap for change.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Deltares
Mars
Trase/SEI
Water Footprint Network
World Resources Institute
session_host

speaker




Summary
Growing water scarcity amidst climate change impacts is dramatically affecting the lives of Afghans. Building resilience requires urgent action but is complicated by constrained engagement with the un-recognized Taliban authorities, including on transboundary concerns. This panel showcases collaborative efforts to address these unique and unprecedented challenges spanning cross-cutting themes.
Session Description
Over the coming years, intensifying climate shocks will confront Afghan communities with extreme and unseasonal weather, increasing both water scarcity and the frequency of flash-flooding which in turn will exacerbate humanitarian needs, undermine livelihoods, fuel migration, and challenge essential service delivery. This panel discussion will unpack the severe water crisis unfolding in Afghanistan, its multifaceted impacts domestically and regionally, and the cooperative efforts required to address these challenges in what is a complex political environment following the August 2021 Taliban takeover. The session will highlight the cross-cutting impacts of water scarcity and climate change on the Afghan people, as well as the risks it presents to peace and stability. It will highlight the need for urgent action and engagement with the de facto authorities to avoid negative consequences. The session will also share experiences from collective actions among development agencies, donors, and international NGOs, including the launch of the Afghanistan Water Platform and ongoing community-based projects.
Programme
Welcome and Introduction, Christina Leb, World Bank
Presentations
Fayez Azizi, University of Lausanne, The State of Afghanistan's Water Resources
Richard Trenchard, FAO, Water, Food Security and Livelihoods in Afghanistan
Charity Watson, UNAMA, Systemic Impacts of Afghanistan's Water Crisis and Climate Pressures
Mohd Faizee, IHE Delft, The Transboundary Dimension: Conflict Risks and Challenges
Zhimin Mao, World Bank, Addressing Afghanistan’s Water Crisis through Collaborative Efforts
Follow-up Questions from the Moderator, Christina Leb
Audience Q&A with Speakers
Concluding Remarks
Files
Convenors
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
World Bank Group
Moderator

speaker





session_host

Summary
We will discuss the environmental consequences of the destruction of the Kakhovka Reservoir in southern Ukraine, which occured in June 2023, assess what is happening now in the area and discuss restoration challenges. In this session we will hear from researchers from Ukraine and Sweden and from Ukrainian civil society
Session Description
This session will provide information on the condition of and damage to aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems connected to the Kakhovka Reservoir in southern Ukraine. A breach in the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Dam, caused by an explosion on June 6 2023, led to a massive flooding event in the southern Dnipro river and along the coast of the Black Sea causing significant damage to both human livelihoods and nature values. This breach also led to the dewatering of the reservoir, which was one of the largest artificial reservoirs in Europe, and had been the central element of the water system for southern Ukraine providing water for households, industry and agriculture. This was a uniquely tragic event with a major impact not only on nature, but also the economic and social development prospects for the entire region. In a session led jointly by researchers (Ukr, Swe) and civil society (Ukr) we will discuss the environmental consequences of the Kakhovka catastrophe. We will also discuss the restoration challenges related to this catastrophe, taking into account international experiences with rehabilitating ecosystems affected by dams. Finally, we will discuss how the international community can work with Ukraine, after the war, to restore these environments.
Programme
Files
Convenors
National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Ukrainian Nature Conservation Group
Moderator


speaker




Summary
The USAID-funded Senegal Water Resources Management activity and its interactive workshop prove that together we are greater than the sum of our parts, by addressing mutually reinforcing drivers and impacts of water insecurity through partnership at the national, territorial, and community level to garner cohesive action toward improved resilience.
Session Description
The USAID-funded Senegal Water Resources Management activity leverages climate resilience, not as a crosscutting theme or objective, but as a direct driver for inclusive development through collaborative stakeholder engagement. By building trust and collaboration between diverse local actors to apply technical solutions that bridge the border between the WASH, climate, livelihood, health, and agriculture sectors, the activity leverages a uniquely multi-disciplinary approach to transcend water and ecosystem security in the pursuit of strengthened human security. Amid tensions caused by transnational resource contention, a growing population, increasing rates of urbanization, and expanding agricultural production, Senegal's freshwater resources are also strained by sea level rise, temperature increases, and erratic rainfall. Participants will engage with a conflict sensitive, locally led approach to the challenges and opportunities Senegal faces through a gamified exercise in which small groups must work together to review physical artifacts and uncover evidence as they work toward a shared solution for water security. In the pursuit of answers, participants will adopt the persona of diverse local actors, each with competing interests. Together, the stakeholders must overcome their private motivations to build a water security improvement action plan that addresses the activity objectives in a sustainable and equitable manner.
Programme
Experts from the USAID Senegal Water Resources Management Activity and Director of the Direction de la Gestion et de la Planification des Ressources en Eau (DGPRE) present an overview of Senegal’s integrated water resources management (IWRM) framework and participatory approaches to achieving climate-resilient water security at a local level.
Session Facilitators and Presenters:
· Mr. Niokhor Ndour, Director, DGPRE, Ministère de l’Hydraulique et de l’Assainissement du Sénégal
· Ms. Penda Diop, Inclusive Water Governance Lead, USAID Senegal Water Resources Management Activity
· Ms. Seynabou Kane, Institutional Strengthening Specialist, USAID Senegal Water Resources Management Activity
· Ms. Veronique Lee Buehler, Program Director, Chemonics International
1- The Water Security Challenge in Senegal and IWRM Framework (10 minutes)
2- The USAID Senegal Water Resources Management Activity (10 minutes)
3- Gamified Case Study Analysis (35 minutes)
Participants assume roles such as government officials, households, private sector representatives, NGO members to simulate the inaugural convening of a local water management committee in the Casamance region of Senegal, under Senegal’s IWRM framework. Water user “personas” will be assigned at the start of the session, with their distinct roles, priorities, and challenges, described on cards. Divided into groups and guided by a group facilitator, audience members will adopt their assigned personas to collectively brainstorm solutions for a set of water-related challenges in the particular community.
· Group Presentation (20 minutes)
Groups present their strategies, discussing tasks, approaches, tools used, and financial and policy opportunities, reflecting on challenges and how gaps were bridged.
4- Final Reflection (15 minutes)
The audience reflects on outcomes and effectiveness of the role-playing approach, followed by a final wrap-up.
Files
Convenors
Chemonics International
Ministère de l’Hydraulique et de l’Assainissement du Sénégal
USAID
session_host



Moderator

speaker




Summary
This workshop explores barriers to expanding corporate involvement in collective actions. Corporates and their partners will candidly share lessons learned from initiatives like the pioneering Women + Water Collaborative in India. Audience will participate in unpacking the opportunities and conditions for collective actions to contribute to basin-wide resilience goal
Session Description
The workshop will be run Roundtable-style, alternating between presentations, panel discussions, and open reflections from the audience. There will be two clear “units” covered: 1. Creating conditions for collective action, and 2. Scaling collective actions for basin-wide resilience.
Unit 1 introduces the principles, characteristics, and enabling conditions of collective action. It features a case study of the Women + Water Collaborative in India, highlighting lessons from the first collective action program aimed at improving clean water access. This initiative illustrates the first time companies from various sectors, including textiles and pharmaceuticals, have united to address a regional water crisis. An interactive panel with corporate members, moderated by WaterAid, will discuss the challenges of collective action. A roundtable will explore why companies hesitate to finance such efforts, addressing perceived and real obstacles.
Unit 2 examines the limitations of collective action in achieving basin-wide resilience and introduces a framework for scaling efforts to meet common targets. A panel of corporate leaders will discuss their experiences piloting this framework and integrating it into their water strategies. A roundtable will consider the alignment of stewardship ambitions with major basin coordination mechanisms, identifying new barriers and potential values for companies.
Programme
Files
Convenors
The CEO Water Mandate
WaterAid
WaterAid India
speaker






session_host

Summary
Responding to water-related instability conditions and conflicts, this session will discuss and showcase technical solutions and tools (DSS, remote sensing, real-time monitoring tools, WEFE nexus) that can help nations respond to internal and external water-related shocks, adapt to changing climate conditions, and protect biodiversity and freshwater ecosystems within and across boundaries
Session Description
As the water demand grows, it poses challenges to the sustainability of current methods for managing, allocating, and sharing water resources, especially in developing countries. Lacking integration between water and other sectors may cause internal instability and conflict between different user groups. In contexts, where water resources are shared between two or more countries insufficient transboundary cooperation may lead to internal regional conflict.
Accordingly, it is essential to ensure the responsible management of water resources at the watershed level as well as in transboundary contexts to ensure a water secure future. Water Security thereby refers to the ability to ensure sustainable access to clean water sufficient for good living, economic development, and environmental protection. In this landscape, water security demands that scientists, innovators, and policymakers consider the needs of, and the stressors placed on water resources within and across countries. While some human activities have exacerbated the water crisis, humans have also developed technologies to better manage, allocate, and share water resources. This session will explore three examples of such technical solutions to addressing water management, allocation, and sharing to build stability and peace
Programme
5 minutes
Session opening:
Dr. Maha Al-Zu’bi, Regional Researcher, IWMI; Sten Schurer, Advisor, GIZ
7-10 minutes
Keynotes Speech:
Dr. Susanne Schmeier, Associate Professor, IHE Delft
15-20 minutes
Technical inputs:
Speaker 1: Dr. Zafar Gafurov, Researcher - GIS/RS and Climate Change, IWMI
Speaker 2: Mr. Soungalo Koné, Observatory Modeling Expert, Autorité du Bassin du Niger
Speaker 3: Anna van Goethem, Senior Geologist, Ruden AS
Moderation: Dr. Susanne Schmeier, Associate Professor, IHE Delft
10 -15 minutes
Q and A
Moderation: Dr. Susanne Schmeier, Associate Professor, IHE Delft
5 -10 minutes
Wrap-up and Closing
Dr. Maha Al-Zu’bi, Regional Researcher, IWMI; Sten Schurer, Advisor, GIZ
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Veolia
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
GIZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
session_host





speaker




Summary
This session will discuss the Southern African Development Community's water management strategies for peace and development, focusing on transboundary cooperation. The session will present case studies detailing challenges and best practices in a drought prone region and galvanize political and financial support for transboundary action to alleviate potential drought-triggered conflicts.
Session Description
The Southern African region is extremely vulnerable to drought and water scarcity. As droughts become more frequent and severe this raises the risk of famine and livelihoods loss, potentially fueling conflict and insecurity, with devastating impacts on the most vulnerable, particularly women.The Southern African Great Green Wall Initiative is facilitating multisectoral cooperation, resilience and development in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region with the aim to build innovative and multisectoral partnerships to mobilize investments.Within this context, this session will delve into the work of SADC River Basin Organisations/Shared Watercourse Institutions in prioritising water management as an instrument for fostering peace through the implementation of their Revised Protocol on Shared Watercourses. Home to over 363 million individuals, SADC features fifteen major river basins and nearly 30 transboundary aquifers. These shared water resources necessitate collaborative efforts to address challenges, harness opportunities and build resilience to disasters such as drought.The session will present strategies and actions to sustain transboundary cooperation and enhance inclusion, particularly of women, in fostering peaceful coexistence and building drought resilience of communities dependent on land and water resources. The session will gather messages for the UNCCD COP16 in Riyad where drought resilience will be a key theme.
Programme
Welcome and Introductions:
Ms Cathrine Mutambirwa (UNCCD)
Opening Remarks:
Mr Alex Simalabwi (GWPSA)
Keynote Address 1:
Mr Elisha Madamombe
(GWPSA/BUPUSACOM)
Keynote Address 2:
Mr Sergio Sitoe (LIMCOM)
Keynote Address 3:
Mr Silvanus Uunona
(GWPSA/CUVECOM)
Panel discussion & Q&A :
Responding partner institutions:
Ms Madeleine Nyiratuza (UNDP-GEF)
Mr Tariro Saruchera (IUCN)
Dr. Loreen Katiyo (GWPSA)
Mr Patrice Kabeya (SADC)
Responding RBOs representatives:
Mr Elisha Madamombe (BUPUSACOM)
Mr Sergio Sitoe (LIMCOM)
Ms Leonissah Abwino-Munjoma (ZAMCOM)
Session summary:
Ms Leonissah Abwino-Munjoma (ZAMCOM)
Closing remarks and way forward:
Ms Cathrine Mutambirwa (UNCCD)
Files
Convenors
BUPUSACOM
Global Water Partnership
Cuvelai Watercourse Commission
Limpopo Watercourse Commission
Southern African Development Community
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
United Nations Development Programme
Zambezi Watercourse Commission
speaker









session_host

Summary
This session will examine the role of governance in WASH, using case studies in Kenya and Ecuador and the USAID Matrix of Pillars and Principles of WASH and WRM Governance. We'll discuss adapting governance structures to dynamic contexts, fostering inclusivity, and promoting sustainable practices for local water access.
Session Description
Join us in delving into the crucial role of governance in water and sanitation management. We'll examine three central pillars of water governance: policy framework, institutions, and processes. Drawing on experiences from Kenya and Ecuador, the session will explore how governance structures can adapt to dynamic socio-political landscapes, foster inclusivity, accountability and transparency, and promote sustainable water management practices. We'll discuss the importance of governance in building and maintaining trust among stakeholders involved in determining access, sustainability, and quality of water and sanitation services. By examining real-world examples and sharing best practices, participants will gain valuable insights into addressing complex water-related challenges through effective governance mechanisms. Whether you're a policymaker, practitioner, or researcher, this session offers an opportunity to deepen your understanding of governance dynamics and explore innovative approaches to enhancing water security and resilience in diverse contexts. Join us as we navigate the intricate landscape of water and sanitation governance and chart a course towards more inclusive and sustainable water management practices.
Programme
Session will include:
- Short presentations on the application of the USAID Matrix of Pillars and Principles of WASH and WRM Governance from Kenya and Ecuador.
- Facilitated dialogue with government representatives from Kenya and Ecuador
- Open Q&A with the audience and four panelists
Files
Convenors
Government of Homa Bay County, Kenya
Ministry of the Environment and Water, Ecuador
RTI International
USAID Western Kenya Sanitaiton Program
USAID Ecuador TuMUNI
USAID
moderator

session_host



speaker




Summary
Key players in WASH and sustainable urban development, WaterAid and UN-Habitat, share their experiences and strategies for prioritising and integrating WASH system investments into efforts to create sustainable, climate-resilient, healthy, and prosperous cities and to achieve the SDGs.
We encourage you to listen and then share your brief thoughts or experiences right after the TalkShow.
Session Description
We have only six years to achieve the SDGs, and yet only 17% of the SDG targets on track. 2.2 billion people around the world remain without access to safer water and sanitation services, and unless this changes, multiple other SDG targets will also be jeopardised. As urban populations grow and face rising inequalities, worsening climate impacts, forced displacement and continuing conflicts, the pursuit of equitable and sustainable urban development presents significant opportunities and challenges. WASH systems are a critical piece in in the pursuit of sustainable, resilient, and equitable urban development. Yet, these are not adequately prioritised in many parts of the world, nor integrated in urban planning, investments or governance. The focus of this dialogue between WaterAid and UN-Habitat, leaders in WASH and sustainable urban development, is on sharing experiences and strategies to prioritize and integrate WASH system investments into broader efforts towards sustainable urban development. The discussion will underscore the role of urban planning departments in harmonizing spatial and development plans with WASH service development plans. It will also emphasise the importance of multi-level governance and building effective partnerships between local and sub-national governments, water and sanitation service providers, national governments and international organisations including IFIs. We encourage participants from urban development, WASH, health, and climate sectors, including international and local development communities, governments, civil society, and the private sector, to engage and share their insights and experiences.
Programme
Files
Convenors
UN Habitat
WaterAid
session_host

speaker



Moderator

Summary
This session will help companies, civil society organizations, and policymakers understand how nature SBTs bridge the gap between local data and global ambition. Company panellists who have piloted the SBT methodology over the last year will explain how setting SBTs fits within their broader environmental and social strategies.
Session Description
In 2023, seventeen of the world’s leading companies committed to piloting the newly launched SBTs for nature. As of February 2024, these companies identified their material impacts on nature, engaged local stakeholders to understand ecosystem conditions, and acquired in-depth data at the local level. By SIWI-WWW, some of these companies will have set targets to reduce freshwater and land impacts within involvement of local stakeholders and communities. The session will begin with a brief overview of the target-setting methodology with a focus on local data acquisition and community engagement. The session will include a "waterside chat" with participants in the target setting pilot to discuss their experiences with SBTN's methodologies. We will discuss:
- Benefits and challenges to addressing nature in a company context.
- Why they chose the SBT pathway. How they engaged local stakeholders.
- What types of data are most useful, challenging to collect, or not available.
The session will conclude with an interactive audience Q&A, as well as a summary of recommended action steps and what’s next for SBTs for nature .
Programme
9:00 to 9:10: Welcome and setting the stage: Allen Townsend, WWF
- Where we are today.
- Recap the first release and ITVG project.
- Key takeaways from last year’s session.
9:10 to 9:45: Waterside Chat
- Harumichi Seta, Suntory
- Katie Fensome , Biodiversify
- Marie-Anne Paulin, Danone
9:45 to 10:05: Angela Bowman, WWF
- Review updates to methods to improve feasibility
- Introduce and review Basin Threshold Tool
- What are misperceived complexities versus true data gaps
10:05 to 10:25: Audience Q&A
10:25 to 10:30: Wrap-up: Action items and resources
Files
Convenors
CDP Worldwide
Pacific Institute
Science Based Targets Network
The Nature Conservancy
World Resources Institute
World Wide Fund for Nature
speaker




session_host



Moderator

Summary
How can disaster risk reduction and anticipatory action shape sustainable futures in hosting communities? The session explores water insecurity and climate impacts in hosting communities, emphasising anticipatory action and the humanitarian-development-peace (HDP) nexus approach drawing on field experience to cultivate discussion on water cooperation and human security in fragile and conflict-affected settings.
Session Description
This session explores the complex interplay between climate change, water insecurity, and forced displacement, highlighting anticipatory action options (early warning and climate adaptation strategies) in communities hosting refugees and IDPs. Amidst growing climate variability, many countries worldwide are also facing the compounding stresses of supporting forcibly displaced populations. Addressing these complex situations requires urgent near and long-term action. Aligned with the COP28 Declaration on Climate, Relief, Recovery and Peace, the session leverages the King Abdullah II Climate-Refugee Nexus Initiative (CRNI) to explore sustainable water management and the augmentation of resilience among hosting communities. We will immerse participants in a dynamic panel discussion, encouraging direct interaction and feedback from the audience utilising real-time polling and Q&A. The session will connect lessons and learnings from government, humanitarian and development agency experiences in multiple countries, driving forward action on innovative and scalable solutions and the pivotal role that can be played by climate finance in supporting communities hosting refugees and displaced persons.
Programme
The session will begin with a welcome by IWMI, setting the stage for an insightful discussion. A keynote address from FCDO's Senior Water Security Advisor focusing on the global challenges of climate change and the refugee crisis, and highlighting FCDO's efforts to drive solutions centred on water.
An introduction, underscoring the critical need for global action, and emphasizing the importance of water, will lead into a dynamic panel discussion, moderated by the IWMI, featuring experts from WMO, IWMI, and the Blue Peace Middle East Initiative. Each panellist offers insights into water, climate, and migration, addressing key questions and discussing innovative strategies.
An interactive Q&A session follows, allowing the audience to engage with the panellists directly. The session will conclude with closing remarks from the IWMI, summarizing key takeaways.
This session aims to deepen understanding of the challenges at the water-climate-migration nexus, highlight innovative strategies, and inspire action. Attendees, including policymakers, development practitioners, humanitarian actors, and academics, will gain insights into the CRNI, water security, and resilience-building strategies, fostering dialogue and driving forward action on sustainable water management and climate adaptation.
Files
Convenors
UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO)
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
speaker





session_host

Summary
Session Description
While there is much to celebrate in transboundary water cooperation, the pace of progress is not sufficient to achieve SDG 6.5 and other international targets.
• Less than 20 agreements have been signed in the last decade, several of which apply to watercourses with existing agreements. The area of shared waters covered by an agreement has only expanded marginally.
• The impact of agreements that have been signed has not been systematically assessed, so the degree to which a formal agreement reflects an improvement in cooperation requires confirmation.
• Conflictive events in shared waters are not subsiding
If the lofty objectives in SDG 6.5 are to be achieved, focus needs to be placed on both aspirational targets and practical problem solving. ?This session will focus on three keynote speeches that illustrate water cooperation is not as far as we would like on: Financing, Visibility, and Value. These points will be elaborated by a panel discussion focusing on how reliable financing, RBO visibility and value placed on basins can promote enhanced water cooperation. The session will finalize with practical recommendations and suggestions based on comments from the audience.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Union for Conservation of Nature
International Water Management Institute
Orange-Senqu River Commission
Oregon State University
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
Zambezi Watercourse Commission
session_host

speaker




Summary
The Freshwater Challenge (FWC) - the largest river and wetland restoration initiative in history – is a global initiative for freshwater ecosystem protection and restoration. This session is an opportunity to examine ways of strategic cross convention cooperation for healthy freshwater ecosystems, healthy people and climate-resilient societies.
Session Description
Rivers and wetlands are the frontlines of the climate and nature crises. The important role of healthy freshwater ecosystems has been recognized in key international development frameworks. However, current international approaches to water are not helping countries achieve the targets set out in these frameworks fast enough. As a result, rivers and wetlands are still undervalued and overlooked, and their rapid loss is undermining the hard-won development gains.
The Freshwater Challenge (FWC) is a country-led initiative launched at the UN Water Conference (New York, March 2023). At last year’s World Water Week, the UEA Presidency of COP28 announced that the Freshwater Challenge would become one of three key water outcomes of UNFCCC COP28. This was followed up by a high-level ministerial event at COP28 in Dubai. Currently a total of 45 countries have joined the Challenge which aims to restore 300,000 km of rivers and 350 million ha of wetlands and conserve intact freshwater
The Challenge aims to catalyse, convene and contribute to targeted interventions which need to be coordinated internationally as freshwater systems are often transboundary in nature. This entails alignment across multilateral agreements and frameworks; whole-of government approach; whole-of-society contribution including active private sector engagement.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Union for Conservation of Nature
World Wide Fund for Nature
The Nature Conservancy
Wetlands International
Conservation International
UN Environment Programme
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
Summary
Women are more distressed about water insecurity and that is aggravated in disaster (natural and humanly constructed) led displacements such as, flood, drought, cyclone, epidemics, war, conflicts, and communal violence. The session highlights the water ‘anxiety’ over in/security that is deep causing serious impacts on the women’s mental wellbeing.
Session Description
The disasters, both natural and manmade events and disturbances, in the world are increasing with impacting more people than ever before owing to the multi-layered social-ecological factors. The flood, drought, earthquake, landslide, sea level rise, salinity ingress, desertification, glacier melting, avalanche, heat wave, etc. are considered nature/climate induced disasters; and the war, communal violence, genocide, forced evacuation, epidemics, pandemics, etc. are considered manmade or socially constructed disasters.
The social-ecological impacts of the disaster are reaching their extreme. The impacts indeed are more on the poor, vulnerable, marginalized communities. Further, the layers of class, literacy, caste, religion, color, belief, even physique and attire, and more influence the access to relief works. Adding to these, the women are disproportionately impacted physically and psychologically in the disasters besides, marginalized socially and politically in the relief works.
The distress rises from the anxiety for and the lack/delay of access to water, food, shelter, livelihood, education, mobility, and more. The anxiety of displacement and hope for rehabilitation encompasses much of the anxiety, of which access to or of lack of water and basic everyday services act as stepping stones to relief or steeping anxiety respectively.
The session, ‘Water Anxiety and Security of Women in Disaster led Distresses’ focus is firstly, on the water related distress experienced by women (of all age groups) before, during and after the disaster; and simultaneously, on the resilience building process that women embody from the past and present experiences.
The session will discuss the project intent and implementation plan at different disaster struck areas that are chosen for intervention, which includes, Kalimpong in West Bengal India, Kackching in Manipur India, Jajarkot in Nepal, Satkhaira in Bangladesh.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Women's Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry- Water Resources Council
woder
WforW Foundation
speaker




session_host
Summary
Explore the quest to draw private capital into the WASH sector in developing markets, focusing on the journey of Global South's pioneers. We'll tackle investment risks and challenges, navigate the SME-centric ecosystems for financial sustainability, and strategize on structuring investments for impactful, sustainable financing for SDG6.
Session Description
A world with secure and sustainable access to WASH services for all requires mobilizing diverse yet interdependent stakeholders. This session delves into the critical challenge of attracting private capital into the WASH sector in developing markets, bringing together perspectives from those at the forefront of this effort. Moderated by Kanika Thankar from SIWI, the discussion will feature insights from Suresh K Krishna of Yunus Social Business, who will share his dual perspective as a social business promoter and fund manager, emphasizing the importance of balancing impact with returns. Carolina Latorre from WASTE will explore the role of technical assistance and innovative finance in creating an enabling environment for investment. Pamela Bundi from the Finish Mondial program will discuss the importance of leveraging local knowledge and South-to-South experiences to scale successful initiatives. Together, they will navigate the complexities of structuring sustainable investments that support SMEs in the WASH sector, aiming to catalyze positive change and significantly contribute to achieving SDG6. This session will provide a deeper understanding of market dynamics, risk mitigation strategies, and the role of private capital in driving sustainable impact.
Programme
Join us for an engaging exploration of innovative financing in WASH, where experts like Suresh K. Krishna, Pamela Bundi, and Carolina Latorre will dive into the strategies that drive impactful investments and foster sustainable development:
Suresh K Krishna is a seasoned expert in social business and impact investing. As Chair of the Global Leadership Team at Yunus Social Business and Fund Manager for the Take a Stake Fund Initiative, Suresh brings a unique dual perspective, balancing the needs of social businesses with the demands of private investors. His work has been instrumental in mobilizing private capital to support sustainable development in the WASH sector.
Carolina Latorre is a Senior Programme Manager at WASTE for the Take a Stake Fund Initiative and a key expert within the Water Supply and Sanitation Global Solutions Group (WSS GSG) under the Water Global Practice of the World Bank. With deep expertise in policy, institutions, regulations (PIR), and water law, Carolina provides critical advice and expert support to strengthen WSS services and institutions globally. At WASTE, she plays a pivotal role in the Take a Stake Fund Initiative, focusing on mobilizing private sector investment in WASH and bridging the gap between SMEs and large-scale investors to achieve sustainable impact.
Pamela Bundi is the Country Coordinator for Kenya and a key player in the Finish Mondial Program, where she leverages her extensive experience in Kenya and across Africa to scale innovative WASH solutions. Her expertise in grassroots initiatives and South-to-South cooperation has been pivotal in transforming small-scale efforts into impactful global movements.
Files
speaker



session_host

Summary
Session Description
Change opens-up new opportunities. The world is in a different place talking about ‘global water dynamics’ then at the time SIWI started. We are halfway the Water Action Decade, we still feel the dynamics of the past UN 2023 Water Conference and are excited about the upcoming 2026 and 2028 UN conferences. The WWF in Senegal and Indonesia delivered a high bar for the upcoming WWF in Riyad. And with the One Water Summit, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water and its report, and water more and more prominent on global and local agendas at COP’s with a water pavilion, and in the trilogy of conventions: Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification.
Now, with all the upcoming changes in Stockholm, it is time to reset the focus, the ambition and with that the capacity – institutionally, individually, and informally. Stockholm and Sweden have choice to make, we have a choice to make: to keep Stockholm center-staged in the water world, with a legacy and a future for water action, inspiration and convening.
If you care for the future of water, of SIWI and the enabling environment it can empower, join us for one of these lunch dialogues and help us think through the future of a strong convening capacity in Stockholm.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Friends of Water,
Friends of Stockholm
session_host

speaker

Summary
Each year, thousands of students compete in national contests, all striving for the opportunity to present their water projects in Stockholm at the Stockholm Junior Water Prize international final, where the coveted prize is awarded by the Crown Princess of Sweden.
Session Description
In this session, we will look closely at how to keep young people engaged in the water sector. We'll begin by asking students what initially sparked their interest in addressing water challenges. Following that, Xlyem will share insights on how they can retain these talented individuals within the sector.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Xlyem
Students from the Stockholm Junior Water Prize
speaker



session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
Blue Peace Middle East presents novel approaches to transboundary water cooperation in the Middle East. Discover how diplomacy, trust-building, and innovation can enhance regional water security and climate resilience.
Join us to explore how our recent regional Water Footprint Assessment can open new perspectives for cooperation, with insights from high-level experts and youth ambassadors.
Session Description
Join Blue Peace Middle East for an insightful 90-minute session that will provide new insights into transboundary water cooperation in the Middle East.
Our diverse panel, featuring high-level experts and youth ambassadors, will guide you through the complexities of and opportunities for regional water management, demonstrating how a holistic approach can foster cooperation and resilience.
What you'll gain:
- Insights into innovative strategies for building trust and cooperation across borders.
- Understanding of how diplomacy and trust-building enhance regional water security.
- Knowledge about the comprehensive Water Footprint Assessment and its implications for policy and decision making.
- Inspiration from real-world case studies of successful confidence-building measures.
Our speakers include representatives from Iraq, Jordan, Türkiye, and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation SDC, alongside youth ambassadors from Lebanon and Syria, who will provide fresh perspectives on age-old challenges and reflect on the study's implications for their countries and regional cooperation.
Whether you're a policymaker, academic, or practitioner, you'll leave with new perspectives to influence water cooperation in your own context. No prior knowledge is required, but a background in international relations, water resource management, or environmental policy will enhance your experience.
By attending, you'll contribute to our mission of shifting from competition to collaboration in water management, directly supporting SDG targets 6.5 and 16.5. Join us in shaping a future where water unites rather than divides.
Programme
1. Opening:
1.1. Welcome and Introduction
1.2. Blue Peace ME Overview - Video presentation
1.3. Keynote Address by Eng. Maysoon Al Zoubi; Chair of Blue Peace ME Managing Committee
2. Regional Study Technical Presentation: Water Footprint and Virtual Water Trade Assessment:
3. Panel Discussion: Strengthening cooperation and trust through a transboundary WEFE Nexus approach
4. Q&A / Discussion with Audience:
4.1. Open forum for questions from in-person and online attendees
5. Wrap Up and Session Conclusion
Files
Convenors
- Blue Peace Middle East
- Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)
Co-Convenors
- Inter-Islamic Network on Water Resources Development and Management (INWRDAM)
- Water Diplomacy Centre
Moderator


speaker






session_host

Summary
This session delves into the role of anticipatory action and longer-term preparedness strategies to support communities affected by stronger and recurrent climatic events, and consequent unplanned mobility and displacement. It features case studies from Pakistan, Zambia and Uganda, emphasising solutions for cooperation over shared water resources and for human security.
Session Description
This session will explore the crucial intersection of proactive, anticipatory action and its contribution to longer-term preparedness strategies, with a focus on water security, to address climate-related mobility challenges. Drawing on case studies from Pakistan, Zambia and Uganda, the session will explore water management strategies, tools and approaches to enhance climate resilience between displaced populations/migrants, as well as hosting communities.
The format, a blended expert-led panel and an interactive discussion, will foster an active dialogue between panellists and attendees. Panel experts will provide some fire-starting remarks in conversation with the moderator to make the case for how proactive, anticipatory action in the water sector can help address climate-related mobility challenges, showcasing actionable solutions from different contexts to this end. Participants will then be invited to join in the conversation in an ‘Experience Exchange' session, facilitated by the moderator, where they will be invited to share their take on specific challenges and solutions, with the goal of stimulating innovative thinking and collaborative problem-solving.
These insights will be synthesised into actionable recommendations in a concluding plenary, ensuring that the session not only fosters meaningful engagement but also drives practical outcomes to bolster resilience against climate change impacts.
Programme
Welcoming remarks and overview of the session (Dr. Beatrice Mosello, Senior Advisor, adelphi)
Fire-starters:
- Dr. Juan Carlos Sanchez Ramirez, Research Group Leader - Water Governance and Political Economy, IWMI
- Dr. Gabriel Pollen, Director, Disaster Management and Mitigation Unit, Republic of Zambia (tbd)
- Dr. Callist Tindimugaya, Commissioner for Water Resources Planning and Regulation, Ministry of Water and Environment, Republic of Uganda
- Andrew Kruczkiewicz, Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre
- Jessica Troell, Director, International Water Program, Environmental Law Institute
Experience exchange: Plenary discussion on actionable solutions to address climate-related mobility challenges (moderated by Dr. Beatrice Mosello, Senior Advisor, adelphi)
Concluding remarks: How to advance the agenda on anticipatory action in the water sector? Recommendations on next steps
Files
Convenors
adelphi
International Water Management Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre
session_host

speaker


Summary
Learn about two Novonesis’ projects addressing contextual water challenges through engagement. A reduction of WASH risks and improving livelihoods in India. Optimization of production process to reduce freshwater dependency at a water constrained site in Denmark.
Session Description
In this session, we will share Novonesis’ approach towards water stewardship that is driven by science and our ambition to manage water in balance with local conditions at all our sites. We focus on optimizing our water consumption, while outside our operations, we work on water restoration in collaboration with external partners. We have successful projects and context-based cases that demonstrate our expertise and thought leadership on water management. Two will be presented at this session: a reduction of WASH risks via community led engagement in India; the development of nanofiltration and reverse osmosis solution that enabled production growth at a water constrained site in Denmark. We will present our approach in implementation of projects on complex water challenges and opportunities including how sites have been involved, along with our learnings, challenges, and future plans for our ambition.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Novonesis
Novozymes
Moderator

speaker


Summary
Tenure-based approaches to water governance provide actionable guidance to safeguard the rights of all water users, particularly vulnerable populations. This session explores global, national, and local perspectives on assessment and application of water tenure approaches, and engagement of local actors in the Global Dialogue on Water Tenure.
Session Description
Diverse initiatives from local to global levels demonstrate the utility of a water tenure perspective in assessing the relationships between people, communities, and their water resources and provide actionable guidance for safeguarding the rights of all legitimate water users, including vulnerable populations, as well as ecosystem needs, in support of the wider goals of inclusive development, food security, and climate resilience. This session will showcase the testimonies of Indigenous Peoples, highlighting their specific water tenure priorities and needs, as well as other local-level perspectives on the importance of a water tenure lens in water governance. Cases from Africa, Asia, and Latin America will illustrate how water tenure assessments, coupled with robust data on water balances, can shape more inclusive water policies and legislation recognizing local and customary tenure arrangements and identify shortcomings of current water governance systems in guaranteeing equitable and sustainable water for all. The session will also share new data unpacking the gender-disaggregated implications of the legislative land- and forest-water nexus in the context of community-based tenure across 35 countries. Furthermore, the session will touch on the challenges of corruption and integrity failures of water governance systems and how they can be included in water tenure assessments.
Programme
9:00 a.m. Welcome and Introduction
Jessica Troell, ELI and John Waconda, TNC
9:05 a.m. Opening Remarks
Silke Stallkamp, BMEL Germany
9:10 a.m. Setting the scene: A global dialogue on water tenure and water tenure assessment
Benjamin Kiersch, FAO
9:17 a.m. Panel Discussion: Aligning Indigenous Peoples', local communities, Afro-Descendants' and government perspectives and priorities around water tenure.
Panelists:
Diana Chávez Vargas , PAKKIRU, Ecuador
Samwel Nangiria, Maasai Tribe, Tanzania
Jennifer Molwantwa, Water Research Commission, South Africa
Beatrice Nyakorema, Lake Tanganyika Authority
9:37 a.m. Presentations on Water Tenure
Gender-sensitive water tenure assessment
Jessica Troell, ELI
Chloe Ginsburg, RRI
Customary water tenure for climate resilience: A Case Study from Zambia
Carol Mweemba, IWMI – ClimBeR
10:00 a.m. Panel and audience engagement
10:25 a.m. Closing and final remarks
Files
Convenors
Environmental Law Institute
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
German Ministry of Food and Agriculture
international Association for Water Law
International Water Management Institute
Rights and Resources Initiative
South Africa Water Research Commission
The Nature Conservancy
Water Integrity Network
session_host



Moderator


speaker


Summary
Join CDP, Water Witness International and the Alliance for Water Stewardship to explore how the private sector can bridge the gap and exercise their collaborative spirit by acting on supply chains to effect impactful change and enhance water resilience.
Session Description
Exposed by Water Witness International (WWI) in the report ‘Towards Fair Water Footprints’, half of the water withdrawn from rivers and aquifers to supply the food, clothes and goods consumed by high-income economies is from unsustainable sources. When water is used unsustainably, supply chain operations and actions can cause water insecurity and exacerbate the water-related risks they, and other water users already face. In addition, CDP Data shows that more and more companies are reporting significant water-related risks in their supply chain, with the potential economic damage of US$77 billion. With the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS), WWI and CDP, this session explores how the private sector can take act on their supply chains to advance water security and resilience in both their direct operations and for the communities they share water resources with. Drawing on AWS's and WWI's firsthand experience and insights and from CDP's data, the session will demonstrate the business case for supply chain action, best practices amongst the private sector, and how companies can begin the cascade of positive water impacts through collective action with their value chain.
Programme
This session will start with a presentation of CDP's latest insights on sustainable supply chains and water security.
It will be followed by a Panel Discussion.
Moderation:
Dr. Patricia Calderon, Global Head of Water, CDP.
Panelists:
Dr. Nick Hepworth, Executive Director, Water Witness International.
Ms. Agnese Dianelon, Vice President Government Relations – Europe, EcoLab.
Mr. Ben Davis, Sector Coordinator, Alliance for Water Stewardship.
Files
Convenors
Alliance for Water Stewardship
CDP Worldwide
Water Witness International
speaker




session_host

Moderator
Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Deltares
Ocean Sewage Alliance
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
Stockholm International Water Institute
World Ocean Council
speaker








Summary
The event will focus on setting a common understanding and engaging discussion around the role of shared water resources in regions prone to political tensions and armed violence. It will explore mechanisms and tools that promote cooperation, focusing specifically on the experiences from Somalia, Uganda and Iraq.
Session Description
This session will explore the needs, challenges and benefits towards water and peace. It will explore mechanisms, tools, and resources that promote cooperation over shared waters within and across borders, focusing on the experiences from Somalia, Uganda, Iraq and international organizations that represent strategic partnerships working to bolster water security in these diverse contexts. There is an urgent need for cooperation over shared water resources across all scales, sectors, and borders against the backdrop of a changing climate, a growing population, and an increasing demand for water security. At the transnational scale, water resource management and development require a baseline of cooperation between and amongst countries sharing water. Establishing this baseline can be a difficult process that often takes years, if not decades, of consistent and diligent water diplomacy to reach mutually agreeable and collaborative outcomes to shared water Drawing from the experiences of Somalia, Uganda and Iraq, this session will focus on setting a common understanding of both the shared and unique challenges each country must overcome regarding water scarcity, management and its role in fostering peace and security. As a platform for dialogue, this session seeks to reflect the shared knowledge and best practices.
Programme
11.00
Welcome & introduction
Setting the scene and establishing the urgency for countries to work cooperatively on shared water challenges.
11.05
Key-note, UNDP
What are the needs, challenges and benefits towards water and peace?
11.10
Country presentations
Uganda: Dr. Callist Tindimugaya, Director for Water Resources Management, Ministry of Water and Environment, Uganda
Somalia: Mr. Ahmed Hassan, Director of Hydrometerology Ministry of Energy and Water Resources, Federal Government of Somalia
Iraq: TBC
How have strategic partnerships amongst representatives of the international community and the three featured countries benefited water cooperation with positive implications for regional peace and security?
11.30
International panel
Dr. Mary Mathews, Water Lead a.i. Ocean Advisor & Ocean Innovation Challenge Manager, UNDP
Maria Vink, Senior Programme Specialist, Sida
Christina Leb, Senior Counsel, World Bank
Dr. Themba Gumbo, Director, Cap-Net
GEF - tbc
EU- tbc
What more can international organizations do to support cooperation and where are emerging opportunities to strengthen these partnerships?
12.00
Closing/responding statements from participating countries
What ambitions and hopes do the countries have related to cooperation on shared waters?
12.10
Interventions, Q&A
12.25
Session summary and closing remarks
Files
Convenors
Cap-Net
UNDP-SIWI Water Governance Facility
United Nations Development Programme
speaker

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Asian Development Bank
charity: water
Inter-American Development Bank
REAL-Water program of USAID
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
session_host


speaker











Moderator


Summary
Novel catchment resilience index guides investment in river restoration. This study proposes a world-leading decision-support tool using a novel catchment resilience index to optimize investments in river rehabilitation. It aims to reduce erosion, minimize flood risk, capture benefits like carbon sequestration and biodiversity, and facilitate stakeholder engagement through innovative tools.
Session Description
River and catchment degradation pose major challenges, increasing flood and drought risks, pollution, and biodiversity loss. This session presents a novel approach to developing a catchment resilience index (CRI) and a deliberative decision support tool. The index assesses catchment health across key metrics, while the tool explores optimal investment options for river and catchment rehabilitation. This optimizes resource allocation, minimizing erosion, pollutants, flood risk, and drought, while maximizing carbon sequestration and biodiversity. This session will showcase the tool's capabilities and its potential to revolutionize decision-making for sustainable catchment management. We invite stakeholders from government, private sectors and communities to engage in discussions and explore how this tool can be applied to build resilient catchments for a secure future.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
CGIAR Initiatives on Climate Resilience "ClimBeR"
Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)
Central Research Institute for Dryland Agriculture (CRIDA)
session_host

speaker







Moderator

Summary
A multifaceted water crisis is unfolding, depleting clean and drinking water resources. It is time for a paradigm shift to address the deterioration of water resources, earth and life on it.
Join us for a discussion on the nuances of the unfolding water crisis and insights from our multidisciplinary panel on forging a water secure world. A new scientific approach for circular economy of water shall also be introduced.
Session Description
The session plans to explore the multifaceted water crisis including depletion of clean aquifers, and its negative impact on the environment, health, industry and governance. The panelists shall explore the key causes of reaching such an impasse and the challenges in wastewater management.
The focus of the discussion shall be on drinking water, sewage water and industrial water requirements, and the need for full reuse of water, circular economy of water with zero discharge. The panelists shall share their insights and experiences on the way forward to a water secure world.
A new scientific approach to recovering clean water will be introduced - Livprotec's breakthrough technology, Aquatron, based on principles of molecular physics.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Scalene Livprotec
speaker



Moderator

Summary
EcoScape is an interactive role-playing game where participants, embodying diverse stakeholders, collaborate to manage water, energy, food, and environmental resources amidst climate change. Through strategic decision-making, players navigate trade-offs and synergies to address conflicting priorities and climate threats.
Session Description
During the 90-minute EcoScape session, participants are immersed in a dynamic role-playing game set in the Yala basin in Kenya (East Africa) facing water, energy, food, and environmental challenges exacerbated by climate change. Each participant assumes a stakeholder role, such as a farmer, policymaker, scientist, or community leader, each with their own priorities and resources. The game unfolds through a future scenario presented to the group, requiring collaborative decision-making to address. Using visual aids like a map of the region and cards representing natural resources, participants navigate through challenges related to water quality, energy access, food production, and environmental degradation. They must strategise and negotiate with other stakeholders to achieve their objectives while considering the broader impacts on the community and environment. The end goal of the session is for each stakeholder group to present their collaborative strategies and desired future map to the larger group, highlighting how they have addressed the challenges presented in the scenario.
Programme
16:00 - 16:10
- Introduction and background
16:10 - 16:20
- Instructions for mapping the Yala Basin
16:20 - 16:25
- Form stakeholder groups and distribute role cards
16:25 - 17:05
- Group work: Create desired future map
17:05 - 17:25
- Group work: Present desired future map
17:25 - 17:30
- Debrief and next steps
Files
Convenors
MSCA ITN inventWater: Inventive forecasting tools for adapting water quality management to a new climate. Grant agreement ID: 956623
session_host






Summary
The session delves into rural Multiple Use water Services (MUS), evaluating progress in implementing MUS in rural areas in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Experiences by governments, international banks and NGOs with this people-centred approach to water services delivery and integrated community-based water tenure are compared and complemented by a citizen science perspective in capacity development and data collection.
Session Description
Multiple Use water Services (MUS) in low-income rural areas is a locally-led approach to water development and management that takes people’s priorities for domestic and basic productive uses as starting point for supporting self-supply or public infrastructure or – most often - combinations. In pitch presentations, the session highlights recent developments from local to national level, including: new MUS design options (Nepal), scaling-up of MUS in large water projects (Kenya) and institutional change at national policy levels (Colombia). Moreover, new research initiatives in Southern Africa will be presented that follow a citizen science perspective on MUS, IWRM and community-based water tenure for climate resilience. By showcasing the synergies between international experience, community knowledge and local data and the synergies between IWRM, WASH and productive water sectors, , the session seeks to advocate for evidence-based ways to sustainably overcome growing local level climate challenges.
Programme
1. Welcome, Introduction, Housekeeping: Barbara van Koppen, IWMI and David Smith, WE&B
2. AfriAlliance experience with citizen science: Jean-Marie Kileshye Onema, WaterNet Africa
3. Institutional Change for MUS in Colombia: Isabel Dominguez, Colombia
4. Scaling-up MUS in water projects in Kenya: James Origa Otieno, World Bank
5. MUS design options in Nepal: Narayan Singh Khawas, NIRAS/SUSWA
6. Q&A, led by David Smith, WE&B
7. Last word and close, Barbara van Koppen, IWMI
Files
Convenors
Rural Water Supply Network
International Water Management Institute
Niras Finland Technical Assistance - Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA) Project Support Unit
Water, Environment and Business for Development
session_host



speaker




Moderator


Summary
Locally led, multi-hazard early warning systems are critical to shield Asia-Pacific communities from escalating disaster risks,, but success hinges on cultural sensitivity, political buy-in, and rigorous evaluation. This session dives into best practices, exploring practical considerations and emphasizing the crucial role of collective action, capacity building, and technology investments.
Session Description
In the face of escalating and varied disaster risks in Asia-Pacific, exacerbated by climate change, urgent climate action is required. Developing and disseminating locally led, inclusive, and sustainably governed multi-hazard early warning systems is crucial for minimizing loss and damage, transcending barriers, and ensuring human and ecosystem security. It is especially vital for cross-border water cooperation, contributing to peace and security when well-designed and executed. The existing gaps in disaster risk knowledge, monitoring, preparedness, and communication in Asia-Pacific elevate vulnerability to floods and droughts, exacerbated by the technology-centric approach without local integration. Beyond forecasting, challenges encompass communication and response capacities. This session aims to share best practices and strategies, proposing cross-sectoral frameworks for inclusive and resilient warning systems. It emphasizes science and technology integration, strengthens user functions for data exploration, and underscores the criticality of social, cultural, and political factors. Evaluation of performance and effectiveness and promoting cooperation and collective action are pivotal, necessitating substantial investments in capacity, talent (including facilitators and decision makers), expertise, innovation, and technology deployment.
Programme
Session Introduction
Ms. Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, Asia-Pacific Water Forum (APWF) Secretariat c/o Japan Water Forum
Keynote presentation:
Mr. Ben Churchill, Director, WMO Regional Office for Asia and the South-West Pacific
Presentation (5mins for each)
- Dr. Giriraj Amarnath, Principal Researcher – Disaster Risk Management and Climate Resilience, IWMI
- Dr. Avi Sarkar, Regional Advisor - South-East Asia, UBS, Head of Office, Lao PDR UN-HABITAT
- Mr. Lance William Gore, Principal Water Resources Specialist, ADB
- Mr. Takahiro Konami, Director, International Affairs Office, Water and Disaster Management Bureau, Ministry of Land Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) Japan
Panel Discussion
Onsite Moderator: Dr. Thanapon Piman, Senior Research Fellow, Stockholm Environmental Institute (SEI) Asia
Moderator for the online audience: Ms. Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, APWF Secretariat/ Japan Water Forum
Panelist:
- Mr. Ben Churchill, Director, WMO Regional Office for Asia and the South-West Pacific
- Mr. Lance William Gore, Principal Water Resources Specialist, ADB
- Mr. Takahiro Konami, Director, International Affairs Office, Water and Disaster Management Bureau, Ministry of Land Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) Japan
- Dr. Suresh Kumar Chaudhari, Deputy Director General, Indian Council of Agricultural Research, India
- Mr. Viengxai Manivong, Deputy Director-General, Department of Meteorology and Hydrology, Lao People's Democratic Republic
- Ms. Shairi Mathur, Head of Office, UN Resident Coordinator's Office in Lao PDR
- Mr. Pranto Paul, World Youth Parliament for Water, Bangladesh/ the founder of 'Eco Prescription, Bangladesh
- Dr. Avi Sarkar, Regional Advisor - South-East Asia, UBS, Head of Office, Lao PDR UN-HABITAT
Wrap Up
Dr. Thanapon Piman, Senior Research Fellow, Stockholm Environmental Institute (SEI) Asia
Files
Convenors
Asia-Pacific Water Forum
International Water Management Institute
UN-HABITAT
Asian Development Bank
speaker









Moderator


session_host


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
French Water Partnership
Institute for Environmental Protection and Research
International Water Resources Association
Ocean Sewage Alliance
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
Stockholm International Water Institute
moderator


session_host
speaker







Summary
This workshop is hosted by GTO, the One Drop Foundation, Splash, and Viva con Agua. The session offers an interactive overview of approaches used in global projects. Participants can experiment with different approaches to develop a behaviour change campaign for World Water Week and beyond SIWI. Join us to make an impact that lasts beyond World Water Week and SIWI!
Session Description
Bridging boundaries extends beyond physical borders to conquering invisible social barriers within communities. With the belief that change starts with us, this session presents an engaging and interactive experiment, integrating the strategies of four organisations GTO, the One Drop Foundation, Splash, and Viva con Agua. The goal is to showcase a variety of approaches and tools for behaviour change, with a focus on demonstrating how a campaign can be developed to involve system actors and scale in, scale-out, and scale-up.
Participants will work in diverse teams, using creative behavioural change techniques to develop a campaign that encourages WASH sector professionals to break down silos and collaborate. Through this process, teams will develop ways to eliminate barriers and understand behaviours determinants. After presenting their creative campaign, teams will be challenged to further scale it in, out, and up so it reaches beyond the workshop and helps create bridges supporting systematic changes in WASH to address the SDGs. This session will also showcase creative behaviour communication methods like sports, art, storytelling, drama, video, and music to promote WASH behaviour change across Africa, Asia, North America, and Latin America. Come prepared to move, connect, and be inspired.
Programme
The workshop will start with an overview of the methodologies utilised in different projects by the hosting organizations: GTO, the One Drop Foundation, Splash, and Viva con Agua.
Following that, there will be an interactive and creative campaign session. This will kick off with Viva con Agua’s sports for development exercise, leading into a 'why?' session using modified tools from GTO's Toilets Making the Grade (TMG) initiative. This will be followed by the development of a hashtag campaign involving the identified barriers in collaboration with the One Drop Foundation. Finally, there will be a scaling session with Splash.
The session will conclude with a facilitated discussion focusing on how these approaches could be adjusted to fit the local context, scaled, replicated, and foster ownership. Furthermore, there will be a reflection on how these adaptations can be integrated within the framework of the World Water Week conference.
Files
Convenors
One Drop Foundation, https://www.onedrop.org/en/
German Toilet Organisation (GTO) https://www.germantoilet.org/en
Splash, https://splash.org/
Viva con Agua (VcA) https://www.vivaconagua.org/en/
session_host






Summary
Learning from decades of transboundary work in West Africa, the session will bring national, regional and international viewpoints on the role of water as catalyst for peace, resilient livelihoods, and development. The region counts 28 transboundary river basins covering 71% of its area, making water cooperation key for the future.
Session Description
With 28 transboundary river basins and 23 shared aquifers, West African peace building and development are linked The session will cover the current challenges and ongoing efforts, including the role of River Basin Organizations, the impacts of droughts and desertification, the power of water data cooperation, and the role of institutional cooperation and civil society organizations. It will highlight remaining needs and challenges, such as the unrealized potential for water valuation and the volatile security and fragility context, and it will provide possible pathways for increased water cooperation.
Programme
Opening remarks by Yogita Mumssen, World Bank
Presentations:
- Transboundary water cooperation and the Water Convention in West Africa: Francesca Bernardini, UNECE
- Drought and Desertification in West Africa: Birguy Lamizana, UNCCD
- OMVS: An instrument for peace, stability and cooperation: Mamadou Max BANGOURA, Deputy High Commissioner, OMVS
- Transboundary hydro-meteorological cooperation for the VOLTALARM EWS in West Africa: Ramesh Tripathi, WMO
- The role of youth in fostering water cooperation: Jean Damase Roamba, World Youth Parliament for Water – Burkina Faso PNJBE
- Civil Society Organizations and water development: Yeli Mariam Dakoure Sou, World Bank
Panel discussion Water cooperation for peace in West Africa - What’s next?
Closing by the Moderator, Yo Nishimura, World Bank
Files
Convenors
Organisation pour la mise en valeur du fleuve Sénégal
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
World Bank Group
World Meteorological Organization
Direction pour la Gestion et Planification des Ressources en Eau du Sénégal (DGPRE)
session_host

speaker








Summary
This event presents why and how to invest in water to enable resilient low emission development. It will present solutions across agriculture, water, sanitation, energy and nature based solutions; policy triggers to overcome barriers and mainstream water into climate actions; and financing; including high integrity carbon credits and more.
Session Description
This event will present why and how we can invest in improved water management to curb emissions and ensure low emission pathways are resilient in a shifting climate. Solutions will cover immediate win-win strategies to reduce methane and carbon emissions in nature, agriculture, power and water sector; policy triggers, including improving integration of water into net-zero standards and measures in national and corporate governance; and financing mechanisms, such as high integrity voluntary carbon credits, that can and are implemented today. The event will include presentations of latest research on water linkages to climate mitigation and highlight opportunities to expand commitments to net-zero water utilities, methane reduction in rice production, and hydropower development while mobilizing water organizations to promote wetland and peatland conservation. Following presentations of actionable solutions and means to scale implementation, lively debate and discussions will be held on priorities to overcome barriers for investment in water as well as to mainstream water resilience within public and private sector decarbonization
Programme
1100-1105. Welcome and Introduction. Jon Lane, Water Initiative for Net Zero, Steering Committee Chair.
1105-1115. Keynote Presentation: Decarbonizing the Water Sector in Asia. Lance Gore, Asian Development Bank.
1115-1125. Keynote Presentation: Advancing Strategies for Integrated Water-Energy Solutions. Mike Rinker, United States Department of Energy
1125-1150. Solution Showcase Panel. Moderated by Georgette Mrakadeah-Keane, Alliance for Global Water Adaptation.
1. Net-Zero Water Utilities. Austin Alexander, Vice President of Sustainability, Xylem
2. Sustainable Solutions for Rice Production. Amod Kumar Thakur, Principal Scientist for Plant Physiology at the Indian Council for Agricultural Research-Indian Institute of Water Management (ICAR-IIWM)
3. Fulfilling the promise of the Freshwater Challenge. Francesca Antonelli, Head of Rivers and Lakes, Wetlands International
4. Leveraging Carbon Credits for Water Solutions. Prof. Evan Thomas, University of Colorado
1200-1225. Panel Discussion:
Scaling investment in water solutions for climate mitigation
Moderated by Georgette Mrakadeh-Keane, Alliance for Global Water Adaptation.
Panelists:
Lance Gore, Asian Development Bank
Maha Al Zubi, International Water Management Institute, IWMI
Charles Scaife, US Department of Energy
1225-1230
Closing Insights & Recommendations. James Dalton, IUCN
Files
Convenors
Alliance for Global Water Adaptation
Asian Development Bank
International Union for Conservation of Nature
International Water Management Institute
United States Department of Energy
Water Initiative for Net Zero
speaker




session_host

Summary
This session will see examples from different countries of how heads of state and other political leaders are committing to WASH Compacts to accelerate progress in providing WASH services to all. Different stakeholders will share their experiences and views on mobilising countries highest political leadership
Session Description
Leadership of Heads of State can transform our chances of success by 2030. One year after the launch of the Heads of States Initiative – linked to the UN 2023 water conference and its action agenda - we will celebrate the first national compacts that set out ambitious and detailed commitments by countries to accelerate improvements in WASH services. This session will share examples from different countries on how their heads of state and political leaders are mobilising to elevate sanitation and water on national agendas. Their architects and champions will share insights on building high level engagement and using it to drive change. We will also reflect on progress across a wide range of countries that are developing compacts to suit their own contexts. Using these country cases we will discuss with participation of different stakeholders experiences and perspectives on the challenges of developing high level political engagement and debate the value of compacts as a means to help develop visions, promote reforms, mobilise resources, strengthen systems and ultimately transform the priority given to water, sanitation and hygiene services.
Programme
Facilitator: Hajar Yagkoubi https://www.hajaryagkoubi.com/
Welcome (11:00). On behalf of the HoSI partners, by Eva Schreuder, Head of the Water Division in the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs
(11:15) Setting the scene: Insights and limitations on high-level political engagement in driving universal access to water, sanitation and hygiene services.
Speaker: Muyatwas Sitali. Head country engagement.Sanitation and Water for All (SWA) partnership
- Sharing insights into the opportunities and limitations of high-level political engagement in driving accelerated progress in water and sanitation services
(11:30) Stories from South Sudan and Nigeria. Country experiences with developing high level political leadership and national WASH compacts.
o Experiences from a HoSI mentor countries. Nigeria (tbc). The responsable minister will speak about the key factors, opportunities and/or obstacles that needed to be tackled in the process to a Presiential compact. What are key lessons learned and what is the mentor countries' advice to other countries with ambitions for a Presidential compact?
o The South Sudan Presidential Compact. Hon. Pal Mai Deng, Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation will speak about the recently launched Presidential WASH Compact. https://www.sanitationandwaterforall.org/news/president-kiir-signs-south-sudans-compact-water-and-sanitation
Focus on key factors that enabled the Presidential Compact and looking ahead on its successfull implementation.
(11:50) Multi-stakeholder panel on stakeholder engagement in support to development and implementation of a Presidential compact. Moderated by Dr Patrick Moriarty, CEO IRC WASH.
The panel will see the perspectives of representatives of different stakeholder groups including from Civil Society and from national governments on their respective roles in support to succesfull implementation of a WASH Compact.
Engagement with the audience. During the session the audience will in different occasions be challenged to share experiences and perspectives by use of an online tool.
(12:20) Wrap-up, way forward and closing remarks, by Cecilia Sharp, UNICEF Director of WASH and CEED [Climate, Energy, Environment and Disaster Risk Reduction]
Files
Convenors
- Government of the Netherlands
- FCDO (UK)
- IRC WASH
- Sanitation and Water for All (SWA)
- UNICEF- United Nations International Children’s Fund
speaker




Moderator

Summary
We are living in the Anthropocene, a time when humans are the dominant force of change on the planet. Our actions push us ever closer to negative tipping points in the Earth system. The recently launched Earth System Boundaries, identified by the Earth Commission are scientifically defined safe and just limits for climate, freshwater, biodiversity, nutrient cycles, and aerosol pollutants. By operating within these limits, we can maintain a stable and resilient planet and ensure access for everyone to the resources necessary for a dignified life. This session will bring together experts to present and discuss the latest conceptual advancements, modelling techniques, and research insights regarding the safe and just Earth System Boundaries, with a specific focus on the freshwater domain
Session Description
Desired impact and session outcomes
Our session is aimed at a diversity of actors and stakeholders, including practitioners, policy-makers, and researchers. Our session will provide the audience with a clear understanding that the global water systems are crucial for the well-being of people and the planet and that we must stay within safe and just boundaries for blue and green water. It will highlight the urgency for actors and stakeholders to increase focus on examining the impact of human activity on water flows, and take action now.
Programme
- Introduction to the Seminar Series (10 minutes)
- Presentations (24 min)
- Ben Stewart-Koster
- Taikan Oki,
- Lan Wang-Erlandsson
- Moderated discussion by Albert, with prepared questions and audience questions (25 min)
- Closing Remarks (2 minutes)
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
Earth Commission
session_host



speaker



Moderator

Summary
Join this engaging session focused on the real-world implementation of nature-based solutions for water security. Experts and practitioners will share insights from projects around the world, with a focus on the importance of roles and capacity in taking NBS projects from theory to impact.
Session Description
Nature-based solutions (NBS) in both urban and rural contexts are key to ecosystem and human security. NBS can support water supply and quality, and reduce risks associated with extreme weather events. This thought-provoking session will feature representatives from different sectors alongside global NGOs, engaged in dialogue about two critical considerations underpinning NBS projects: roles and capacity. Drawing on lessons from projects like ‘Scaling Urban Nature-based Solutions (NbS) for Climate Adaptation in Sub-Saharan Africa’ (SUNCASA), IISD’s Natural Infrastructure for Water Solutions Initiative in the Canadian Prairies (NIWS), and the CEO Water Mandate, the experts will share insights into the realities of implementing NBS in water-insecure areas. Participants will also be invited to join a facilitated activity building on the session themes, deepening insights on the need for NBS implementation to be place-based and informed by considerations linked to capacity and roles.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Institute for Sustainable Development
Nutrien
Pacific Institute
World Resources Institute
speaker






Moderator

Summary
The lack of water in the Horn of Africa (HoA) has a significant impact on communities, their socioeconomic status and increasing fragility and conflict in the region, extending beyond country boarders. This session will showcase how different actors working with communities, are working to address water scarcity.
Session Description
A youth advocate from the region will describe their experiences of water scarcity and how it impacts their daily life and their prospects for the future. Complimented by a water security specialist explaining the links between water and tensions in the region. We then pose the question how can our work today give them the tools to provide water for this and the next generation? More Water More Life (MWML) (long term water provision for the region) a water minister will present their work, what significant investment in the approach could look like for water provision and the impact on conflict in the area. Socioeconomic development (developing livelihood opportunities) – through the perspective of key partners and drilling operators we review the socioeconomic opportunities in the region. Community level initiatives (what we can do now) – In Eritrea work is being led by local communities on Managed Aquifer Recharge to bolster local water catchments and adapt to climate impacts at a community level. We will enable communities to share their experience on this. Discussion with a youth advocate for the region with the Private sector (Xylem) how these approaches can support the next generation to address water fragility.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Denmark
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
Xylem
speaker




session_host
Moderator

Summary
Locally-led Adaptation (LLA) has become an increasingly influential approach to ensure that adaptation actions are anchored in the needs of the communities most affected by climate impacts. This session aims to explore how LLA approaches can support peacebuilding, water security and sustainable ecosystems in conflict-affected regions by placing local communities in the lead.
Session Description
While it is widely known that youths and men are the ones heavily involved in the conflicts and that women and children are impacted the most, what is forgotten is the impact of conflict on ecosystems. LLA approaches can support the achievement of more peaceful ecosystems and a water-secure world. But what does LLA look like in practice, especially in conflict-prone ecosystems, and how can you integrate it into your programming? This session shares current and evolving best practices in LLA approaches, within and beyond water-focused and ecosystem-based programmes. Participants will hear directly from communities who are successfully implementing this approach in conflict-affected contexts, after which they will engage in discussions on how local communities can lead peace initiatives while managing their shared resources effectively and sustainably. This session seeks to provide a safe space for discussing how LLA approaches can help to foster peace over shared resources. Discussions will be inspired by the experiences gathered from partners working in the Netherlands Government-supported Reversing the Flow (RtF) hubs, IIED as well as the LLA-focused work of a number of their key partners, the GCA and other like-minded actors that have been promoting LLA approach. This is a participatory session, it doesn’t include panels and participants will be working together to reflect on how the LLA principles can be applied into their work.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
IMPACT-Kenya
International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)
SOS-Sahel Sudan
speaker




Moderator

session_host

Summary
This session explores the nuanced roles of partnerships. It provides actionable proposals to enhance multi-stakeholder exchange and collaborations and accelerate effective actions on the local, national, and global front to tackle global water challenges in a joint effort by the private and public sectors, civil society, and academia.
Session Description
This session discusses and evaluates the pivotal roles of water partnerships to accelerate effective actions for water-related challenges at the local, national, and global levels. The Northern Water Network (NoWNET) – a network of currently 11 country-level water partnerships, with more than 1000 member companies and organizations in Europe, Japan, and the Republic of Korea – along with the World Water Council and Global Water Partnership, aims to discuss the ways of effective transformation of water sectors architectures to accelerate the actions through the value added of multi-stakeholders platforms to reach the SDGs. In the session, we will share the perspectives of various water partnerships on how they are contributing to achieving the SDGs illustrated with examples. The session will also serve as a platform to share experiences, exchange on good practices, and discuss the challenges and opportunities of water partnerships and networks and their contributions to bringing stakeholders together, empowering youth, and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. It will engage the audience in a participative approach, called fish-bowl conversation.
Programme
Welcome and session Introduction
Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, NoWNET Sec, Japan Water Forum
Distinguished Opening Speech:
Mr. Loic Fauchon, President, WWC
Keynote Presentation: NoWNET-Why & how it was born?
Dr. Torkil Jønch Clausen, International Water Advisor
Fishbowl Conversation 1
Introduction on Spotlight on examples by members of water partnerships
- Spotlight on Sandec/Eawag
George Wainaina, Sandec/Eawag (member of SWP)
- Spotlight 2 Finnish Water Forum
- Spotlight 3: French Water partnership
- Sporlight 4 : Netherland Water Partnership
Fishbowl conversation 2: Interaction with the audience
Onsite Moderator: Louise Heegaard Partnerships and Funding Mobilisation Expert, International Development, DHI, representing Danish Water Forum
Online Moderator: Michèle Heeb, Coordinator, Swiss Water Partnership
Fishbowl Wrap-up & Closing
Files
Convenors
Danish Water Forum
Finnish Water Forum
French Water Partnership
Global Water Partnership
Japan Water Forum
Korea Water Forum
Netherlands Water Partnership
Northern Water Network
Portuguese Water Partnership
Swedish Water House
Swiss Water Partnership
World Water Council
speaker




Moderator



session_host








Summary
Find the transformative potential of Water-Oriented Living Labs (WOLLs) in driving sustainable water solutions. Engage with experts showcasing the role of WOLLs within the theme of World Water Week 2024, "Bridging Borders: Water for a Peaceful and Sustainable Future.
Session Description
This session explores the critical role of Water-Oriented Living Labs (WOLLs) in addressing global water challenges.
Speakers will showcase the thematic and problem-solving approach of WOLLs, their territorial linkage, and the quadruple helix collaboration model. The session will also focus on how and why wastewater treatment plants of today should transform into resource plants of tomorrow, with WOLLs playing a crucial role in fostering this critical advance to address water scarcity challenge.
Through real-life examples and discussions, participants will gain insights into how WOLL initiatives contribute to a Water-Smart Society and align with the broader goals of World Water Week 2024, fostering cross-border cooperation and innovation to ensure water security and resilience globally.
Programme
0-5 mins: Introduction by Andrea Rubini, Director of Operations, Water Europe
5-20 mins: Keynote speech by Pär Larshans, Chief Sustainability Officer Ragn-Sells, and Andrea Rubini
20-30 mins: The territorial linkage: contextualizing challenges and opportunities by Alexandra Winderickx, Mechelen Municipality, Belgium
30-40 mins: Long-term strategy and governance structures by Søren Heinecke, IFD, Denmark
40-50 mins: Engaging stakeholders for creating a WOLLs in Attica by George Sachinis, EYDAP, Greece
50-65 mins: Water-Oriented Living Labs: leading by example
Prof. Maurizio Borin, University of Padova, Italy
Dr. Valerie Naidoo and Phillip Majeke - Water Research Commission, South Africa (online)
65-85 mins: Cross-interview panel consisting of the keynote speaker (moderator) and representatives from each Water-Oriented Living Labs (WOLL)
Moderated by Osman Tikansak, Water4All Pillar C Co-leader, FORMAS
85-90 mins: Closing remarks by Water Europe and EDF
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Water Environment Land Livelihoods (WELL) Labs
Water Europe
Ragn-Sells
Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)
session_host






speaker







Summary
This virtual session will set the stage, providing context on the role that water plays in ensuring ecosystem security and will highlight stories from people on the ground who are grappling with and developing innovative solutions that work for both people and nature in real life environments.
Session Description
The session will be an introduction to understand how water contributes to ecosystem security.
Through presentations and discussions, it will also illuminate the multifaceted significance of water within ecosystems. The session will shed light on the real-world complexities, challenges and opportunities surrounding water management through case studies and stories on ground. These stories will highlight complexities in balancing human needs with environmental sustainability, innovative approaches and solution oriented strategies that would work on-ground.
The session will be introduced by the co-conveners and will see a keynote speech by a renowned expert in the field of water and ecosystem security. The session strives to be as interactive as possible, and will also see a panel discussion and a Q&A session before closing. It will also introduce the topic of the following seminar session, i.e, the water-oriented living labs.
Programme
0-3 mins: Introduction by Veena Srinivasan, Executive Director, WELL Labs
4-10 mins - Setting the context by Felicia Marcus, William C. Landreth Visiting Fellow at Stanford University’s Water in the West Program, Former Chair, California State Water Resources Control Board
11-16 mins: Recorded videos highlighting good practices of water for ecosystem security
17-45 mins: Panel discussion moderated by Felicia Marcus
Panelist 1: Ishmael Sunga, Chief Executive Officer, Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions
Panelist 2: Gena Gammie, Director, Global Water Initiative, Forest Trends Association
46-55 mins: Q&A session moderated by Felicia Marcus
56-60 mins: Closing remarks by Pär Larshans, Chief Sustainability Office, Ragn-Sells
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Water Environment Land Livelihoods (WELL) Labs
Water Europe
Ragn-Sells
Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)
session_host






speaker


Summary
The main purpose of the workshop is to provide an opportunity for Indigenous Peoples to engage with the Global Commission on the Economics of Water on findings regarding atmospheric moisture flows and provide direction for future activities.
Session Description
The Global Commission on the Economics of Water set out to reimagine the way we value and govern water for the common good. A key finding of the GCEW is the importance of recognising green water flows and the connections between locations, with a particular focus on land-sourced atmospheric moisture flows and impacts of long-term land use change.
This work is especially relevant to Indigenous Peoples and their collective role in atmospheric water flows, as many territories are important sources of water owing to their livelihoods and culture. The collective role of Indigenous governance and livelihoods in green water flows is critical but often unacknowledged in local and global policy discussions.
This workshop is planned as a face-to-face opportunity for Indigenous Peoples to explore the role of Indigenous territories and livelihoods in green water flows and provide guidance on future policy direction and avenues for engagement.
Programme
Introduction (5 mins) - Speaker Elizabeth Wathuti (GCEW)
Overview of GCEW Report (7 mins) - Speaker Simon Fahrlaender (PIK)
Plenary Discussion Policy Implications (70 mins) - Yolanda Lopez
Recommendations (5 mins) - Rapporteur
Files
Convenors
Global Commission on the Economics of Water
Stockholm International Water Institute
session_host

speaker



Moderator

Overall Introduction to the seminar series (5 mins): Ambassador Bakyt Dzhusupov, Coordinator of the OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities
Definition and context-setting (10 mins): Sareen Malik, Executive Secretary, African Civil Society Network on Water and Sanitation (ANEW)
Moderator: Sareen Malik introduces grassroots voices, and we hear their observations about where the local institutions have gaps to overcome:
- Voice 1 – Tanzania: Herbert Kasiliah (Kash), Shahidi Wa Maji (4 mins)
- Voice 2 – Tajikistan: Shohida Tulieva, OSCE-SIWI-CAREC (4 mins)
- Voice 3 – Peru: Eduardo Zegarra, Senior Researcher, El Grupo de Análisis para el Desarrollo (GRADE) (4 mins)
- Voice 4 – Zambia: Yulia Titova, GFA Consulting Group GmbH (4 mins)
Q&A (14 mins): Moderated by Sareen Malik
Launch of the Fair Water Action Fund, which will provide grants of between £3,000 and £36,000 GBP, alongside technical and legal support, to organisations in the Global South working for water justice, (10 mins): Esayas Samuel, Water Witness International
Session wrap-up and closing, tease for session 2 (5 mins): Saule Ospanova, OSCE and co-convener team
session_host








speaker







Moderator

Summary
An analysis of the situation, best practices, and lessons learned in granting and sustaining WASH access in urban informal settlements in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) will be presented. This will be based on key research findings and a discussion with a panel of experts representing government institutions, service providers, NGOs, and local communities.
--
Se presentará un análisis de la situación, las mejores prácticas y las lecciones aprendidas sobre el acceso a WASH (agua, saneamiento e higiene) en asentamientos informales urbanos de América Latina y el Caribe (ALC). Esto se basará en hallazgos clave de investigaciones y una discusión con un panel de expertos que representan instituciones gubernamentales, proveedores de servicios, ONGs y comunidades locales.
Session Description
Based on the key findings of a research study carried out by IDB, Isle Utilities and SIWI (2024), and the live discussion with experts, the session aims to shed light on how WASH access in urban informal settlements in the LAC region is defined, present the main barriers to granting and sustaining WASH access, and discuss the best practices being implemented by key actors in the region.
In conversation with experts and the audience, the session aims to conclude by presenting a blend of opportunities for moving forward and improving WASH access in this context. The session will bring together representatives from government institutions, service providers, NGOs, and local communities.
The topics for discussion will be centered around governance and the enabling environment, service delivery models, and social and cultural approaches for local engagement. Furthermore, in line with this year WWW’s theme, the session will reflect on how to enhance peace and security in this context.
--
Basado en los hallazgos clave de un estudio de investigación realizado por el BID, Isle Utilities y SIWI (2024), y en la discusión en vivo con expertos, la sesión tiene como objetivo arrojar luz sobre cómo se define el acceso a WASH en asentamientos informales urbanos en la región de ALC, presentar las principales barreras para mantener el acceso a WASH, y discutir las mejores prácticas que están siendo implementadas por actores clave en la región.
En conversación con expertos y la audiencia, la sesión tiene como objetivo concluir presentando una combinación de oportunidades para avanzar y mejorar el acceso a WASH en este contexto. La sesión reunirá a representantes de instituciones gubernamentales, proveedores de servicios, ONGs y comunidades locales.
Los temas de discusión se centrarán en la gobernanza y el entorno propicio para la prestación de servicios, los modelos de provisión de servicios, y los enfoques sociales y culturales para la participación comunitaria. Además, en consonancia con la temática de la WWW de este año, la sesión reflexionará sobre cómo fortalecer la paz y la seguridad en este contexto.
Programme
The session agenda is as follows:
- Introduction.
- WASH situation in informal settlements in LAC.
- Panel discussion.
- Q&A with the audience.
- Key takeaways and session wrap-up.
--
El programa de la sesión es el siguiente:
- Introducción.
- Situación WASH en asentamientos informales en ALC.
- Panel de discusión.
- Preguntas & respuestas con la audiencia.
- Conclusiones y cierre de la sesión.
Files
Convenors
Inter-American Development Bank
Stockholm International Water Institute
speaker





session_host



Moderator

Summary
To address the $7 trillion global water infrastructure goal by 2030, a coalition of water champions is crucial. Coordinated public, concessional, and private capital, and innovative policies, is essential to overcome decades of underinvestment. This session puts a spotlight on innovative financing and fostering open public-private dialogue for water security.
Session Description
Water, a critical global resource, faces escalating challenges from population growth, urbanization, and climate change. Addressing these issues requires transformative action and innovative financing solutions to update aging infrastructure and build resilience. Current global investment levels fall short of meeting Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to water and addressing climate impacts. The need to mobilize up to $7 trillion by 2030 for global water infrastructure necessitates a coalition of committed water champions, comprehensive financing solutions, and innovative policies. A coordinated influx of public, concessional, and private capital is imperative to compensate for decades of underinvestment and tackle present and future challenges. Governments hold a crucial role in establishing enabling conditions and necessary reforms to facilitate a greater flow of both public and private finance for essential water sector investments. This session, organized by the World Bank and partners, will spotlight public-private collaboration models and financing instruments essential for systemic change. It aims to foster an open dialogue on pathways for transformative impact.
Programme
Opening Remarks
by Yogita Mumssen, Global Practice Manager, World Bank Water
Moderated discussion on strategies for sustainable water financing in two panels.
by moderator Rochi Khemka, Sr Private Sector Specialist, 2030 WRG/World Bank Water
Panel 1: Financial institutions on the financing need in water
- Satoshi Ishii, Director, Strategy and Partnerships, Asian Development Bank (ADB)
- Christopher Flensborg, Head of Climate and Sustainable Finance Business Development, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB)
- Sumeet Thakur, Global Head of Water, Cities, Waste & Circularity, (IFC)
- Tomás Serebrisky, Infrastructure and Energy Sector Manager, Inter-American Development Bank, (IDB)
- Peter Szappanos, Senior Water Engineer, Water Division, Environment & Natural Resources Department (EIB)
Panel 2: Corporate and international perspectives on the financing need in water
- Jai Shroff, CEO, UPL Ltd.
- Anne Le Guennec, Senior Executive Vice President, Veolia
- Eliza Roberts, Global Water Lead, Microsoft
- Braulio Morera, Head of Resilience Solutions, World Economic Forum (WEF)
- Sophie Tremolet, Water Team Leader, OECD Environment Directorate, (OECD)
Closing
Files
Convenors
- World Bank Group (IFC, MIGA)
- 2030 Water Resources Group (2030 WRG)
- World Economic Forum (WEF)
- Swedish Bank Group (SEB) Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken
- Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
speaker








session_host


Moderator

Summary
The session provides insights into how a WASH project, SUSWA, has helped the Federal Ministry of Finance localise gender responsive budgeting in Karnali and how the project and its partners are using GRB as a means to help direct finance into gender-responsive WASH services and address discriminatory practices.
Session Description
Localising gender responsive budgeting (GRB) is critical for many reasons, including but not limited to more equal resource allocation, but what does this have to do with WASH? A lot, as the experience of a bilateral WASH sector project, SUSWA, has proven in Karnali, Nepal.
Since the constitutional reform, the landscape for GRB has changed in Nepal and opened up an opportunity to involve more diverse local voices in public planning and budgeting processes. In Karnali, many inequalities persist in the WASH sector. For example, many women are still denied access to water taps during menstruation. WASH related behavioural and normative change processes are challenging and can be supported by public finance management tools like GRB.
In this session, the convening partners will discuss and stimulate conversation on how strategic mainstreaming of gender and inclusion perspectives into the municipal WASH interventions can help promote inclusive decision making, contribute to the efficiency and sustainability of interventions, and address discriminatory practices. The conveners will explain how WASH service delivery has been used as a vector to help build capacities in GRB and influence gender dynamics in the society.
Programme
Introduction
Speakers: Krista Orama, Senior Adviser for Gender Equality and Human Rights at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland
Raju Tirwa, Gender Equality, Disability, and Social Inclusion Specialist, Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA)/Niras Finland.
The SUSWA project is funded by the Government of Nepal, the European Union, and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland and the local governments and people in the project area.
The session will be moderated by Hajar Yagkoubi.
Files
Human Rights and Gender Equality, Disability and Social Inclusion Strategy and Action Plan. The Sustainable WASH for All Project (2023). Accessed at: https://suswa.org/download/human-rights-and-gender-equality-disability-and-social-inclusion-strategy-and-action-plan/
Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review, Nepal. United Nations Human Rights Council A/HRC/47/10 (2021). Accessed at: https://www.ohchr.org/en/documents/country-reports/ahrc4710-report-working-group-universal-periodic-review-nepal
Convenors
Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland
Niras Finland, Technical Assistance - Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA) Project. The SUSWA project is funded by the Government of Nepal, the European Union, and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland and the local governments in the project area.
speaker


Moderator
Summary
Innovation could solve some of the water sector’s biggest challenges, but regulation often inhibits the impetus and potential for change. Join this session to learn how Ofwat, the economic water regulator in England & Wales, launched a £200 million fund to drive sector-wide innovation, and the challenges along the way.
Session Description
Innovation is essential to solve water sector challenges, yet in such a heavily regulated industry with ageing infrastructure, change is slow-moving and often incremental. To stimulate the scale of innovation demanded by customers, the environment and the sector, Ofwat launched a £200 million fund to drive cultural change by promoting partnerships to explore risky, innovative solutions. With 75+ funded projects, this session will share key learnings about how regulation can be used to effectively drive cross-sector innovation and collaboration, showcase examples of projects that are leading the charge in developing technological solutions that contribute towards water security, support the sector to achieve net-zero, build a resilient infrastructure to cope with climate change, engage communities with local water issues, and more. This session is designed for a variety of stakeholders: from regulators, governments and funding bodies to understand their role in driving innovation, and how the Ofwat Innovation Fund model could be applied elsewhere; as well as for the water sector and innovators to co-create ways to incentivise collaboration to find solutions to local water challenges.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arup
Challenge Works
Ofwat
Ofwat Innovation Fund
session_host

speaker



Moderator

Summary
Transboundary Water Management: Challenges and Solutions for Peace
Session Description
Water resources that cross national boundaries present unique challenges and opportunities for cooperation. This session will explore the complexities of transboundary water management, focusing on innovative solutions that promote peace and regional stability. Experts will discuss case studies, share best practices, and provide insights into the governance mechanisms that facilitate effective collaboration among nations.
Key topics to be discussed during this session include:
- Enabling Environment: Innovative and integrative approaches for improved transboundary cooperation, addressing outdated governance and organizational structures.
- Governance: Overly political, outdated top-down frameworks with no mechanisms to engage stakeholders.
- Data: Incomplete or obsolete science-based diagnostics and monitoring systems.
- Tools: Lack of protocols for natural disaster response (droughts and floods) and conflict resolution.
- Infrastructure & Finance: Insufficient basic infrastructure and development of unsustainable projects; need for financing and sustainable project development.
Programme
- Welcome and Opening by Sergio Campos, Head of Water and Sanitation, IDB
- Keynote Scene-Setting by Mark Zeitoun, Director General of the Geneva Water Hub and Professor of Water Diplomacy at the Graduate Institute of Geneva
- Ignite Talks by
- James Dalton, Director Global Water Program, IUCN
- Judith Ter Maat, Expert surface water and delta management, Deltares
- Lama Ranjous, Fundraising and Partnerships Officer, OneWater
- Melissa McCracken, Assistant Professor of International Environmental Policy, Tufts University
Key Take-Aways and Closing by Sergio Campos, Head of Water and Sanitation, IDB
Files
Convenors
- Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
- ACTO
- Deltares
- IDB
- MEDRC
- SDC
- World Bank
speaker





session_host







Moderator

Summary
Water insecurity from floods or droughts threatens peace and security, particularly in a changing climate. Early warnings and early actions are key, but communication failures are often a bigger issue than forecasting. This session explores communication barriers and solutions, learning from diverse actors to make effective public warnings.
Session Description
The sudden lack of safe water access due to floods or prolonged droughts can strongly affect peace and security in a country: end-to-end early warning systems (EWS) are a crucial element to reduce such impacts. There is ample evidence that the lack of EWS protection is often not a lack of forecasts and warnings but a lack of proper communication to the people that need to act. Countries across the globe face the same challenge to effectively communicate to communities in danger across scales, not only in low income context facing low connection coverage but also in high income and fully connected countries (e.g. during the floods of 2021 in Germany). In this session we want to share and discuss insights on barriers to effective communication to the communities and learn from different actors engaged in communication to the public. This aims at creating a new network of similarly minded actors to work together on effective communication strategies. We will explore the role of media, social media and the public itself in effectively propagating messages from the regional/national to the community level.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
USAID
Red Cross
World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
US Geological Survey
Segura
World Youth Parliament for Water
session_host



speaker









Summary
The balance of water availability affects menstrual health and hygiene. Panelists discuss the connection between MHH and water, emphasizing the importance of investing in MHH to empower women and girls against climate change.
Session Description
Ensuring access to clean water is crucial for addressing menstrual health and hygiene (MHH). Too little water can lead to unsanitary conditions, making maintaining proper hygiene during menstruation difficult; excessive flooding can disrupt access to safe sanitation facilities, further exacerbating MHH issues. Climate change is already affecting MHH, with natural disasters disrupting water sources and sanitation infrastructure. By leveraging the ability of menstruators to manage their menstruation with dignity, we can strengthen resilience. The session promotes menstrual health advocacy in WASH systems for climate resilience. This session will discuss water availability and MHH through case studies in Cambodia, Ethiopia, and India, exploring challenges in seasonally flooded environments, rural settings, urban areas, and informal settlements. iDE will focus on unique challenges in flooded areas with no safe disposal options, Splash on the need for functional infrastructure access in Addis Ababa schools to enable girls to manage their menstruation, and CFAR India on driving equity in WASH systems to raise awareness about menstruation. The session will conclude with WfW leading a call to action: investing in MHH is critical for the resilience of women and girls in the face of climate change, sharing examples of partners’ work across the Asia Pacific.
Programme
Files
Convenors
CFAR India
iDE - International Development Enterprises
Splash
Water for Women
Moderator


speaker




session_host

Summary
Data, monitoring, and data products including forecasts and warnings are critical in enabling effective and efficient management of water resources for competing demands and reducing risks of water-related disasters hence promoting peace and security. This session will emphasize data and products to strengthen interdisciplinary collaboration to achieve water security.
Session Description
Actionable climate and water observations are critical for providing early warning of climate/water-related hazards and decision-making in climate/water sensitive sectors such as disaster risk management, agriculture, health, water management, transportation, and other sectors to protect and support lives, livelihoods, property, and economies. However, water data is scarce in many countries and especially in developing countries in fragile, conflict and violence affected context. In addition, data alone is not sufficient for effective decisions and requires modeling, forecasting, and information products to enable decision makers to understand risks and impacts to take timely and appropriate actions to reach the goal of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, SDGs, and Paris Agreement to address water security. While new technologies such as remote sensing are promising - gaps remain.
Beyond data collection needs, to achieve water security, multiple-sectorial coordination among all affected sectors, financing, and governance are essential to prevent conflicts . The purpose of this session is to highlight through examples the imperative of interdisciplinary collaboration to achieve water security. The session also aims to highlight current barriers and gaps in the enabling environment to achieve water security in local, regional, and global levels.
Programme
· Introduction: USAID – Policy/Program – USAID – Sezin Tokar
· Keynote duet: Mickey Glantz (M), Director Consortium of Capacity Building, University of Colorado and Intergenerational Advisors to Future Leaders (Water Security in Changing Climate ) and Ms. Amira Nasser, Deputy Director of the Technical Office of the Chairman, Board of Directors, the Egyptian Meteorological Authority and Future Leaders representative
Panellists
· Carla Liera - SEI - Mexico
· Yelyesaveta Demydenko - GWP - Ukraine
· Bapon Fakhruddin, GCF Water Resources Management Senior Specialist -New Zealand
· Najeebullah Saraj, WMO - Afghanistan
· Discussant: Susanne Schmeier (IHE Delft).
Other Roles:
· In-person moderator: Mr. Jose Castro (Segura).
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
USAID
Red Cross
World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
US Geological Survey
Segura
World Youth Parliament for Water
session_host



speaker






Summary
Locally-led NGOs from Africa, Asia and Latin America present case studies highlighting successful programs integrating community-managed water systems with household water service and safely-managed sanitation. These pioneering organizations will share their blueprints and practical experiences with engineering design, construction, long-term sustainability, financial management, and collaboration with local government and funders.
Session Description
The SDGs for water and sanitation are ambitious and stress the right to safely-managed water and safely-managed human waste. Currently 80% of the population of rural Africa lack access to both safely managed water and sanitation services. While accessibility in urban areas is higher, at least 40% of people in African cities do not meet SDG targets for water and sanitation. Thus, funders, implementing organizations, and governments worldwide need to develop new competencies to bring their work in alignment with those goals. Learning from institutions at the forefront of this effort can speed the sector’s progress. Locally-led organizations based in Kenya, Bangladesh, and Honduras, working in both urban and rural contexts, will share the real challenges they have experienced and solutions they have developed while implementing integrated community-managed piped water systems that deliver last miles services. A case study from the mayor of Valladolid, Honduras will describe a long-term collaboration with a locally-led NGO resulting in a household piped water systems approaching 100% coverage in the region. Case studies will include detailed practical knowledge and lessons learned in design, construction management, community-management, government collaboration, and how funding partners can contribute to successful implementation, monitoring and follow-up.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Comité Central Pro Agua y Desarrollo Integral de Lempira
Community Asset Building and Development Agency
Dushtha Shasthya Kendra
Kenya Water for Health Organization
Water1st International
session_host

speaker












Moderator


Summary
Join the Centre for Advocacy and Research – India’s Akhila Sivadas in a conversation on advancing clean water and sanitation for all in marginalized informal settlements of Bhubaneswar and Jaipur. As vanguards for climate-resilient and inclusive WASH, learn how CFAR bridges borders between people, policymakers and providers, and pathways
Session Description
SDG 6 — clean water and sanitation for all — means leaving no one behind. The 2030 deadline on the SDGs is looming, and while many are off track, those linked to sanitation are lagging even further behind. In many parts of the world the progress pipeline is too slow, or at risk of reversal with the onset of climate change. Increasingly, SDG 6 seems more like a pipe dream, but it is one that we must make a reality. Supported by Australia through Water for Women, the Centre for Advocacy and Research - India (CFAR) is bridging borders to turn the tide on SDG 6 in some of India’s hardest to reach and most marginalized communities – those living in urban informal settlements of Bhubaneswar and Jaipur. Akhila Sivadas leads a conversation on breaking down barriers within and between marginalized communities, and building partnerships with provincial authorities, duty bearers, and water and WASH service providers charged with delivering water and sanitation for all. Learn about recent community water and WASH wins in Bhubaneswar and Jaipur supported through CFAR’s Water for Women and wider work, and the ongoing challenges and pathways to impact for a climate-resilient and
Programme
Files
Convenors
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
CFAR
Water for Women
speaker

session_host
Summary
Plan International, Water Mission and partners works with refugee and hosting communities applying climate resilient WASH services to promote wellbeing and development. This interactive session will discuss and identify challenges and opportunities related to implementation of WASH projects in protracted crisis as an enabler to peaceful coexistence among refugees and host population.
Session Description
In Kenya the Government have developed visionary frameworks for refugee hosting communities. Kenya have welcomed refugees for decades. This adds pressure on the country, that are facing several other challenges including climate change, conflict, and poverty. With ambitious frameworks as Kenya’s Shirika Plan, refugee hosting communities becomes socio-economically active and self-reliant and commits to changing the primary assistance model toward development-oriented integrated settlements. These frameworks present challenges and potentials to implement sustainable WASH services for both populations. Lack of resources including access to WASH services, puts a strain to health and wellbeing among both populations and threatens the fragile coexistence of the populations, despite the positive political developments. Plan International is well positioned to work in these contexts of protracted crisis. Examples of this is Turkana County, Kenya with support from the Grundfos Foundation and DANIDA. Plan International, Water Mission and partners works inside camps, informal settlements, and hosting communities to not only provide sustainable WASH services but are using them as a facilitator to enhance job creation, gender transformation and social cohesion. Several actors play a role including youth, women, men, local leaders, authorities, and the UN.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Plan International
Water Mission
Grundfos Foundation
session_host


Moderator

Summary
This session explores practical and applied pathways towards climate resilient urban sanitation from around the world, and invites participants to identify, share, and discuss feasible pathways towards climate resilience in their local contexts. The session includes a series of short presentations, followed by a panel and table discussions.
Session Description
Join us for a session that will empower you to champion climate resilient urban sanitation locally. Drawing on research by Arup, WSUP Advisory, and the World Bank, we explore sanitation as a key enabler of urban resilience and delve into pioneering examples of practical climate adaptation in urban sanitation from around the world. We will also discuss the Policy, Institutions, Regulatory, and Financing (PIRF) mechanisms that may facilitate climate resilient urban sanitation in your local context. The session features four short presentations from Arup, WSUP, iDE and practitioners pioneering climate adaptation in urban sanitation. Presenters will engage in a panel discussion discussing the challenges of climate adaptation in urban sanitation and how they may be overcome. Finally, participants will share and discuss pathways towards climate resilient urban sanitation in their local context. This session is for everyone interested in urban climate resilience and the enabling role of sanitation. We invite governments, private sector, civil societies, and academics to convene to collectively share and reflect on practical pathways towards climate resilient urban sanitation. We will also hear from the World Bank on how the findings shared in this session could inform the design of resilient urban sanitation projects.
Programme
1. Open & Welcome [Arup]
2. Climate Resilient Sanitation: Setting the Scene [Dr Leonie Hyde-Smith]
3. Thematic area 1: Deep dive into PIRF (Policies, regulations, institutions and financing) [Water & Sanitation for the Urban Poor - WSUP]
4. Thematic area 2: Human centred design for sanitation [International Development Enterprises - iDE]
5. Case Study 1: Nairobi [Nairobi City Council - tbc]
6. Case Study 1: San Francisco [San Francisco Public Utilities]
7. Panel Discussion - Pathways for Climate Resilient Sanitation
8. Closing Keynote - a path forward for Climate Resilient Sanitation [The World Bank]
Files
Convenors
Arup
iDE
Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor
World Bank Group
speaker







session_host

Summary
This session presents highlights from the 2024 report for SDG indicator 6.3.1 “safely treated wastewater” (which has updated global databases on total, industrial, and domestic wastewater generation and treatment) and discusses the impact on climate resilience and water security.
Session Description
This session will launch the 2024 report for SDG indicator 6.3.1 (safely treated wastewater). The SDG wastewater target is critically important due to its relationship with water pollution, climate, water scarcity and more generally on global water security. Data are compiled and analyzed separately by UN-Habitat (for total and industrial wastewater) and WHO (for domestic wastewater). UN-Habitat reports that in 2022, 76% of total wastewater received at least some treatment before discharge, and 60% received at least secondary treatment. WHO reports that 58% of domestic wastewater was safely treated before discharge, meaning either that effluent complied with relevant standards, or wastewater received at least secondary treatment. Unprecedented levels of pollution to the increasingly limited freshwater resources have impacted not only water-scarce countries but the most vulnerable in society. Additionally, extreme climate events have rendered current approaches to wastewater management ineffective due to extremes of flooding and drought. These results highlight the need for focusing our attention on wastewater and supporting the Wastewater 2030 commitment, endorsed by several Member States at the 2023 UN Water conference in New York. A high-level panel will discuss the implication of the newly-available data and the implications for revised management approaches and increased investment.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Agence Française de Développement
Environmental Protection Agency, Ghana
Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
United Nations Human Settlements Programme
World Health Organization
session_host


moderator

speaker


Summary
The first session of the Art of Water Diplomacy series starts at the beginning: what is water diplomacy? Why is it needed? With an emphasis on not only building, but also institutionalizing and maintaining relations between states and non-state actors, water diplomacy is as much about the process as it is about results.
Session Description
The session underscores the vital importance of water diplomacy in today’s geopolitical arena, and identifies the various challenges posed by transboundary water resources. It explores the goals of diplomatic efforts and how we might measure its success, while giving an overview of the varied skills, competencies, and actors involved.
Programme
After setting the scene and introducing water diplomacy, we will hear from a range of practitioners, with differing roles and fields of expertise, who will demonstrate the diverse mechanisms of water diplomacy and the interaction between them.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
United Nations Educational,Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
EcoPeace Middle East
session_host




speaker




Moderator

Summary
Freshwater resources availability and quality are deteriorating at an increasing pace, calling for bold action by all actors together, from State bodies, territories, industries and their supply-chains, and NGOs: Actors must blend large-scope reforms, emergency measures, and turnaround their water impacts
Session Description
Most actors realize that the continuity of their activities is threatened by water scarcity, driven by broader systemic failures. Adapting to climate change, and its impacts on the availability of good quality water, require a combination of solutions including depollution (e.g. removing pathogens, nutrients, PFAS, endocrine disruptors etc.) water reuse, water productivity increase, water use efficiency, as well as governance innovations. Decisions-makers have to rethink territories and their water infrastructures from what they are today: based on outdated hydrological data and design. It is possible to imagine green-field factories, and totally different production and consumption patterns, which help to figure out possible futures, yet at the same time, the highest priorities are to address the current needs of the poorest, negotiate transition pathways, taking account of the needs and wishes of the citizenry, economic actors, and States, as they stand today. The session will contrast the views of the largest official aid agency in the world, those of the reference international research organization for water and land resources management, and those of the global leader of environmental services to industries and municipalities.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute
REAL-Water program of USAID
USAID
Resilient Waters Program
Veolia
session_host

speaker


Summary
To address challenges such as climate change, increasing fragility, conflicts and threats to biodiversity, transboundary water cooperation is imperative. This session will discuss how partners are creating a new architecture to increase support of transboundary water cooperation, and how stakeholders of all kinds can contribute to the efforts.
Session Description
The world is facing many challenges, including a significant increase in conflicts, the effects of climate change, increased disasters, and significant biodiversity loss. It is for these reasons that the World Bank has chosen water as one of its foremost priorities to address through a new Global Challenge Program. Turning these global public "bads" into "goods" requires new thinking and types of engagement, with new action in transboundary water at the fore. As around half of the world’s water is transboundary, cooperation is necessary to achieve development, climate resilience, and increased peace and stability. In response to this, and the calls for improved mechanisms to support transboundary cooperation during the UN 2023 Water Conference, the World Bank and its partners have established a new Global Facility for Transboundary Water Cooperation. The goal of the Facility is to make relevant expertise and knowledge available to countries and their joint organizations, to inform and support the joint management of transboundary water resources. In this talk show, participants will reflect on the extent of current challenges related to transboundary water, and the new ways the World Bank and its partners are changing their offerings to countries to support improved transboundary cooperation.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Global Facility for Transboundary Cooperation
World Bank Group
speaker



session_host


Moderator

Summary
The Thinkshop will explore qualitative evidence's role in WASH system strengthening through peer-review of tools used by Agenda for Change members & collaborators. Participants will share experiences and determine conditions for using specific tools. As an outcome, a compendium of WASH system strengthening qualitative tools and methods will be published.
Session Description
A shift in the context, such as a new government policy, can significantly impact the relevance of planned activities related to systems strengthening interventions. The session, designed as a Think shop, aims to bring together various collaborators under the Agenda for Change and RWSN to exchange approaches and methods that provide a diverse range of experiences and ideas on qualitatively measuring systems change. This exchange aims to promote informed and inclusive action to address WASH-related security risks. The Think shop is structured as a creative and collaborative exchange through interactive exercises on the various qualitative tools employed in system strengthening, particularly in the WASH sector. The theme of the Think shop directly contributes to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6 by addressing sector gaps that hinder shared accountability, a crucial element identified under the SDG 6 Global Acceleration Framework. Generating evidence contributes to a delivery culture that breaks down sector silos, utilizing the latest evidence on effective approaches and adapting to evolving realities in different intervention contexts.
Programme
09:00 - 09:10
Session Overview
Lead Facilitator/Moderator: Bethlehem Mengistu (Agenda for Change)
09:10 - 09:20
Keynote: Qualitative Evidence Framing in System Strengthening
Presenter: Irene Gai (WHH)
09:20 - 10:00
Practitioner Perspectives Cross-Exchange (World Café Format)
Facilitator:Stef Smits (IRC WASH)
- Reflection at Tables on Tools: Discuss the pre-conditions for application, subsector fit, project cycle placement, and addressing elements like GESI.
- Identify Main Challenges: Document the top three challenges for each tool, clustered in bubbles.
10:00 - 10:25
Panel/Plenary Discussion and Wrap up
Facilitator: Ewurabena Yanyi-Akofur (WaterAid country director & convenor for Agenda for change- Ghana Country collaboration
- Applying Tools and Frameworks: Discuss how tools can measure and attribute impact at various levels (household to global).
Harnessing Structures and Systems: Identify formal/informal structures, mechanisms, processes, and systems that aid uptake.
10:25- 10.30
Wrap up- Next steps
Lead Facilitator/Moderator: Bethlehem Mengistu (Agenda for Change)-
Convenors
Agenda for Change
Welthungerhilfe
IRC WASH
session_host



Summary
Join us to discover simple technological options for safe water and how the convening partners are addressing the challenges in Karnali, Nepal, where 96.5% of people consume unsafe water. Learn strategies and approaches for system-strengthening with technologies and water supply management for the most vulnerable and marginalised communities.
Session Description
According to Nepal Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (2019), 96.5% of people consume unsafe water in Karnali, Nepal. In Nepal overall, the safely managed water supply coverage was 16% in 2022 (UNICEF, WHO, 2023).
The drive towards ensuring safe water is always a challenging one without easy-to-use and affordable technological options and joint efforts. In this session, the presenters will share the key challenges related to access to safe water in the mountainous and hard-to-reach rural areas of Karnali and their experiences in developing innovative inline chlorination systems in the project municipalities of the Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA), Helvetas Nepal, and Nepal Water for Health (NEWAH).
The inline chlorination technology introduced by the conveners not only serves to maintain safe water but also triggers awareness at the community level on safe water and related health concerns. Low operational and maintenance costs are another key factor for the easy adoption of this technological solution which supplies feacal coliform-free water at the household level, reducing the need for household-level water treatment practices. The system has multiple benefits but like almost any system, it also comes with certain challenges.
Join us to learn about, discuss, and share experiences using and developing sustainable solutions for safe drinking water!
Programme
Introduction
Access to safe drinking water in Nepal
Presentations
Research and development related to the inline chlorination system (HELVETAS Nepal)
Piloting the inline chlorination system at the community level in rural Nepal (Nepal Water for Health)
Scaling up the inline chlorination in Karnali: opportunities and challenges (SUSWA/NIRAS Finland)
Open discussion and questions and answers
Conclusions and closing remarks
Files
Convenors
HELVETAS Nepal
Nepal Water for Health
Niras Finland, Technical Assistance - Sustainable WASH for All (SUSWA) Project. The SUSWA project is funded by the Government of Nepal, the European Union, and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland and the local governments in the project area.
speaker




Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute
speaker










Summary
Nature Based Solutions can provide ecosystem benefits, carbon benefits, water quality benefits, and they can reduce the impacts of wildfires, floods, and droughts. This panel will describe projects that have brought together unlikely partners and funding streams (such as NGOs, tribes, corporations, public agencies, and philanthropy) to provide benefits to communities and ecosystems.
Session Description
This session will document a variety of different projects that have been based on nature-based approaches, used multiple funding streams, and brought together diverse partners, to provide many different types of benefits. This panel will describe different types of nature-based projects, such as beaver dam analogues, regenerative agriculture, and forest restoration work, and explain how these projects were developed with different funding streams, diverse partners, and led to stackable results.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Bonneville Environmental Foundation
The Nature Conservancy
Walton Family Foundation
Water and Tribes Initiative
session_host

speaker



Moderator

Summary
The Opening Ceremony sheds light on the 2024 theme Bridging Borders: Water for Peaceful and Sustainable Future with leading experts and inspiring thinkers.
Session Description
Welcome to the official Opening Ceremony of World Water Week 2024! Join water experts from around the world to explore new ways of how water can bridge borders and be the key to a more peaceful and sustainable future.
Through a mix of formats, we will delve into some of today’s greatest challenges. We will shed light on the role of water in conflicts around the world and analyze the power of water to bridge borders between global challenges, nations, and communities.
With a focus on solutions to current and emerging challenges around the globe, the Opening Ceremony discusses questions such as how water can be a tool for successful cooperation and how we can acquire wisdom about global interconnectivity through water.
Programme
- Welcome from SIWI:
- Susanne Halling Duffy, Director World Water Week
- Andreas Karlsson, Director of Communications, SIWI
- Olle Burell, Chairman of the Board, SIWI
- Photography in conflict zones
- Paul Hansen, photojournalist, Dagens Nyheter
- Panel: Water, peace, and security
- Dan Smith, Director, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
- Elina Valtonen, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Finland
- David Mahlobo, Deputy Minister of Water and Sanitation, Republic of South Africa
- Dialogue: Transfer of knowledge
- Phil Duncan, Professor University of Canberra
- Aana Edmondson, Board Member Sáminuorra
- Dialogue: Youth inclusion
- Teddy Katongo Chifumbano, President, World Youth Parliament for Water
- Disa Crow Chief, Blackfoot Youth Water Council
- A global perspective
- Jakob Granit, Director General, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
- Closing remarks:
- Susanne Halling Duffy, Director World Water Week
- Andreas Karlsson, Director of Communications SIWI
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker











session_host

Moderator

Summary
Dive into the future of corporate sustainability as we learn how the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive is re-shaping business accountability for shared water resources. Discover how environmental disclosure is being transformed and improve your corporate water practices. Join us as we learn together in this cross-sectoral conversation.
Session Description
The CSRD is revolutionizing accountability, mandating company disclosures on water usage, water pollution and more. Businesses will have to conduct double materiality assessments to identify what risks water poses to their operations and vice versa. In this sessions, we uncover how companies will have to navigate the challenges and opportunities this creates.
In this inaugural Water in Business programme, we will unpack the global dialogue on water stewardship and governance with a focus on the implications of the CSRD, and how it aligns with existing sustainability frameworks. We will also look at the meaning of key terms in the CSRD, such as double materiality.
Key questions will be addressed:
- What is CSRD and disclosure
- How to best leverage existing data and sustainability reporting standards
- How can the public sector, civil society and companies work better together for advancement of SDG 6 based on the CSRD
Join us to shape the future of water and foster meaningful dialogue and partnerships across sectors. Water in Business is a collaborative initiative with the Government of the Netherlands.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Government of the Netherlands
session_host


speaker



Moderator

Summary
Water has never been a more relevant issue. And that’s why it’s never been more important to communicate about water. Throughout World Water Week, Water in Communications hosts a series of inspiring talks and discussions that highlight the crucial role of communication?in societal transformation. Join the conversation and become part of the solution.
Session Description
We often hear that we need to be better at communicating about water. Improving communication around water was the idea behind the Water in Communications programme when it was launched in 2021.
At that point, the water community had identified communication as one of its greatest challenges. It was clear that building awareness of water and its complexity, functions, and linkages to other issues, such as climate change, would improve the visibility of water and help motivate policymakers and the public to make better decisions about water. But how do we quantify the socio-economic impact of water access, and communicate it effectively?
We still have some way to go before water becomes a key component in societal, political and economic discussions. We need to talk more about communicating water, and how we measure success.
Is this the task of the communications department in your organization? Or does it fall to individual researchers? What if communication was a KPI? How can we make water the top priority for decision makers around the world? Is it up to individual researchers or is it up to the media?
Join the conversation, in which we invite distinguished panellists to discuss how to make communicating about water everyone’s business.
Water in Communications is a partner programme co-created with the Grundfos Foundation. After the Centre Stage session, we invite you to join the follow-up mingle at the foundation’s booth (4:03). Guests joining online can continue the discussion in the Grundfos Foundation & Co. digital booth.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Grundfos Foundation
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker



session_host

Moderator

Summary
Welcome Reception for World Water Week 2024. Join the mingle, network, connect and re-connect with other participants and help us kick-start this year's event. Light refreshments will be served.
This event is open to all registered World Water Week participants onsite, no sign-up required
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
Session Description
Change opens-up new opportunities. The world is in a different place talking about ‘global water dynamics’ then at the time SIWI started. We are halfway the Water Action Decade, we still feel the dynamics of the past UN 2023 Water Conference and are excited about the upcoming 2026 and 2028 UN conferences. The WWF in Senegal and Indonesia delivered a high bar for the upcoming WWF in Riyad. And with the One Water Summit, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water and its report, and water more and more prominent on global and local agendas at COP’s with a water pavilion, and in the trilogy of conventions: Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification.
Now, with all the upcoming changes in Stockholm, it is time to reset the focus, the ambition and with that the capacity – institutionally, individually, and informally. Stockholm and Sweden have choice to make, we have a choice to make: to keep Stockholm center-staged in the water world, with a legacy and a future for water action, inspiration and convening.
If you care for the future of water, of SIWI and the enabling environment it can empower, join us for one of these lunch dialogues and help us think through the future of a strong convening capacity in Stockholm.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Friends of Water,
Friends of Stockholm
session_host

speaker

Summary
The Hydro Extreme Game highlights the complexity of taking consensual decisions towards integrated disaster management. Players will attempt to come up with the best mix of water management solutions to manage both droughts and floods based on tools of the UNCCD Drought Toolbox, APFM, IDMP, and the IWRM Toolbox.
Session Description
Participants will be playing the Hydro Extreme Serious Game in this workshop, a board game that was developed to highlight the various trade-offs and the challenge of pursuing collaborative integrated disaster management. Players will be grouped in teams of 4-5, each team represents a village assembly. Each team starts the game with 10 houses and a number of coins. Each round, the village assembly can use the coins to purchase “water management cards”, which represent different solutions that can protect the village against future droughts or floods. These water management cards are derived from technical and policy solutions presented in tools of the UNCCD Drought Toolbox, the APFM Tools Series, and the IWRM Toolbox. After decisions have been made a roulette of disasters will be rolled indicating whether a drought, flood, or both happened that year. Another dice will be rolled to determine the impact of that disaster. Villages will be losing houses on whether their management cards offer enough cumulative protection against the disaster that hit and its strength. The game consists of 5 rounds, after which the points are counted based on the number of houses and coins left.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Associated Programme on Flood Management
DHI Group
Global Water Partnership
Integrated Drought Management Programme
International Water Management Institute
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
World Meteorological Organization
speaker



session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Summary
Appropriate big data and AI are pivotal to quantifying planetary boundaries for water and building trust in local communities. This session highlights the integration of AI, digital tools, and community-based insights for science-based decision-making. We will envision digital innovations blending technology with local knowledge, enhancing decision-making transparency with ethical dimensions.
Session Description
The escalating frequency and intensity of hydro-meteorological hazards highlight the critical need for innovative water resource management, learning from community-based practices, and emphasizing ecosystem security from a watershed perspective. Breaking the trust deficit "deadlock" necessitates science-based decision-making in policies and investments considering the next generation's peace, substantiated by data and accountability. The Asia-Pacific region’s decision-makers and practitioners are well-positioned to embrace Big Data and AI to enable the digitalization of traditional-community-based knowledge. Addressing challenges from water quantity stress to quality issues, data and disclosure enable decision-making, incentivize industrial supply chain transformation, and empower the public to demand change, take water-friendly actions, and participate in decision-making. This session assembles leading innovators in digital and AI solutions, aiming to: Foster collective understanding and support for integrating digital solutions to leapfrog conventional approaches and solutions and explore the inclusion of digitalized community-based knowledge Inspire collaborative efforts integrating technological advancements with local cultural insights for sustainable water and ecosystem management Showcase evidence-based practices and intellectual developments shaping strategies for unraveling sectoral nexus challenges through digital infrastructure Deep dive into how digital capacity-building tools and infrastructure can facilitate well-informed decisions by governments, private sectors, and civil societies
Programme
11:00 Session Introduction
Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, Asia-Pacific Water Forum (APWF) Secretariat, Japan Water Forum
11:02 Presentation1: UN-HABITAT
Echoes of Innovation: Synergizing Digital Technologies & Community Voices for Resilient Water and Ecosystem Security
Dr. Avi Sarkar, Regional Advisor - South-East Asia, UBS, Head of Office, Lao PDR UN-HABITAT
11:12 Presentation 2: JICA
Dr. Takahiro Otsuka, Deputy Director of water resources team 2, Global environment department, JICA
11:22 Presentation 3:IWMI
Dr. Giriraj Amarnath, Principal Researcher – Disaster Risk Management and Climate Resilience, IWMI
11:32 Presentation 4: ADB
Using Natural Capital Assessments & Accounting to Improve Water Management Resilience
Mr. Qingfeng Zhang, Senior Director, Agriculture, Food, Nature, and Rural Development Sector Office, ADB
11:42 Presentation 5: UNESCO
- Dr. Shahbaz Khan, Director of the UNESCO Office in Beijing and UNESCO Representative to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Japan, Mongolia, People’s Republic of China, and the Republic of Korea
11:52 Panel Discussion, including interaction with the audience
Moderators
Dr. Ai Sugiura, Programme Specialist for Natural Sciences of UNESCO Beijing Office
Ms. Yumiko Asayama, APWF Secretariat
Panelists: The above presenters
12:27 Wrap Up
Dr. Ai Sugiura, Programme Specialist for Natural Sciences of UNESCO Beijing Office
Files
Convenors
- Asia-Pacific Water Forum
- International Water Management Institute
- UNESCO Regional Office in Beijing
- Japan International Cooperation Agency
- UN-HABITAT
- Asian Development Bank
speaker





session_host


Moderator


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Institute for International Economic Studies
The Institute for Fiscal Studies
UVA Batten School
speaker











Moderator


session_host



Summary
The Water Access Acceleration Fund is an impact fund investing equity in drinking water businesses targeting BOP. We often hear that these business models cannot scale and break even. The purpose of our panel is to kill this prejudice and show real examples shared by entrepreneurs from the Global South.
Session Description
One of the biggest issues related to access to drinking water for BOP in the Global South is the supply side's financially sustainability. A common belief is that private sector players cannot become profitable . As a water specialized impact investor, W2AF works with water businesses around the world. After 2 years of operations, we want to share examples of businesses which do break even, scale and thrive. What are their secrets? How can these examples inspire other entrepreneurs who are tackling the same issues somewhere else in the world? Each speaker has been chosen because they are an expert in this field and/or is an entrepreneur actually implementing the "secret" shared. Our secrets will include; i) use of non traditional revenue streams (carbon credit, impact linked schemes) until you break even; ii) cross sell products, segment your clientele according to purchasing power and cross-subsidize; iii) involve local communities and last mile operators with decent financial incentives and respect; iv) understand what it takes to scale; v) never a down moment, the importance of brand trust and water quality; vi) conducive regulatory environments for private players to thrive.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Danone Communities
Incofin Investment Management
Norfund
Platform Impact
Rite Water India
Spouts of Water
Spouts Water Rwanda-Uganda
speaker





session_host

Summary
This session will focus on the opportunities and challenges to strengthen regional coordination for effective transboundary water management in Latin America and the Caribbean. Experts will explore strategies and methodologies including stakeholder engagement, behavioral change, and participatory modeling for sustainable water resources management
Session Description
This session will focus on the opportunities and challenges to strengthen regional coordination for effective transboundary water management in LAC. It will highlight novel initiatives, strategies and methodologies that contribute to effective implementation of priority actions in shared water resource planning and management. The session will explore i) positive examples of behavioral change and collaboration for effective integrated water management; ii) targets for efficient water allocation objectives to attend cross-border and cross-sector competitive demands.
The event will provide an opportunity for practitioners and decision-makers engaged in transboundary water management to discuss : i) how planning and implementation allows for a genuinely transboundary approach to be achieved by addressing the major basin issues for resilient and sustainable shared water resources (i.e. participatory upstream cross-sector planning for water-energy-food- environmental security); and ii) the importance of stakeholder and social participation processes and inclusion of gender and indigenous dimensions for successful transboundary basin development.
Programme
Opening Remarks by Tomás Serebrisky, Manager, Infrastructure and Energy, IDB
Ministerial Conversation
- Moderated by Tomás Serebrisky
- Carlos Estevez, Ministry of Public Works, Chile
Methodologies and Strategies for Planning and Management of Shared Water Resources
- “Local actor participation in transboundary waters: Colombia-Ecuador Case", Yina Pantoja, UNDP
- “Building models for the management of water resources with multisectoral participation", Enrique Triana, Director, Integrated Water Resources Management, RTI
- “Focus on social art for behavior change", Tania Vachon, One Drop Foundation
Files
Convenors
Inter-American Development Bank
One Drop Foundation
RTI International
United Nations Development Programme
speaker





session_host



Moderator

Summary
The Community Support Program’s novel Public-Public Partnership agreement is a sustainable, participatory solution to fund the operations of wastewater treatment facilities despite Lebanon’s protracted multi-crises and hyper-inflation. Insights offer a path toward effective, long-term revenue collection when prolonged fragility results in significantly reduced capacities and resources of governing bodies.
Session Description
This session presents the unique Public-Public Partnership agreement developed in Lebanon to finance wastewater treatment by bridging the boundary between two public sector bodies. In the wake of what the World Bank describes as one of the “most severe crises episodes globally since the mid-nineteenth century” — the Community Support Program worked to address the rapidly accelerating sanitation crisis caused by defaulted wastewater facilities. The session focuses on achievements and lessons learned in crisis management and strengthening wastewater infrastructure governance and sustainability through donor-funded capital development blended with local revenue generation. The key was to ensure wastewater treatment facilities once again had viable revenue generation for operations and maintenance cost recovery. A novel Public-Public Partnership agreement between Bekaa Water Establishment and the municipalities’ union delegates tariff collection for over 27,000 customers to the municipalities, providing progressively higher collection fees to the municipalities based on the percentage of collected tariffs while still accommodating customers' hardships. The program leveraged municipalities' intimate knowledge of local constituents and built in continuous re-evaluation of tariff rates to allow customers to cope with hyper-inflation. This partnership is providing sustainable funding for wastewater treatment plant operations while building a dynamic, participatory approach to water sector governance.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Chemonics International
USAID
session_host



speaker

Moderator

Summary
Achieving peace through initiatives in water for food and nutrition require actions by multiple actors, sectors and disciplines. This session presents frameworks and tools to coordinate initiatives across communities, private entities, global and local organizations, and public agencies, addressing the complexity of water for food in fragile areas.
Session Description
Water, food and nutrition security are interlinked with peace and stability in complex ways. Managing this complexity – particularly in fragile areas affected by conflict, degraded ecosystems, climate change, hunger and poverty – requires intentional, coordinated efforts. The use of systematic frameworks, monitoring tools, and decision-support systems for water and food offer entry points to address this complexity. This session will share approaches to policy development, investments and implementation that can help to de-risk public and private investments in water for food. Ultimately, multiple actors, sectors and disciplines, at different scales, must be brought together to contribute to peace through water for food initiatives.
Programme
Welcome and introduction (Patricia Mejias Moreno, FAO)
Speakers:
Global Dialogue on Water Tenure (Benjamin Kiersch, ScaleWat project, Project Manager FAO)
Trade-offs between nutrition and irrigation sustainability in the Global South (Marc F. Muller, Swiss Federal Institute for Aquatic Science and Technology)
The role of international agricultural research in securing water for food in fragile contexts (Claudia Ringler, International Food Policy Research Institute)
Private sector investment: Tools & approaches in fragile water and food contexts (Richard Colback, IFC)
Roundtable workshop: What knowledge and evidence are needed to support the use of effective frameworks and tools? What approaches are needed to address the multi-disciplinarity of water for food and livelihoods (income) in fragile or conflict-affected areas?
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
International Finance Corporation-The World Bank Group (IFC-WB)
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), CGIAR
Catholic Relief Services (CRF)
session_host



speaker





Moderator



Summary
We propose to re-define failure in water and climate projects, transforming it into a learning opportunity. By making failure an option, we encourage collaboration, overcome challenges, and move forward on the global water pledges. Failure should no longer be treated as shameful; instead it is something to be openly discussed.
Session Description
The session aims at reshaping the discourse around failure and catalyzing change in water and climate projects. The session will be an encouraging, open, and empathetic conversation, where people - the researchers, practitioners, advocates – can reflect on the complexities of water and climate projects. The conversation on failures provides a platform for sharing experiences, challenges, and insights in navigating setbacks and shortcomings in water sustainability endeavors. The conversation promotes accountability, and continuous learning in the water and climate sector. It also inspires reimagining and co-enacting more inclusive, equitable, and just ways of managing water. The session invites water and climate professionals to engage in an open dialogue, exploring the nuances of failure and its implications for sustainable development. Through interactive discussions and case studies, participants will have the opportunity to reflect on their own experiences and unlearn-and-relearn about knowing and managing water. By embracing failure as a viable option, participants will learn that success can take multiple forms and routes, and gain inspiration from each other.
Programme
11:00 to 11:05: Welcome and setting the stage: Shahnoor Hasan, Deltares
11:05 to 11:25: Learning from failures
Peter Letitre, Deltares
Sundus Al-Ogaidi, IHE Delft
John Matthews, AGWA
Sareen Malik, ANEW
12:05 to 12:25: Fishbowl discussion
12:25 to 12:30: Wrap-up: Reflection and way forward
Files
Convenors
Deltares
Alliance for Global Water Adaptation (AGWA)
African Civil Society Network on Water and Sanitation (ANEW)
speaker




session_host

Summary
Liquid I.V.’s Confluence program accelerates water access solutions through collective action. This panel will explore the impact of this collaborative model and discuss the benefits of leveraging resources, expertise, and perspectives across organizations.
Session Description
Liquid I.V. is committed to expanding access to clean and abundant water. Over the next three years, our ambition is to help ensure access to clean water for 2 million people around the world. To advance our vision for global water security, we partner with leading water, humanitarian, and community-based organizations to advance innovative solutions that help communities protect their water and their future. Confluence is Liquid I.V.’s signature program, designed to help cross-pollinate the most effective and innovative solutions by sparking collaboration and providing catalytic funding towards our aligned water access and protection work. Confluence is the embodiment of our belief in the power of collective action and cooperation. In this session, we will discuss the potential of collective action and the impact of collaborative grants with two of our partners, DigDeep and The Center for Water Security and Cooperation.
Programme
Files
Convenors
DigDeep
Liquid I.V.
The Center for Water Security and Cooperation
session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Colombia Ministry of Environment
Mekong River Commission
Office of the National Water Resources, Thailand
SEI Asia in Thailand
SEI Headquarters in Sweden
SEI Latin America in Colombia
Stockholm Environment Institute
Summary
This session will focus on a case study of the application of the City Water Resilience Approach in Lagos State, which brought together stakeholders from the community to state government level to develop a vision of a resilient water future for the state and developed a state-wide water partnership.
Session Description
This session will provide context for Lagos, focusing on the key stakeholders involved in Lagos’ water environment, spotlighting the public and private sectors, and the communities affected by water insecurity. This will share insights into shocks and stresses, examining their impact on social economy and the environment. This will also explore how water scarcity and insecurity have contributed to conflicts and civil unrest such as the 2016 water privatisation protests. The session will then go on to showcase the CWRA process in the state through: Stakeholder-led mapping of the water systems using OurWater; Stakeholder-centric city assessment and profiling. Visioning future interventions with all hands-on deck. Current status of interventions and implementation. Following this, the session will explore the outputs of the CWRA process: the development of a City Characterisation Report, Resilience Profile, and the creation of the Lagos Water Partnership. This will focus on how this work has tried to eliminate siloed efforts to creating water resilience and involved grassroot organisations. Finally, the session will look at how the Lagos Water Partnership (LWP) will play a pivotal role in stabilizing water-related policies and foster collaboration and coordination among stakeholders, fostering a more resilient water system.
Programme
12:00-12:10 | Introduction to CWRA | Kunle Adebajo
12:10-12:20 | Baselining city resilience | Nimot Muili
12:20-12:30 | Creating a vision for Lagos' water systems | Omobolanle Magbagbeola
12:30-12:40 | What comes next? A Lagos Water Partnership | Philip Obosi
12:40-12:55 | Panel discussion | Moderated by Kirsten Smith
12:55-13:00 | Close and reflections | Martin Shouler
Files
Convenors
Arup
Resilient Water Accelerator
session_host



speaker






Summary
This session walks attendees through Water and Energy for Food’s new water accounting tools, helping them understand opportunities for the tools’ use when making climate-related funding decisions and helps water-energy-food nexus public and private sector actors understand the need for caution when scaling innovations.
Session Description
By 2050, food production must increase by 60% to feed the predicted population, requiring farmers to implement new innovations. Technologies like solar-powered irrigation help boost farmers’ crop productivity, but, without proper monitoring, it can result in negative impacts on future water availability. With over half of the world’s population living in international water basins, businesses, and governments and investors who fund their growth, must be aware of risks related to water security. At the 2023 UN Water Conference, the Water and Energy for Food announced its commitment to develop water accounting tools that could be used to improve sustainable water management. This session will showcase the developed tools. Attendees will explore the tools developed for select water basins as well as engage staff in conversation about the tool’s usage and what should be considered when designing their own tools. By creating these tools and integrating their usage into agriculture, public and private sector actors can build bridges to connect their work to ecosystem protection and water security. These tools can also open communication channels between the private sector and farmers, as they can help inform better siting of technologies and encourage capacity building for better water and agricultural management practices.
Programme
Files
To view the Zambezi Basin Water Accounting Tool click here
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation
Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
USAID
Water and Energy for Food
speaker






session_host


Moderator

Summary
Transformative workshop focusing on systems strengthening, intergenerational and multi-stakeholder collaboration for collective impact, addressing Indigenous water challenges. Engage with inspiring Indigenous youth from Canada & allies, gain insights into water cooperation and power of art for water security. Interconnect these elements through interactive learning, fostering a dynamic participatory and experience.
Session Description
Join us for an immersive workshop and delve into the significance of systems strengthening through intergenerational and multi-stakeholder partnerships for collective impact. Participants will actively engage with inspiring Indigenous youth from the Indigenous Youth, Art and Water Initiative (IYAWI), gaining valuable insights into the pivotal role of water cooperation and art as a powerful intervention tool in securing clean water for all living beings.
Highlights:
- Systems Strengthening: Explore the importance of holistic systems strengthening to address water-related challenges faced by Indigenous communities, with emphasis on sustainable solutions and collective impact.
- Intergenerational and Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships: Discover the power of collaboration across generations and sectors, fostering a deeper understanding of the interconnectedness required for effective water stewardship.
- Indigenous Youth Perspectives: Hear firsthand from dynamic Indigenous youth of the IYAWI project, as they share their experiences and perspectives on water cooperation and the power of art.
- Art - a Powerful Intervention Tool: Uncover the unique approach of social art for impact, witnessing how creativity can inspire positive change and elevate the importance of water protection.
- Interactive Learning: Engage in hands-on, experiential activities and discussions, encouraging active participation reinforcing the workshop's key concepts and promote a dynamic learning environment through social art and storytelling.
Programme
- Cultural Opening and Acknowledgement
- Panel presentation addressing the question of "What does Indigenous Water Allyship mean to you?"
- Youth led social art workshops, enriching the collective understanding of water cooperation
- Summary and close
Files
Convenors
- Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER)
- Keurig - Dr Pepper Canada
- One Drop Foundation
- Indigenous Water Allyship
- Waterways Collective
- Caldwell First Nation
- Indigenous Youth and Elders Council
- Blackfoot Youth Water Council - Indigenous Youth Lead, Waterlution
Moderator

session_host

speaker






Summary
Through technical and social innovations, CBRD (Community-Based Rainwater for Drinking) can significantly enhance climate resilience for drinking water supply in rural and underserved areas of developing countries. This will be demonstrated with successful examples and government initiatives in the Pacific Islands and Mekong countries.
Session Description
People in rural and underserved areas of the Pacific Islands and Mekong countries are facing increasing water shortages exacerbated by climate change. While various water supply options exist, their high costs and need for expert implementation limit their effectiveness. Utilizing the principles of E. Ostrom's "Governing the Commons," which emphasizes community involvement, can ensure sustainability and affordability. Communities, including schools and healthcare centers, play a crucial role in this approach.
Given the abundant rainfall and traditional rainwater harvesting practices in these regions, rainwater harvesting emerges as a suitable solution. Technical innovations like the multiple barrier concept, nature-based solutions, and designs incorporating mass balance modeling can tackle challenges such as maintaining water quality and addressing shortages during the dry season.
Central to the sustainability of school-based CBRD systems is the active participation of students. By involving them in engaging and enjoyable activities, we can ensure the longevity of these systems. Moreover, students can become advocates, educating their peers, parents, and the broader community about the benefits of rainwater harvesting. The Rain School Initiative, a proposal for the UN 2023 Water Action Agenda, has garnered support from numerous countries at the governmental level, a testament to its potential in addressing water challenges.
Programme
The 60-minute session will be a comprehensive event featuring an introduction, session speakers, and a discussion. This session will serve as a platform to showcase the technical and social innovations in CBRD and announce the Rain School Initiative. The Mekong Institute's experience promoting Rain Schools across the five Mekong countries proves CBRD's success. High-level government officials from Cambodia, Tonga, and the Solomon Islands will present the initiative's motivations and objectives. Cambodia's ambitious plan to build 1,000 Rain Schools using innovative legal and financial strategies will be highlighted. The session will also include interviews with students, providing firsthand accounts of the initiative's behavioral changes and impacts. The discussion will be enriched by insights from a former WHO expert and ambassador, who will share their vision and strategies for spreading this idea to other countries. The detailed schedule is shown in the link below (in the files)
Convenors
Climate Resilence
Community-Based Rainwater for Drinking (CBRD)
Rainwater Harvesting
Pacific Island Countries
Mekong Countries
session_host


speaker







Summary
What is the journey of social innovators investing in WASH SMEs in the Global South? Follow the story of those who are juggling the risks, navigating through imperfect ecosystems and bullet proofing new strategies to structuring investments for impactful, sustainable financing for SDG6.
Session Description
In an intimate conversation, a catalyzer, an entrepreneur in India, and an asset manager tell us about their quest.
What is like to build an Impact Investment Fund for WASH in developing markets – like the Take-a-Stake Initiative? What differences make culture and business mindset? What opportunities can offer local incentives to investors coming in? and How prepared and supportive are the local economy infrastructures in achieving sustainable finance of WASH?
A world with secure and sustainable access to WASH services for all requires mobilizing diverse yet interdependent stakeholders. Through these testimonies, this talk show offers access to the personal journey of those proposing a way forward. Their efforts navigating through imperfect ecosystems; their learnings and insights on structuring investments to provide sustainable financing for SMEs in WASH; and their vision towards the future.
We hope that listening their stories, you also "Take-a-Stake" and join the quest to mobilize sustainable financing to achieve SDG6.
Programme
Join us for an insightful journey into the world of sustainable investments in WASH, where pioneering leaders like Namita Banka, Sylvia Giezeman, and Kajetan Hetzer will share their unique perspectives on scaling impactful solutions.
Meet the speakers:
Namita Banka is the Founder and Managing Director of Banka BioLoo Limited, a pioneering social impact enterprise in India that provides sustainable sanitation solutions. With over a decade of experience in the WASH sector, Namita has transformed her company into a leader in innovative sanitation technologies, earning numerous accolades for her contributions to social entrepreneurship and environmental sustainability.
Sylvia Giezeman is a seasoned portfolio manager at Cardano Group, where she leads the development of blended finance structures in the WASH sector. With a strong background in impact investing and development economics, Sylvia is instrumental in managing the Financial Inclusion Fund and shaping Cardano’s strategy towards sustainable and scalable investments in developing markets.
Kajetan Hetzer is the Executive Director of WASTE, an organization committed to sustainable development through innovative financing and capacity building in the WASH and waste sectors. Kajetan is a driving force behind the Take-a-Stake Fund initiative, which focuses on bridging the 'missing middle' by investing in SMEs that are too large for microfinance but too small or risky for commercial investors.
Files
speaker




session_host

Summary
A highlight of World Water Week, the Young Water Professionals’ debate is a lively dialect between our enthusiastic future leaders and recognized senior experts. The debate is a bridge between generational borders, and through it we will bring the WWW theme to life!
Session Description
Investment into water resilience is often predicated by a disaster event or major shock. Is conflict a necessity for water security & resilience?
This debate seeks to explore the critical relationship between conflict and water security. Significant investments in water infrastructure and resilience frequently follow catastrophic events, such as natural disasters or severe droughts. The central question is whether conflict, in its various forms, is an essential catalyst for achieving long-term water security and resilience.
Chaired again by Dr Mark Fletcher, Arup’s Global Water Director, we will hear arguments for and against the motion from mixed debate teams of young professionals and senior experts. This debate will be an engaging, safe space to explore this topic. With plenty of opportunity for audience questioning and rebuttal, this debate will also be highly interactive. At the end of the session, the winning debating team will be crowned – those who have managed to sway the most votes. But the true winners will be the audience who have a front-row seat in the exploration of this complex topic.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arup
Onewater
Stockholm International Water Institute
speaker





session_host

Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
speaker



Moderator


session_host

Summary
Water security and access is increasingly relevant in the context of climate change and conflict escalation. Gender Equality and Social Inclusion approaches in WASH programming can diffuse community tensions and reduce conflict via (in)formal governance pathways. Shared experience and tools will demonstrate how climate-resilient GESI WASH can facilitate social cohesion.
Session Description
Gender Equality and Social Inclusion (GESI) and participation approaches are essential for ensuring access to water is available to all. As global challenges such as climate change increasingly threaten resource access, GESI and community approaches become more important. This is particularly true with water, where uncertainties caused by scarcity, pollution, overuse and climate change have considerable knock-on effects for water access. Vulnerable groups such as women, girls, and people with disabilities experience greater difficulties when access to resources is threatened. A holistic, GESI approach towards resource access is necessary to not only include vulnerable groups, but also to reduce tension and prevent potential resource conflict. Formal and informal governance structures play a vital role in ensuring resource access remains available to all. Plan has found that applying the GESI approach to WASH programming not only results in equitable, community-led solutions, but also has positive implications for social cohesion. This session will present how GESI WASH programming on three continents and in different contexts (humanitarian, development and nexus) use governance pathways to facilitate equitable resource access and reduce tensions at community and even regional levels. It also invites audience engagement to facilitate learnings from various sectors.
Programme
In this session, you will explore unique water-related conflict mitigation approaches in Indonesia, Somalia and Ethiopia through specific case studies. What approaches, tools, considerations does Plan International apply in these contexts to promote social inclusion, gender quality, community participation, sustainable change? How are these effective to contribute to conflict prevention/mitigation? How do your experiences compare with the approaches of Plan International? As water-related crises continue in scope and intensity – can we expect these approaches to remain effective in the near future?
- From Indonesia we will learn how a water Resources Management Forum can encourage participation, inclusion and peace between communities that use the same water source, thus preventing potential conflicts;
- From Indonesia we will travel to Somalia’s recent flood response and learn about the practicality of applying of gender and social inclusiveness - and conflict-sensitivity approaches (as prioritized in line with humanitarian principles) in a very acute context. What was intended by these approaches, and did they reach their goals in practice?
- Lastly, we will visit the Ethiopian context where - due to heightened climate-induced fragility -water scarcity has proven to be a key driver of conflict. And learn how WASH initiatives play a significant role in tackling the root causes of conflict, improving governance, building trust between impacted parties and institutions, and establishing channels for communication and conflict resolution.
After exploring the local context in each of these three countries, a guided discussion will allow us to identify other good practices and lessons learned from the expertise within the audience. What can Plan International learn from you? Perhaps there are sustained assumptions at play, or perhaps there are gaps in our responses. What does the future hold for collective development and humanitarian responses toward water-related crises? Let’s discuss and learn from each other!
Files
Convenors
Plan International Indonesia:
Silvia Devina
Novika Noerdiyanti
Plan International Ethiopia: Melaku Taffesse
Plan International Somalia: Ali Hassan
Plan International Netherlands, Margot Bolwerk
session_host


speaker




Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Moderator

speaker





session_host

Summary
In our interactive session, PADF will share our experience on resolving water conflicts, specifically focusing on our community-driven approach near the Haiti-Dominican Republic border. We'll discuss our experience and ignite conversations on best practices, aiming to bring sustainable solutions to escalating tensions over water scarcity.
Session Description
Our interactive session will begin by showcasing PADF's impactful project in Northeastern Haiti, highlighting our approach to community-driven development and participatory planning. By leading a series of inclusive community consultations, the project helped the community to identify shared priorities. The project supported these priorities by providing grants, technical assistance, and rehabilitating irrigation canals, thus resulting in improved water management and conflict mitigation. This led to increased water availability for over 2,000 people and enhanced agricultural productivity across 200 hectares, promoting food security. The project established committees for maintenance, decreasing conflicts over water resources, fostering peace and social cohesion. Our interactive segment will have participants role-play diverse stakeholders in a community experiencing conflict over water, encouraging deeper reflection on the importance of including all voices in decision-making. Through this exercise, participants will explore various sources of conflict and identify potential solutions, creating a deeper understanding of the complexities surrounding water management and conflict resolution. To close, our facilitators will share experiences from additional PADF programs that address conflict through community planning and local governance strengthening, and how we have successfully replicated this methodology across LAC. Participants will be invited to share their own best practices, bringing enriching discussions on inclusive decision-making.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Force Organisée er Inclusive
Institut National des Ressources Hydriques
Maribaroux Entreprise de Services Agricoles
The Government of Taiwan
The Ministry of Environment
University of Haiti Limonade
USAID
speaker






session_host



Summary
This session will showcase best practices and innovative approaches in water resources monitoring and
assessment to ensure water security for all within safe and just earth system boundaries for freshwater.
The session will give water professionals new tools, skills and strategies for water resources monitoring
that consider also social justice aspects.
Session Description
To operate within the safe and just Earth System Boundaries, we need to know where, how much and in what quality freshwater resources exist. This is where water resources monitoring and assessment become crucial elements for a water-secure future. This event is dedicated to showcasing best practices and innovative approaches in monitoring and assessing water resources, including cutting-edge technologies such as machine learning and geospatial information. Moreover, the session will explore the integration of social justice considerations into monitoring practices, and the importance of open and findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) data along with open-access platforms for universal sharing. Participants will be given hands-on experience to deepen their understanding of the latest developments in water resources monitoring and assessment tools, as well as insights on the social considerations for equitable management of water resources. In this session, the SIWI Gold Standard will be adhered to by integrating interactive elements and including diverse speakers concerning gender, geography, and age.
Programme
- Welcome and Introduction by Henk Ovink
- Interactive quiz on the topic by Maria Kosonen (5 minutes)
- Keynote speech by Kaveh Madani, director, UNU-INWEH (8 minutes)
- Findings from the State of the Water Resources Report by Stefan Uhlenbrook, WMO (8 minutes)
- Fair water footprints towards a just, resilient and sustainable future by Nick Hepworth, Water Witness International (5 minutes)
- Innovative solution on water resources monitoring tools and techniques, including the added value of innovative approaches by Louise Croneborg-Jones (5 minutes)
- Live hands-on demonstration and exercise (30 minutes)
- Panel Discussion (fireside chat, moderated by Nof Afghani) (15 minutes)
- Q&A (15 minutes)
- Session 2 summary and brief intro of session 3.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
Earth Commission
session_host




speaker




Summary
Earth observation technology can be used for building global water-resilient food value chains and mitigating (local) water withdrawals impacting water-stressed basins, fields and commodities. These shared watersheds are crucial for water quantity, quality and access and underline the need to break silo's of water authorities, businesses & local communities.
Session Description
This panel discussion will feature water and agriculture leaders from Coca-Cola Europacific Partners, The World Bank, FAO, Water Envoy of the Netherlands, the Director of the Tensift Basin Authority (Morocco), CEO Water Mandate and a regenerative farmer from South Africa.
The agenda of the session will be as follows:
1) Setting the scene with our keynote speaker Meike van Ginneken Special Envoy for Water of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
2) Panelist discussion related to various strategic insights, experiences, and focus areas.
3) Open the floor for audience questions to the panelists along with an interactive poll.
Programme
Panel discussion on various ‘water’ topics like:
- The importance of (satellite) technology to increase global insights & transparency,
- Collaboration between public and private sector.
- Climate resilience initiatives in the food value chain and data-driven (MRV) financing,
- Specific importance of regenerative agriculture and irrigation strategy towards resilience.
Files
Convenors
eLeaf
European Space Agency
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
International Water Management Institute
Government of the Netherlands
The CEO Water Mandate
World Bank Group
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners
Tensift Basin Authority (Morocco)
session_host

Moderator

speaker








Summary
This presentation will focus on how corporations, NGOs, investors, and other are working together to make sure that water sustainability keeps up with other progress on corporate sustainability goals.
Session Description
Corporations are making commitments to be "water positive" or "water neutral" and have different standards and terms of commitment. The Business of Water Stewardship, the CEO Water Mandate, Ceres, and corporations are building a bridge from these commitments to collective action goals that can allow the whole to be much greater than the sum of its parts. However, it will take leadership and collaboration among many who may be competitors in the business world. This presentation will focus on how and why corporations and partners must set aside the need for competitive advantages in order to increase the likelihood of success at achieving water sustainability in regions and globally.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Bonneville Environmental Foundation
Ceres
Microsoft
Procter and Gamble Company
Walton Family Foundation
speaker



session_host

Moderator
Summary
2. The workshop will provide participants from Africa with hands-on experience on the use of next-generation data and innovation tools (Earth Observation-based datasets, and open data cubes) generated by IWMI and Digital Earth Africa for improving water management. It will also be used to get end-user feedback and explore partnership opportunities.
Session Description
Water management challenges: In Africa, cooperation on river basin management is critically constrained by the lack of data, poor data quality, and restricted sharing. The spatial coverages and density of hydro-meteorological data collection networks are declining. Earth Observation offers an excellent opportunity to fill data gaps at affordable costs across scales. However, due to a lack of capacity and awareness, the use of Earth Observation data in water management in Africa remains a challenge. The innovation: IWMI has developed cloud-based frameworks that use Earth Observation and generated water data products and tools for Africa that greatly improve water management decisions. The datasets and tools will be made available to users in Africa over the Digital Earth Africa platform. Selected datasets are available through the ESRI AfricaGeoportal (https://iwmi.africageoportal.com/) The session provides hands-on experience on the datasets, tools, and cloud-based frameworks generated by IWMI to participants from African River Basin Organizations and national agencies across Africa. Participants will generate information on water availability, assess water uses for various purposes, and learn how to generate water scarcity hotspots. Participants will also learn how to interpret the data and information and discuss it with other participants, provide feedback on future areas of improvement.
Programme
1:00 – 1:10: Introduction to the IWMI’s Digital Innovations for Water Secure Africa; Abdulkarim Seid
1:10 – 1:20: Production of Water Data Products using earth observation and data innovation technologies; Naga Velpuri
1:20 – 1:30: Converting water data products into decision support tools: Illustration from DIWASA; Mulugeta Tadesse
1:30 – 1:40: Production of Digital Twin for Limpopo River Basin for transboundary water management; Marie-Angel Garcia
1:40 – 1:50: Stakeholder Engagement Activities for capacity building and training; Alemseged
1:50 – 2:00:Q and A; Moderator: Abdulkarim Seid
Files
Convenors
Digital Earth Africa
International Water Management Institute
session_host

speaker






Summary
This session explores how integrated water solutions benefit ecosystems, food security, and livelihoods. Panelists discuss engaging stakeholders, implementing science-policy-finance models, and overcoming challenges in cross-sectoral water management. Experts from diverse backgrounds aim to inspire collaborative action, bridging policy and practice.
Session Description
In this session of the seminar series, titled "Water for All: Integrating Collaborative Water Solutions into Broader Systems Change," experts and practitioners will delve into the integration of water solutions into broader systems, focusing on opportunities that enhance water resilience, security, and sustainability. The session will also explore how such integration can benefit other aspects such as ecosystem health, food security, and livelihoods.
Building on examples from previous sessions within this seminar series, the discussion will explore how cross-sectoral solutions can lead to positive outcomes for both people and nature, prioritizing the well-being of local communities while safeguarding ecosystems. The session will cover integrated science, policy, and finance models, as well as dialogues or programs that support efficient and equitable water management from local to national levels. It will aim to balance diverse stakeholder needs with environmental sustainability.
Programme
0 – 6 mins: Welcome and setting the scene
7 – 15 mins: Keynote
16 – 60 mins: Panel Discussion
61 – 85 mins: Q&A
86 – 90 mins: Closing Remarks
Moderator
Vanessa Puig-Williams, Director, Climate Resilient Water Systems, Environmental Defense Fund
Keynote
Nikki Tulley, Navajo Nation and Ph.D. student in the Department of Environmental Science with a concentration in Hydroscience & Trainee at the Indigenous Resiliency Center, University of Arizona
Panelists
Dwane Roth, Fourth generation Kansas farmer, agriculturist and water conservationist, Front Porch Farms
Vivek Singh Grewal: Senior Manager, Technical Consulting and Applied Research at Well Labs India
Elena Rodo: Graduate in Biological Sciences in the Department of Integrated Environmental Assessment Uruguay
Keatlegile Mnguni, Youth Desk Chair, African Farmers Association of South Africa
Closing Remarks
Summary of the three session: Veena Srinivasan, Executive Director, WELL Labs. Par Larshans, Chief Sustainability Officer, Ragn-Sells and Riccardo Zennaro, Project Management Officer, United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)
Vanessa Puig-Williams, Director at EDF
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Water Environment Land Livelihoods (WELL) Labs
Water Europe
Ragn-Sells
Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)
session_host






speaker





Summary
Building on the 2023 UNICEF shark tank at SWWW we are back for another round, this time focusing on innovation relevant for fragile contexts. The situation in our fictitious city of Lodah is changing and we will discuss the value of innovation for addressing systemic WASH issues in fragile contexts.
Session Description
The session is an interactive gameshow to profile innovations relevant for fragile contexts and the ecosystem within which innovation can scale. We will begin with an introduction to the session and its approach with an overview to investing in WASH innovation and how to drive it to address SDG 6 in fragile contexts (10 mins) We will introduce the fictitious City of Lodah and how it struggles with WASH challenges due to ongoing fragility in the area. They are looking to do things differently to address these systemic issues and leverage non-traditional actors (10 Mins). The 4 sharks will be introduced representing: an international development bank, National government, a local entrepreneur and a large impact investment group. They will respond to four pitches. Each project will have five minutes to pitch their innovation, the sharks will respond if they want to invest. The audience will also have an opportunity to invest (45 minutes). Following this the Director of WASH from UNICEF will facilitate a discussion with the sharks about their rationale for investment and their drivers to solve WASH challenges in fragile contexts, the audience will also be given the opportunity to contribute (20 minutes)
Programme
Files
Convenors
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Denmark
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
speaker







Moderator

session_host
Summary
Transboundary water cooperation is a powerful instrument for sustainable development, working through River Basin Organizations and similar regional organizations. Thereby, innovative financing mechanisms are promising tools to increase countries’ benefits through cooperative engagements and risk reduction. What role can new financing and risk reduction mechanisms play in promoting TBW cooperation?
Session Description
For creating a world free of poverty on a livable planet, it is crucial to effectively develop, manage, and share water at local, national, and international scales. Cooperative transboundary water management is an important regional public good that is vital for regional climate resilience and conflict prevention. However, it may require different financing approaches – and sometimes subsidies – that recognize and address the challenges brought about by investing in transboundary water management. These challenges can include asymmetries in e.g. information or capacity and risks for both countries and financiers. Despite the recognized leverage of transboundary cooperation in achieving development goals and addressing climate change, financing and other risk reduction instruments in the management of shared water resources are undersupplied.
The objective of this session is to explore what innovative financing and are developed and used in transboundary waters, what mechanisms exist in other sectors that could be used to advance transboundary cooperation, while identifying gaps. We will explore opportunities to increase financial flows from the private/public sectors, and international/domestic sources, while reducing risks to investors and countries themselves. Discussions will revolve around novel approaches or new applications of bonds, guarantees, water funds, and more.
Programme
Opening Remarks by Janine Kuriger, Head of Section, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Setting the Scene by Susanne Schmeier, Head of the Water Governance Department at IHE Delft, International Waters Panel Member of the Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of GEF
Case Study: The Gambia River Basin Organization by Abdoulaye Kourou Diallo, Director of Studies for Regional Infrastructure Planning, OMVG
Ignite Talks
- Blue Peace Financing Initiative by Thierno Diallo, Lead Investment Advisor, UNCDF
- Private Sector and TBW by Christopher Flensborg, Head of Sustainable Products and Product Development, SEB
- Water Funds by Phera Ramoeli, Executive Secretary, OKACOM
- The Water Convention & Examples by Sonja Koeppel, Secretary, Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes, UNECE
Q&A moderated by Anders Jagerskog, CIWA Program Manager and Focal Point for Transboundary Water Cooperation, World Bank
Closing Remarks by Rochi Khemka, Senior Private Sector Specialist, World Bank
Files
Convenors
- Global Environment Facility
- Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken
- Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
- United Nations Capital Development Fund
- United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
- World Bank Group
speaker






Moderator

session_host


Summary
This session will present lessons learned from practitioners working on different approaches to addressing water and sanitation initiatives in communities with challenging physical environments. The session will draw from different activities designed and implemented in Cambodia. Panel participants will address their approaches to increasing water and sanitation services in areas with frequent flooding, rocky soil, and in floating communities.
Session Description
Despite the impressive gains in access to safe water and sanitation services around the world, many communities are left behind due to geographic or topographic conditions that are unsuitable for traditional sanitation technologies and approaches. Water and sanitation campaigns and programs often bypass these communities as implementers struggle to find appropriate solutions. Furthermore, many communities will need to find new water and sanitation solutions as current practices become unsustainable due to the impacts of climate change, including the increased variability in rain, flooding, and droughts.
Come to this session to learn about how practitioners and researchers have developed and implemented different activities and programs to reach these overlooked communities. This session will feature speakers presenting on-going work in rural Cambodia. The panelists will share their successes and failures in adapting and implementing a social and behavior change campaign targeted to people in these communities, in identifying and scaling up local innovations, in transferring technology from other regions of the world, and in developing targeted policies to support these communities. We look forward to a frank discussion as we share lessons learned and engage in an open conversation on a path forward and the challenges ahead.
Programme
Files
Convenors
USAID/Cambodia Integrated Early Childhood Development (IECD) Activity, RTI International, 17 Triggers, Engineers without Borders Australia, Wetland Works, USAID
speaker




session_host

Moderator

Summary
Girls’ education is critical to a thriving, peaceful and sustainable world. Access to services at school during menstruation can strongly impact a girl’s education. We present the JMP global update on WASH in schools with a focus on menstrual health, and examples of policy and programming to improve girls’ experiences.
Session Description
Girls’ education is a foundation for gender equality, critical to a thriving, peaceful and sustainable world. Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), in addition to other elements related to menstrual health, are necessary for a girl’s quality, non-discriminatory education and have been linked to improved educational outcomes for girls. Thus, menstrual health and WASH in schools promote education, equity, development, and well-being for girls and their families, helping achieve SDGs 4, 5, and 6. This session focuses on the current state of WASH and menstrual health in schools and how monitoring and programming can be further improved. We will present the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (JMP) global update on WASH in schools with a special focus on menstrual health. Interactive discussion will then focus on an LSHTM global review of WASH in schools, lessons from the Global MHH Monitoring Group’s initiative to strengthen national monitoring of girls’ menstrual health and promote uptake of priority indicators in ten countries in collaboration with UNICEF, and an in-depth programme evaluation by Splash. Examples will demonstrate how menstrual health and WASH in Schools bridge borders across different countries, sectors and organizational types, including government, NGOs, and research
Programme
11:00- 11:05 Welcome / Overview Belinda Abraham (GIZ)
11:05-11:10 Scene setting (2-3 min) BMZ
11:10-11:25 Global progress update on WASH in schools with a special focus on menstrual health Rick Johnston (JMP)
11:25-11:30 Panel introduction Moderator: Maria (UNICEF)
11:30-11:40 LSHTM global review of WASH in schools impacts in LMICs Robert (LSHTM)
11:40-11:50 Lessons from the Global MHH Monitoring Group’s initiative to strengthen national monitoring of girls’ menstrual health Bethany (Emory)
11:50-12:00 Swiss water and sanitation consortium adoption of global priority indicators for girls’ menstrual health Rahel (Swiss Water and Sanitation Consortium)
12:00-12:10 In-depth evaluation of Splash programme in Ethiopia Megan (Splash)
12:10-12:25 Panel discussion - audience Q&A Moderator: Maria (UNICEF)
12:25-12:30 Wrap-up and call for action Belinda (GIZ)
Files
JMP 2024 report on WASH in schools: special focus on menstrual health. UNICEF and WHO, 2024.
https://washdata.org/reports/jmp-2024-wash-schools
Priority list of indicators for girls’ menstrual health and hygiene: technical guidance for national monitoring. (2022). Global MHH Monitoring Group. Columbia University. New York.
https://www.publichealth.columbia.edu/file/8002/download?token=AViwoc5e
Convenors
Burnett Institute
Columbia University
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
Emory University
Global MHH Monitoring Group
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
LSTM
Save the Children
Splash
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
WASH in Schools Network
WaterAid
WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (JMP)
World Health Organization
speaker





Moderator

session_host

Summary
Armed conflicts can severely hinder access to safe WASH services through direct and indirect impacts on crucial water resources, interconnected WASH infrastructure, and essential personnel. This disruption extends to access to other basic services, collectively diminishing both water security and human security.
Session Description
Water is an indispensable element for human survival and welfare, serving vital functions such as facilitating basic sanitation, disease prevention, and sustaining ecosystems and economies. Amidst the armed conflict, prioritizing effective water resource management and ensuring timely, affordable WASH services are pivotal for fostering peace and security. Achieving success in this endeavour necessitates coordinated efforts among humanitarian actors, stakeholders, and governments to bolster organizational, technical, and financial capacities for WASH services.
Water and water-related challenges can lead to disagreements, conflicts and insecurity. The reasons for this are inequalities in accessing safe and sustainable water, which are also reinforced by poor water management, including inadequate governing institutions, the lack of technical capacity, and corruption. However, they are often combined with various political, socioeconomic, institutional, climatic, and cultural factors.
This session will demonstrate the importance of proper and sustainable water governance in the context of conflicts along with the case studies. Participants will also share effective approaches to prevent and resolve water-related conflicts with case study examples.
Programme
Agenda:
0-5 mins - Opening of Seminar and Session - Dhesigen Naidoo, ISS Africa
5-15 mins - Keynote presentation - Barbara Schreiner, Water Integrity Network Germany
15-33 mins - Panel:
Fonteh Akum, ISS Africa (Moderator)
Akica Bahri, Ministry of Agriculture, Water Resources and Fisheries
Kgaugelo Mkumbeni, ISS Africa
Julia McQuaid, CNA
33-45 mins - Q&A session
45-54 mins - Panel conclusion
54-60 mins - Closing of session - Dhesigen Naidoo, ISS Africa
Desired impact and session outcomes:
-
Increase awareness of the importance of proper and wise water resource management and water infrastructure in the context of armed conflict, and demonstrate approaches and case studies.
-
Illustrate current examples of water-related conflicts, the reasons that can cause water-related conflicts, and approaches that helped to resolve them.
-
Share best practices for the prevention of water-related conflicts, and investment in sustainable water management taking into account accessibility, inclusion, and equality.
-
Champion the nexus between water, peace, and security, advocating for policies and initiatives that promote peace and stability.
Desired impact:
Facilitate the enhancement of partnerships and collaboration aimed at bolstering support for nations grappling with armed conflicts, particularly in the realms of water, peace, and security. Engage with the audience to explore proposed strategies and pathways for progress.
Enhance understanding among key stakeholders—governments, policymakers, and water resource/infrastructure managers—regarding the criticality of investing in sustainable water management. Emphasize the significance of prioritizing accessibility, inclusivity, and equality as integral components in mitigating water-related conflicts effectively.
Main SDG targets that we are hoping to meet: SDG16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions; SDG6 Clean Water and Sanitation; SDG10 Reduced Inequalities; SDG3 Good Health and Well-being; SDG2 Zero Hunger; SDG17 Partnerships for the Goals.
Learning outcomes:
Familiarity with recommended strategies for water management in nations experiencing ongoing armed conflicts is essential for delivering timely and affordable WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) services, thereby contributing to peace and security.
Comprehending the nature of water-related conflicts, their underlying causes, potential triggers, resolution methods, and preventive measures is crucial for addressing such conflicts effectively and proactively.
Skills, knowledge, or information
-
Specifics of water management in the ongoing armed conflicts, ways for successful provision of WASH services to the population, including IDPs and host communities.
-
Increase understanding of how water challenges may escalate into water-related conflicts, and familiarize with case studies.
-
Knowledge of approaches for the prevention of water-related conflicts, based on case studies.
-
Importance of strengthening partnerships and cooperation for water, peace and security.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Geneva Water Hub
ISS Africa
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
session_host



speaker




Moderator: Nancy Eslick, Global Water Coordinator, USAID
Welcome to the session (5 mins): Julien Favier, Associate Environmental Affairs Officer, UNECE
Presentation of the EU Water Framework Directive (5 mins): Veronica Manfredi, Director for Zero Pollution and Green Cities, Directorate-General for Environment (DG ENV), European Commission
Panel Discussion 1: Peace and conflict (27 mins): Exchange on characteristics that make institutions, particularly basin organizations, “agents for peace.”
Panelists include:
- Ms. Maria Apostolova, Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO)
- Ms. Ana Jeleapov, Chair of the Working Group on Planning and Management, Dniester Commission (Moldova)
- Mr. Phera Ramoeli (virtual), Executive Secretary, Okavango River Basin Water Commission (OKACOM) – online panelist
- Mr. Vitaliy Zhuk, Head of the Division on Protection and Reproduction of Water Resources and Marine Ecosystems of the Department of Balanced Management of Use of Natural Resources of the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Natural Resources of Ukraine, Dniester Commission (Ukraine) – online panelist
Panel Discussion 2: Financing and structure (24 mins): “Ingredients for a successful institution: structure, accountability, and finance.”
Panelists include:
- Dr. Sharon Megdal, Director, Water Resources Research Center, University of Arizona
- Dr. Anders Jagerskog, Programme Manager, Cooperation in International Waters in Africa (CIWA) Trust Fund, World Bank
- Walter Chinangwa, Country Lead, Malawi, Water Witness International
Q&A (10 mins): Moderated by Nancy Eslick (USAID)
Summary and reflections (9mins): Nancy Eslick (USAID) and Akil Crichlow (SPC + Commonwealth Secretariat): The political balancing act of water as one of many competing priorities in a larger sociopolitical context.
Closing (5 mins): Fanny-Tsilla Koninckx, France MFA and Seminar Co-Convener
speaker









session_host








Moderator

Summary
This session focuses on existing legal and technical tools to reduce the social and humanitarian impacts of armed conflicts on water. The reduction of such impacts is necessary to ensure the protection of life and human dignity of civilians.
Session Description
Sparing water from armed conflicts and ensuring access to water is a matter of survival in conflict zones. Safeguarding the well-being of population in fragile and conflict-affected situations entails preserving freshwater resources, protecting water and water-related infrastructure, and ensuring the continuity of essential services.
The impact of armed conflict on freshwater, water-related installations and other essential services is severe and long-lasting, and poses grave humanitarian, development and environmental challenges. Freshwater is often heavily polluted by military operations or activities carried out by non-state armed actors or criminal groups. When armed conflict moves into urban areas, it exposes interconnected civilian infrastructure to damage or destruction, in particular when explosive weapons with a wide impact area are used, and disrupts the provision of essential services. The reverberating effects of attacks on or damages to water-related installations lead to contamination, spread of deadly infectious diseases, malnutrition, and other environmental hazards that disproportionately affect vulnerable groups.
This session focuses on the reduction and mitigation of civilian harm through the protection of water and water-related installations from the consequences of armed conflicts. To that end, it aims at disseminating the legal knowledge on international humanitarian law and human rights law and the technical expertise on the reverberating impacts.
Programme
Agenda:
0-5 mins - Seminar topic and recap session 1 - Matus Samel, Economist
5-10 mins - Introduction to session 2 - Caroline Pellaton, Geneva Water Hub
10-30 mins - Panel 1: Social and humanitarian impacts through the lens of field and research experience
Stefan Döring, Uppsala University - War’s impact on health
Peter Gleick, Pacific Institute - Water as a weapon/casualty of War: The water-related implications of the Russia-Ukraine war
Hina Derabe Maobe, UNICEF CAR - Fragility of water access in CAR’s armed conflict zones (UNICEF)
Jean Lapegue, Action against Hunger - The protection of civilians in armed conflicts and the WASH Roadmap Initiative
30-50 mins - Panel 2: How can Policy and Decision makers better address the social and humanitarian impacts of the destruction of water in armed conflicts?
Christian Frutiger, Swiss Confederation - The 75th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions and the protection of water
Mark Zeitoun, Genewa Water Hub - Social and humanitarian impact / long term consequences of Reverberating impact on water/ the need for a Global Alliance
Tanja Miškova, Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs - Insights on the Alliance to spare water from armed conflicts /synergies with Wash Road Map
50-70 mins - Q&A/ Discussion
70-90 mins - Closing of session - Caroline Pellaton, Geneva Water Hub
Desired impact and session outcomes:
Provide a better understanding of the direct, indirect and reverberating impacts of attacks on or damages to water-related installations and contributes towards strengthening the protection of civilians.
Identify good practices, lessons learned, as well as possible new / better standards of protection of water in armed conflicts contributing to enhance the protection of civilians..
Present the relevance of new initiatives including the Declaration on Explosive Weapons in Populated Areas (EWIPA) and the Global Alliance to Spare Water from Armed Conflicts.
Harness expertise from the development and humanitarian sectors to identify preventive action to reduce or mitigate civilian harm from armed conflicts.
Desired impact:
The speakers and audience will exchange on the possible mechanisms for ensuring monitoring and accountability, and find new ways to increase the cooperation between militaries, political leaders, humanitarian, development and peace organizations. The session will contribute to the understanding of how the disruptions to freshwater and water services affect livelihoods, food security, human security, and health is crucial, especially in protracted crises and urban warfare. For these reasons, the session will focus on SDGs 2, 3, 6, 11, 13 and 16.
The intended audience includes state and civil society representatives, international organizations, military personnel, and academia.
After the session, the audience is encouraged to continue the discussion, considering how to better implement and enforce international humanitarian law (IHL) through effective monitoring and accountability mechanisms.
Skills and knowledge what you can get:
Provide an analysis of the challenges on the application and interpretation of IHL instruments during an armed conflict and what should be done to strengthen the implementation of IHL.
Reflect on the long-term consequences for the population, caused by the pollution and the destruction of and damage to water and water related infrastructure.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Geneva Water Hub
ISS Africa
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
session_host




speaker







Summary
West Africa is at a turning point between high population demand for development and severe risks of increased insecurity and interstate tensions. Emerging stakes on shared water resources should guide discussions on water diplomacy strategic role for productive uses, job creation and peace consolidation around the principle of shared benefits.
Session Description
The session will address transboundary basin politics in West Africa, first by highlighting the key lessons learnt from basin organisations history both on conflicts and best practises. Secondly, by proposing a collective reflexion on emerging stakes on shared water resources and on how to reinforce cooperation in the region at a time when interstate tensions are hampering peaceful development. West Africa has a record of transboundary basin organizations that mutualised state strategic interests in various water productive usages. Over half a century of practises enabled to draw numerous lessons, such as the importance of distinguishing between water uses conflicts and territorial disputes on borders defined by international rivers, the importance to set water allocation tools not only between states and users but also among sectors, the valuation of ecosystem services in human activities, etc. The principle of sharing benefits is the cornerstone that enabled mutualizing investments between states on shared infrastructures while proving to be instrumental to de-escalate tensions when they arose between state members of basin organisations. This principle should be further explored and improved in the face of current and future challenges, such as surface and groundwater conjunctive management, and local transboundary cooperation as tool against local fragilities.
Programme
Welcome Remarks:
- Laura Turley, Geneva Water Hub
- Niokhor Ndour, Pôle Eau Dakar
Introduction on emerging stakes on management of shared waters in Africa,
- Marie-Jeanne Senghor, Pôle Eau Dakar
Moderated Discussion with Practitioners :
- Abdoulaye Doumbia, Mano River Union
- Yacine Sanou, Eau Vive Internationale
- Prof. Alix Servais Afouda, LARES Bénin
Audience Q&A with Speakers and Panelists
Concluding Remarks:
Armel Gilles Mewouth Thang, IUCN
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Mots d'ouverture :
- Laura Turley, Geneva Water Hub
- Niokhor Ndour, Pôle Eau Dakar
Introduction sur les enjeux émergents de la gestion des eaux partagées en Afrique,
- Marie-Jeanne Senghor, Pôle Eau Dakar
Discussion modérée avec des praticiens :
- Abdoulaye Doumbia, Union du Fleuve Mano
- Yacine Sanou, Eau Vive Internationale
- Alix Servais Afouda, LARES Bénin
Questions et réponses du public avec les orateurs et les panélistes
Remarques finales :
- Armel Gilles Mewouth Thang, UICN
Files
Convenors
Geneva Water Hub
International Union for Conservation of Nature
Pôle Eau Dakar
speaker







session_host

Summary
The session puts focus on innovative and context-specific water cooperation solutions to shared water problems across sectors, stakeholders and scales. The session highlights water cooperation challenges, status, trends and innovations of river basins and countries around the world. It addresses water cooperation gaps and opportunities globally.
Session Description
The session makes analysis and assessment of status and trends of water cooperation at different scales and varying contexts. It aims to draw policy and practice lessons on what makes cooperation work. Based on insights from various research experiences – such as assessing water cooperation preparedness, sharing of water benefits and water diplomacy - the session promotes contextualized water cooperation solutions and innovations to national and international decision-makers and water managers. The discussion of the session aims to seek solutions to three main water cooperation questions:
1) What are the key factors of water cooperation opportunities, risks and challenges? For example, governance, leadership, data and information and financing contribute to water cooperation, but are some of them more important than others?
2) What motivates and incentivizes various actors’, leading to their positions, opinions, and actions (or inaction) on water.
3) How is cooperation organized and implemented? Cooperation can be through formal or informal arrangements from local to transboundary scales. It can be codified in policy and law or part of customary rights to water and land.
Programme
11:00 – 11:05 – Opening of session by Dr. Håkan Tropp, Acting Chief Operating Officer, SIWI / Director of ICWC;
11:05 – 11:25 Presentation: Water Cooperation Global Outlook Report, Dr. Håkan Tropp, Acting Chief Operating Officer, SIWI / Director of ICWC;
11:25 – 11:40 Presentation of other ICWC initiatives:
- Foster enhanced water cooperation in the Shabelle-Juba basin by strengthening knowledge and data sharing at all levels of government, by Anna Tengberg, Senior Advisor, SIWI.
- International water cooperation and the human right to water realization in Northern West Sahara Aquifer System, by Moez Allaoui, Senior Manager, SIWI.
- Indigenous Territories Contribution to Atmospheric Moisture Flows, by David Hebart-Coleman, Senior Program Manager, SIWI, and Caterina Vanelli, Researcher at Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK).
11:40 - 12:25 – Moderated roundtable discussion by Dr. Håkan Tropp, Acting Chief Operating Officer, SIWI / Director of ICWC
Roundtable Participants:
- Milena Angelova, Rapporteur for the EESC's opinion on Water Politics: Empowering Youth, Women, and Indigenous and Local Communities.
- Elin Adolfsson, Junior Policy Analyst at the Global Commission on the Economics of Water Secretariat.
- Callist Tindimugaya, Commissioner for Water Resources Planning and Regulation, Ministry of Water and Environment, Uganda.
- Comfort Molosiwa, Executive secretary, Orange – Senqu River Commission (ORASECOM).
12:25 – 12:30 Closing of session: Dr. Håkan Tropp, Acting Chief Operating Officer, SIWI / Director of ICWC
Files
Convenors
Government of Sweden | Government of the Netherlands | International Centre for Water Cooperation | Stockholm International Water Institute, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization | Uppsala University
Moderator

session_host

speaker








Summary
In Ethiopia’s vast lowland regions that cover two thirds of the country’s land mass, primarily along its borders with Somalia, Kenya, and Sudan, pastoralist communities must increasingly manage conflicts that have emerged due to competition for access to scarce pasture and water resources, and that are exacerbated by climate change impacts. Water conflicts are often linked with among others land use issues, disputed boundaries, poorly prepared water supply development projects, degradation of natural resources, and evolving state policies. The pastoral resource use pattern is characterized by risk-spreading and flexible mechanisms while livestock, rangeland, and water resources management are core components of the customary institutional system. Conflicts over access to water and productive land are thus becoming more intense with changing pastoralist practices. How can we mitigate the drivers of these conflicts and better understand stakeholder relationships and the management of natural resources due to changing local conditions?
Session Description
To begin to address the intensifying conflicts in Ethiopia's lowland regions, this session will reflect on how these conflicts surface, which stakeholders have influence to better manage conflicts, and what are possible approaches to mitigate conflicts. The session will also highlight findings from the development of a Water Conflict Mitigation Strategy in the lowlands under the Climate Resilient WASH Activity funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and find opportunities to incorporate learnings from discussions into the final Strategy. The session seeks active audience engagement to hear more about applied mitigation methods and lessons that can enrich how mitigation can be scaled.
Programme
Welcoming Remarks (5 min) - USAID
Session Introduction (3 min) - RTI
Source of Water Conflict: Findings from Recent Study in Afar, Oromia and South Ethiopia (10 min) – RTI
Lessons and Experiences in Water Conflict Management in Afar (7 min) – Friendship Support Association/FSA (Afar, Ethiopia)
Strengthening Climate Resilience and Water Conflict Management in Ethiopia’s Pastoral and Agro-pastoral Areas (10 min) - International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI, Ethiopia)
Panel Discussion and Interactive Audience Q&A (20 min) - Rural Agency for Community Development and Assistance/RACIDA, ILRI, RTI, Ethiopia Ministry of Water and Energy, Friendship Support Association/FSA
Session Closing (5 min) - USAID
Files
Convenors
United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
RTI International (RTI)
Rural Agency for Community Development and Assistance/RACIDA (Ethiopia)
Moderator

session_host

speaker





Summary
Pollution discharged to rivers and streams is not just an ecological problem, but a public health issue. And these pollution incidents are happening more often due to climate change and urbanization. This session will show how we can use digital models to prevent pollution and protect water quality.
Session Description
Regulation such as the EU Water Framework Directive has produced good improvements to our rivers and streams but there is more work to be done. Significant water pollution incidents still happen everywhere. More frequent and intense rainfall is overloading our wastewater systems. Increased urbanization means more contaminants from runoff. But things are changing for the better thanks to public pressure. For example, in the EU, the Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive is undergoing the first revision in almost 30 years with more stringent rules for water quality. Although the message from government tends to be that change takes money and time, as engineers we can start now. We have the digital tools to create integrated catchment models to improve the water management for flood, sewer, and drainage networks and to prevent pollution. Improving the water quality in our rivers, streams and seas makes sense for both our health and the health of the environment. In this session, we will demonstrate how models can be used to plan, predict and prevent wastewater pollution.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Autodesk
speaker



Moderator

Summary
Urban water resilience is interdependent with regional peace security and social justice. This session demonstrates these interlinkages and presents several insights from African contexts that attempt to improve peace, inclusivity and resilience outcomes, mainly through multilevel and multistakeholder governance approaches.
Session Description
In a time of poly-crises, it has become clear that lack of access to water resources and sanitation services is a key catalyst of unrest, conflict and exclusion. Because urban water schemes are often dependent on catchment systems that stretch beyond their administrative borders, urban water resilience is dependent on transboundary governance, and is linked to peace and security at both the city, utility, and regional scales.
A peace, security and inclusivity lens on urban water raises critical questions around governance, such as the ethics of water use by different sector needs, equitable distribution of water and sanitation services, with particular attention to vulnerable groups, urban-rural competition for water, and the financial responsibilities associated with nurturing healthy catchments that protect urban supplies. The regional or catchment connection has received little attention in policy discourses surrounding urban water resilience.
The objective of this participatory learning session is to demonstrate connections between urban water resilience — particularly access to water and sanitation — and regional peace, security and inclusivity in African contexts. The session explores with the participants how multi-stakeholder collaboration & multilevel governance, incorporating broad catchment stakeholders, can contribute to regional security through sustainable and resilient urban water and sanitation systems.
Programme
- Welcome and introduction to session approach and objectives: Anton Earle (Global Coordinator: Water Systems, ICLEI)
- “Community Stories of Change” — Introductory videos from local community representatives: Eden Takele (Engagement & Communications Specialist, WRI Ross Center for Sustainable Cities)
- Audience Mentimeter prompt: Anton Earle
- Four short stories of urban water resilience experiences in Africa:
- Multi-stakeholder urban water resilience planning processes: Louise Ellis (Associate Director: Water Advisory & Asset Management, Arup)
- Linking urban water resilience to regional peace and security: Audrey Legat (Senior Advisor: Water Governance, Deltares and Water, Peace & Security Partnership)
- Ensuring inclusivity in multi-level planning processes as a conflict mitigation tool: Hellen Wanjohi-Opil (Climate & Engagement Lead: Cities – Africa, WRI and Climate Champions Team)
- Water utilities in a changing environment — key interfaces with other stakeholders: Åsa Jonsson (Head, Global Water Operators' Partnerships Alliance)
- Facilitated discussion amongst panellists and the audience: Anton Earle
- Conclusion by keynote listeners:
- August Abdon Kinglo (University of Montpellier)
- TBC
- Closing: Anton Earle
Files
Convenors
Antea Group
Arup
Climate Champions Team
Deltares
ICLEI — Local Governments for Sustainability
Resilient Cities Network
World Resources Institute
Moderator

speaker





Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
speaker


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
This session will focus on understanding the impact of urban sanitation systems on climate change. It will explore new tools for quantifying this impact, discuss opportunities for using such tools in development projects, and examine funding sources for climate resilient sanitation.
Session Description
Urban sanitation systems – both onsite/fecal sludge management and sewers/wastewater management – contribute to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, both directly through breakdown of excreta discharged into the environment or during treatment processes, and indirectly through the energy required for the different waste transportation and treatment steps along the sanitation service chain. The range of mitigation and adaptation available and under development tools related to climate resilient urban sanitation systems indicate the importance of this emerging area of concern in the sector.
Programme
· Welcome and Opening Remarks – Sanyu Lutalo, Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist, The World Bank.
· Speakers
o GHG Baseline sanitation emissions in Lake Victoria basin riparian countries – Ruth Kennedy Walker, Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist, Water Global Practice
o ClimateFIRST: Design features for resilient sanitation technologies – Jeremy Kohlitz, University of Technology, Sydney
o Tools for Climate in WASH Projects – Sean Nelson, Climate Change Specialist, The World Bank
· Remarks from Discussant - José Gesti, Senior Adviser, Climate Action, Sanitation and Water for All
Panel Discussion - Moderator – Nishtha Mehta, Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist, The World Bank
Q&A
Take-Aways and Wrap Up - Sanyu Lutalo
Files
Convenors
World Bank Group
University of Technology, Sydney
session_host

Moderator

speaker


Summary
Unifying Waters: The Role of Diverse RBOs in Fostering Cooperation and Shared Prosperity
Session Description
This session will delve into the critical role of organizations, institutions, and river basin organizations in fostering peace and cooperation in water management in very many diverse ways. It will examine the contributions of such organizations in fostering cooperation and early warning systems for potential disputes. Participants will examine governance challenges, funding constraints, and political dynamics these entities face, while also exploring successful strategies through case studies. The session will highlight tools and mechanisms for enhancing cooperation, such as data sharing platforms, conflict resolution techniques, and capacity-building initiatives, culminating in recommendations for improving organizational effectiveness in sustainable water management.
Key topics to be discussed during this session include:
- Roles and Challenges of Water Management Organizations: Governance issues, funding constraints, and political dynamics.
- Successful Strategies and Case Studies: Effective approaches employed by organizations to address water-related challenges.
- Cooperation Tools and Mechanisms: Data sharing platforms, conflict resolution methods, and capacity-building initiatives.
Programme
- Welcome and Opening by Yogita Mumssen, Global Practice Manager, World Bank Water
- Keynote scene-setting by Ciarán Ó Cuinn, Center Director, MEDRC
- Moderated panel discussion followed by Q&A with key experts:
- Alejandro Iza, Head of the Environmental Law Programme, IUCN Bridge
- Audrey Legat, Senior Advisor on Water Governance, and International Water Cooperation, Deltares
- Edith Paredes, Administrative Director, Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO)
- Kim Vercruysse, Advisor, Join For Water
- Louise Ellis, Associate Director Water, Arup
- Nandita Singh, Associate Professor Water Management, Södertörn University
- Key Take-Aways and Closing by Fabrice Fretz, Deputy Head Water Section, Thematic Cooperation, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)
Files
Convenors
- ACTO
- Deltares
- IDB
- MEDRC
- SDC
- World Bank
session_host










speaker






Moderator

Summary
This Talkshow will showcase how different sectors of society are increasing engagement in nature-based solutions (NbS) to contribute to multiple global goals. Collaborators will share examples of impacts on water security, climate mitigation and adaptation, biodiversity and socio-economics to demonstrate how NbS can contribute to a peaceful and sustainable future.
Session Description
Companies and water utilities often focus on water-related impacts when considering solutions to invest in, with volumetric benefits (the quantity of water affected) and improved water quality often being key drivers of intervention selection. When companies and partners support the implementation of nature-based solutions (NbS), however, reports will often note additional and diverse impacts via anecdotal evidence. Therefore, NbS are seen to have potential to deliver on multiple global and corporate goals (e.g., SDGs, Global Biodiversity Framework), connect communities and diverse sectors, and help contribute to peace and security. Addressing complex watershed health challenges requires an equally comprehensive solution model that puts nature at the center. This panel will build upon and challenge the common approach to singular-focused programs designed to improve watershed health, stormwater, and wastewater challenges, discussing the importance of thinking beyond water quantity, but also considering water quality, biodiversity, climate, and socioeconomic impacts. Sharing both well-developed and still nascent examples of NbS programs, the panel will demonstrate what is possible and what challenges remain. The panel will also examine trends in corporate uptake of NbS and provide insights on how companies and water utilities are considering NbS as potential risk mitigation strategy.
Programme
The session will begin with an introduction from the Talk Show host and then will include a conversation among the speakers before our host closes the session.
Files
Convenors
CDP Worldwide
The Nature Conservancy
Veolia
session_host

speaker



Moderator
Summary
The session highlights progress achieved in menstrual health and hygiene over the past 10 years and discusses what’s needed to create a #PeriodFriendlyWorld for everyone, contributing to gender equality and sustainable futures for women, girls, and communities.
Session Description
The WASH sector embraced menstrual health and hygiene (MHH) early on. It first emerged at the World Water Week in 2010, followed by the establishment of Menstrual Hygiene Day and the #MHMin10 initiative in 2014.
Since then, MHH has come a long way in creating awareness, establishing programming across sectors, collating data, and driving policy change.
The session highlights progress achieved in menstrual health and hygiene over the past 10 years. It will discuss what's needed in the years to come to create a period-friendly world, that contributes to gender equality and creates a sustainable future for women, girls and the communities.
The session will:
1. Present progress in MHH on global, regional and country levels and in humanitarian settings. Presenters will elaborate on good practices that strengthen the enabling environment and leverage government leadership.
2. Highlight the investment case, through, e.g. the MHH Funding Tracker and studies on the return on investment, and discuss funding pathways for MHH by, e.g. looking at market-based approaches and financing models.
3. Discuss key challenges as well as opportunities for MHH in the next 10 years.
Programme
Opening
Part 1: Presentations on progress in menstrual health & hygiene
- Progress in West Africa and Ghana, WaterAid Ghana
- Progress in South East Asia, WaterAid Australia
- Progress in MHH in humanitarian settings, AfriPads
Part 2: Panel on what's needed for MHH im the next 10 years
- The World Bank
- Agence Française de Développement
- WASH United
- UNICEF
- Sanitation and Hygiene Fund
Closing
questionsTime for question & answers is included.
Files
https://www.menstrualhygieneday.org/
https://www.mhh-funding-tracker.org/
Convenors
Agence Française de Développement (AFD)
AFRIpads Ltd.
The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
WASH United
WaterAid
speaker






Moderator

session_host
Summary
With the threat of water scarcity looming, businesses are taking action to improve their water resilience. But improvements to internal processes can only go so far. We'll explore the growing shift toward collective action and how businesses, and the communities in which they operate, can best realize the shared benefits.
Session Description
Effective collaboration is critical in addressing global water challenges at scale and ensuring a water-resilient future, but how can stakeholders best work together to maximize the impact and benefits of water projects?
This interactive session will bring together experts in water strategy, technology, conservation, and finance together with a household brand name to examine how collective action is mitigating water risk in high-stressed water basins, while also generating real business and community benefits.
The virtual panel session and Q&A will focus on real collaborative initiatives taking place in high-stressed basins, particularly across Central and South America, with learnings on how to make a lasting, positive impact in other regions around the world.
The session will:
- Demonstrate how water-related risks manifests in businesses and local communities
- Inspire strategic thinking on water, highlighting the varied benefits businesses can realize by thinking 'beyond the operational fence'
- Support leaders to be more successful in implementing water strategies in partnership with relevant stakeholders
Programme
Featuring:
- Nathalie Dörfliger, Watershed Sciences & Stewardship Director, Danone
- Victoria Edwards, CEO and Co-Founder, FIDO
- Anaïs Julienne, Senior Investment Officer, Municipal and Environmental Infrastructure, International Finance Corporation (IFC)
- Alejandra López Rodríguez, Director, Water & Climate Solutions Program, The Nature Conservancy
- Ana Laura Elizondo Quintanilla, Water Security Project Manager, FEMSA Foundation
- Moderator: Bill Malarkey, Partner, Roland Berger
Files
Convenors
Roland Berger
Victoria Edwards, FIDO
Nathalie Dörfliger, Danone
Anaïs Julienne, International Finance Corporation (IFC)
Alejandra López Rodríguez, The Nature Conservancy
Ana Laura Elizondo Quintanilla, FEMSA Foundation
session_host



speaker





Moderator

Summary
This session delves into the pivotal role of businesses in advancing sustainable water management. It examines how businesses can expedite water stewardship across value chains, emphasizing collaborative solutions and business leadership. Through collective action, companies drive positive change, ensuring a sustainable future for all stakeholders.
Session Description
In today's dynamic landscape characterized by intense competition for water resources and the effects of climate change, businesses play a key role in achieving sustainable water management. By implementing sustainable water practices throughout their operations and supply chains business can ensure access and minimize environmental harm. With innovative solutions and by promoting sustainable water management beyond the business wall, companies can also contribute to positive water impact. One crucial step is collective action aimed at reducing impacts on water-stressed areas. This involves business collaborating with stakeholders across sectors and regions to exchange ideas and resources.
Additionally, businesses together with policymakers, business partners, and civil society can advocate for policy measures and sustainable water practices that safeguard water resources. By actively participating in local communities and supporting measures for the provision of water and sanitation systems, companies can make tangible contributions to sustainable management of water. This collaborative approach, transcending borders and sectors, is crucial for addressing complex water challenges and ensuring a sustainable future. In this session, we will explore how businesses can accelerate water stewardship actions within and beyond their value chains.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute
CEO Water Mandate
UN Global Compact Network Sweden
speaker


session_host


Moderator

Summary
In collaboration with Johns Hopkins University, TRANSFORM conducted systematic research and developed a WASH toolkit on practical steps that enterprises can take to influence WASH actors to adopt better sanitation practices.
In this interactive session, TRANSFORM will:
- Share practical steps from the WASH toolkit on how to assess the enterprise’s position and evaluate key WASH actors’ potential influence
- Explore how enterprises can stimulate discussion and interest in WASH products and services
- Hear first-hand from WASH enterprises on what makes a good communication strategy and why some are failing
Session Description
Behavioural change around WASH traditionally focuses on downstream audiences, but that means a huge gap in driving change upstream among other key WASH influencers. So, how can enterprises bridge that gap and communicate change more effectively?
Through a systematic research process with WASH enterprises in Ghana, the toolkit highlights practical steps that enterprises can take to influence their consumers to adopt better sanitation practices.
These include:
- Demand creation tool to assess the organization’s position on customer engagement
- Stakeholder mapping to define and understand key WASH actors
- Customer engagement activities to stimulate discussion and interest in WASH products and services
- Impact measurement tools to create KPIs and customer relationship management systems
In our session, our speakers will share research insights behind each step and a tool template that WASH enterprises can adapt to their own businesses.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication Programs
TRANSFORM
Loowatt
Drinkwell
Moderator


speaker



session_host

Summary
Building on the first, theoretical, session, the second session of the series aims to answer a key question: what does water diplomacy look like in practice?
Session Description
While continuing to address the questions outlined in the first session, Session 2 focuses on practical questions of identifying interests, managing the process, building political will and trust, addressing asymmetries, managing uncertainty and complexities, and more. Learn about the key actors and stakeholders, the tools required, and what successful outcomes look like.
Programme
The session will be broadly divided into two sections. First, practitioners from different fields will present their experiences, both grassroots and state-level actors, while highlighting the key role of third-party actors. Second, a panel discussion with diverse representatives from multiple levels will give insights into the cross-disciplinary collaboration required to conduct water diplomacy.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
EcoPeace Middle East
session_host




speaker






Summary
The USAID Rural Water Supply Activity is enhancing water infrastructure, reducing network losses, and fostering community participation for lasting impact through a novel approach to Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) that offers a promising approach to improve rural water access through decentralized management models.
Session Description
This session unveils the success of the USAID Rural Water Supply Activity in overcoming the effects of climate change on glacier melt, inefficient irrigation, exploitation of groundwater, and large network losses in drinking water supply to create healthier, more water secure communities. By protecting water resources in Tajikistan, a country uniquely critical to the central Asian region due to its abundance of source water for neighboring nations, the program improves ecosystem security to reduce transboundary tensions. Strong engagement of local communities through self-governing Consumer Advisory Boards, including women and youth, are complemented by strategic PPPs with water operators, such that institutionalization and community participation can form the basis for successful entrepreneurship. Transferring facility management from local authorities to the private sector for sustainable management under agreements, reinforced by the program’s work in policy reform, has resulted in vastly improved operator performance. This has translated directly into increased revenue and numbers of beneficiaries reached. The program’s approach offers a small-scale solution to attract private investments through community-based partnerships that improve service quality and accountability, as well as water fee collection rates for sustainable, decentralized services.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Chemonics International
The Republic of Tajikistan
Limited Liability Company "Makoni Ozod"
USAID
session_host



speaker







Summary
For many forms of infrastructure, the present-day sustainability conversation is centered on decarbonization. What does this mean in the context of green and grey stormwater infrastructure? We aim to address this question by breaking down carbon terminology and sharing actionable strategies to reduce carbon in stormwater designs and infrastructure policy.
Session Description
Sustainability in stormwater design is often discussed in terms of reducing combined sewer overflows, implementing rainwater harvesting, and restoring natural systems. In many other forms of infrastructure, such as energy and transportation, the present-day sustainability conversation is centered on decarbonization. This session aims to bridge this gap and equip designers, developers, and policymakers to better understand how to understand, quantify, and reduce carbon in stormwater infrastructure. We will start by discussing the state of the industry and defining key carbon terminology in the context of stormwater infrastructure. We will then discuss a series of key themes that can help move the water industry toward lower carbon solutions for stormwater infrastructure in the future. This session offers global and cross-disciplinary perspectives, as it will be presented by a Civil Engineer from NYC, a Biodiversity Consultant from Bogota, and a Senior Infrastructure Policy Advisor from London.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arup
speaker



Summary
This session delves into leveraging global reporting standards to hold finance and investment accountable for climate and sustainability in Asia-Pacific. It emphasizes integrating water security and ecosystem resilience into the evolving landscape, fostering accountability, interoperability, credibility, and cost-effectiveness in supply chains and infrastructure projects. Moreover, it initiates collaborative regional capacity-building efforts.
Session Description
This session explores how countries in Asia and the Pacific can capitalize on the alignment of global reporting standards that hold finance and investment accountable for climate and sustainability goals and commitments. The region stands as a global manufacturing powerhouse, offering a unique chance to actively shape the evolving landscape of finance and investment in water sustainability, encompassing supply chains and infrastructure projects. Financing water security and climate adaptation redefine financial institutions' strategic focuses. Against the backdrop of escalating insecurity challenges, the key lies in ensuring the delivery of commitments, propelling Asian and Pacific countries towards a water-secure future. A promising development arises as regulators in major economies and financial markets move towards standardizing financial and non-financial reporting and disclosure. This shared initiative holds finance and investment accountable for meeting sustainability and climate goals. Commitments extend to financial capital, performance, and outcomes resulting from investments. From the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Standards (CSRD) to ISSB’s S1 – Sustainability Reporting and S2 – Climate Reporting, and TCFD and TNFD to Water Stewardship, financiers and investors align their governance and management systems with these regulatory changes. For the Asia-Pacific region, capturing this opportunity has become imperative.
Programme
Session Introduction
Ms. Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, Asia-Pacific Water Forum (APWF) Secretariat c/o Japan Water Forum
Keynote / Presentation: Disclosure trends globally and in Asia, water issues and risks and opportunities for companies; the vital role of financial institutions.
(include video: Financial institutions and Taiwanese Semi-Conductor industry leader UMC)
Ms. Patricia Calderon, Head of Water, CDP.
Presentation - Case Study
Japan's Case:
- Mr. Hirohito Yoshida, Manager, Sustainability Services, Yachiyo Engineering Co., Ltd
Indonesia's Case :
- Gregorius Gilang S. Nugroho, Manager - Sustainability and ESG, Indonesia Global Compact Network (IGCN)
- Ms. Lely Fitriyani, Research And Development Manager, PT. Prasadha Pamunah Limbah Industri (PT. PPLl)
Panel Discussion
Onsite Moderator: Ms. Patricia Calderon, Head of Water, CDP.
Online Moderator: Ms. Yumiko Asayama, APWF/ Chief Manager, Japan Water Forum
Panelists:
- Ms. Gay Santos, Regional Director, Southeast Asia, Water.org
- Ms. Asa Knudsen Sterte, Senior Advisor, Climate and Sustainable Finance Business Development, SEB
- Mr. Hirohito Yoshida, Manager, Sustainability Services, Yachiyo Engineering
-
Gregorius Gilang S. Nugroho, Manager - Sustainability and ESG, Indonesia Global Compact Network (IGCN)
Ms. Lely Fitriyani, Research And Development Manager, PT. Prasadha Pamunah Limbah Industri (PT. PPLl)
Q&A - Interaction with the above-all speakers and audience
Conclusion and call for action
Ms. Yumiko Asayama APWF & Ms. Patricia Calderon, CDP
Files
Convenors
Asia-Pacific Water Forum
CDP Worldwide
Yachiyo Engineering Co., Ltd
Moderator

session_host


speaker






Summary
The session is about circular economy applied to water: The session will tackle the recovery of water, energy, and nutrients from wastewater, for beneficial uses by others, and other sectors, with emphasis on recycling for potable or non-potable uses, Zero Liquid Discharge if possible
Session Description
To drink, to wash, to build and to produce, we all need water: it must be protected and shared, because it is a common good. But the ecological, climatic, demographic, social and economic crisis completely calls into question the linear model: we pump, use, treat if we have time, and reject: this is no longer possible, neither technically nor ethically. Behind (almost) every wastewater discharge, there is another user or a use.
Certain geographies are hit before others: it is urgent to learn from their experience, understand the techniques that allow the waste of one to be a resource for the neighbor, and involve academic and industry experts to shed light on how to circularize water, energy, and materials.
Programme
Presentations
- Berenice Ndaitwah, WINGOC
- Heather Cooley, Pacific Institute
- Anne Le Guennec, Veolia Global TECH
- Javier Mateo Sagasta IWMI
Fishbowl conversation
Moderated by Simarpreet Khanijou, ImagineH20
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Veolia
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
GIZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
session_host




speaker




Moderator

Summary
This panel will convene the Indigenous Women’s Leadership Network (Colorado River Basin) and other Indigenous leaders from networks across North and South America, Asia, Oceania, and/or Africa to discuss the role of Indigenous women’s leadership in water challenges and share ideas on solutions.
Session Description
Indigenous communities around the world have been caretakers of the natural world since time immemorial. This relationship has shaped their worldview, spirituality, and cultural practices which are still practiced today. The impacts of climate change and its contributions to water insecurity are changing the balance of the natural world which is disproportionately affecting Indigenous communities. Within these communities, Indigenous women have served as the foundation for traditional leadership which has been eroded with colonization and governance structures. However, women continue exercising their leadership and power in their communities to restore balance and re-Indigenize conservation. The Indigenous Women’s Leadership Network (IWLN), launched by the Water & Tribes Initiative in 2022 is a leadership program that supports a group of multigenerational Indigenous women in the United States in the areas of water and natural resources environment who work on issues in the Colorado River Basin. This panel will highlight case studies of Indigenous women leaders, water policy challenges and feature women’s networks from North America, Asia, Oceania, South America, and/or Africa. The panel will discuss the role of Indigenous women’s leadership, traditional values of water in Indigenous communities, and share ideas on how women might advocate and work together to solve challenges.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Indigenous Women's Leadership Network
Water and Tribes Initiative
speaker





session_host

Moderator

Summary
This session will discuss the benefits and challenges of a “go to” knowledge sharing platform with focus on the best ways to operationalize the platform for maximizing impact in the water sector on the African continent and beyond. The session will engage the audience in a "fish bowl" set-up.
Session Description
In 2008, the African Union committed to improving water and sanitation information and knowledge management, leading AMCOW to establish a central knowledge hub. By December 2016, AMCOW's Secretariat was tasked by its Executive Committee with creating a platform for free access to water and sanitation resources. In October 2021, the Mukhtari Shehu Shagari Resource Centre was launched, housing a web-based knowledge hub and library. Recognizing the need for broader participation, the General Assembly directed the Secretariat in 2021 to forge partnerships and mobilize resources. This aims to involve member states, regional institutions, academia, and others in advancing water and sanitation initiatives in Africa. AMCOW engaged stakeholders during 2021 World Water Week (amidst COVID-19) on a session with the themed AMCOW knowledge management hub: Connecting African Water Practitioners. Its overall goal is to contribute to all water-related goals and priorities of the African Union’s Agenda 2063 for an integrated, prosperous, and peaceful Africa. The session will discuss the benefits and challenges of operationalization of a “go to” water knowledge sharing platform: The Hub of Hubs. This will present AMCOW’s efforts and way forward, including, among others, strengthening knowledge systems and partnerships at member states levels, and other partners.
Programme
9.00-9.15 Welcome & Introduction by AMCOW
9.15-9.30 Opening statements by co-conveners: Vision for Africa's knowledge-sharing hub and efforts to advance the water knowledge system.
9:30-10.05 Fish bowl conversation on knowledge management and partnership at national and regional level: Interventions by South Africa, Senegal, Congo Basin, AfDB, World Bank, CodeKraft, DHI
- National perspectives on operationalizing the hub of hubs
- Pole Eau Dakar
- Catchment Information system
- World Bank’s knowledge sharing and partnership
- Strengthening knowledge partnerships and systems at national level.
- The role of supporting the technical platform.
10.05-10.20 Session outcomes
- Opportunities and challenges in integrating knowledge systems across Africa.
- Operationalisation Roadmap: Long-term engagement strategies with member states, academia, and private sector partners
- Summary of key take aways and recommendations from the discussion
- Outline the next steps to ensure continuous engagement and operationalization of the Hub of Hubs.
10.20-10.25 Reflection on the session's impact andhow it supports the post-2025 AfricaWater Vision by AMCOW, Senegal and South Africa
10.25-10.30 Closing remarks by AMCOW TAC Chair
Files
Convenors
African Development Bank
African Ministers' Council On Water
African Water Facility
Code Kraft Technologies
Congo Basin Water Resources Research Center
DHI Group
Egypt Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation
Senegal Ministry of Water and Sanitation
South Africa Department of Water and Sanitation
World Bank
Moderator

speaker





session_host

Summary
A 60-minute online session focusing on water security cooperation in Jordan, the second most water scarce country in the world, located in the middle of a geopolitically unstable region.
The session showcases collaborative efforts implemented through short-term and long-term strategies, to achieve a sustainable water supply, ultimately improving peace, security, and economic growth.
Session Description
Presentation by representative of the Government of Jordan/ H.E. Eng. Raed Abu Soud, Minister of Water and Irrigation, on the challenges of the water sector in Jordan and the national water strategy developed to achieve water security through cooperation that advances peace and security within the Kingdom and the region, including forward-looking studies and initiatives (10 minutes)
Presentation by Ashley King, representative of USAID/Jordan on the Country Development Cooperation Strategy roadmap including partnerships on water resources management, and advancement of sustainable water security through the dynamic USAID program designed to support GOJ (5 minutes)
Presentation by representatives of USAID Building Water Infrastructure (BWI) and APSC activities, implemented by CDM Smith, a partner to USAID in Jordan since 1995, working collaboratively to improve the water sector and enhancing people’s access to better water services.
CDM Smith representatives will highlight the two largest dynamic USAID programs, implemented to address short-term and long-term countrywide challenges, related to water security in support of national and regional stability. This includes addressing a variety of unique localized challenges, as well as developing and implementing countrywide strategies aiming at facilitating local and international collaboration to develop appropriate and sustainable solutions, including resilient infrastructure, energy optimization and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. (25 minutes).
Audience engagement (15 minutes), with moderator-facilitated Q&A.
Programme
Introduction - 5 minutes
Keynote Presentations
- Ministry of Water and Irrigation/Jordan - 10 minutes
- USAID/Jordan - 5 minutes
- USAID IP/ CDM Smith - 25 minutes
Q&A - 15 minutes
Files
Convenors
Jordanian Ministry of Water and Irrigation
USAID Jordan
CDM Smith
Moderator

session_host

speaker

Summary
Join IISD's President and CEO, Patricia Fuller, formerly Canada’s Ambassador for Climate Change, and Prof. Kaveh Madani, the Director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) for a thought-provoking session on how meaningful inclusion can drive progress and create equitable, sustainable water management systems worldwide.
Session Description
With current progress on water-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) falling significantly short of targets, IISD's President and CEO, Patricia Fuller and Prof. Kaveh Madani, the Director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) will discuss the critical need for inclusive approaches in achieving global water-related goals.
Speakers will share insights into how inclusive practices vary globally, with specific examples from Canada and other global geographies. From bridging Indigenous and western knowledge systems to co-developing long-term water solutions in Canadian scientific research at the IISD Experimental Lakes Area, to an IISD-ACARE initiative, which empowers African women scientists and integrates their perspectives into efforts to coordinate efforts on large, transboundary lakes in Africa.
Participating experts will emphasize the role of agriculture as a major water sector, and advocate for the inclusion of agricultural voices in water management strategies.
The session will also explore the broader implications of inclusion for future water agendas beyond SDGs—urging local, national, and global leaders to consider these aspects as they plan for 2030 and beyond.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Institute for Sustainable Development
speaker


Moderator
Summary
Deltas bridge land, freshwater, and the ocean; successful delta management depends on these linkages. IPDC and S2S Platform join forces in a discussion on how the source-to-sea approach unlocks pathways for cooperation on climate resilience and sustainable development. This interactive workshop will discuss concrete cases from deltas around the world.
Session Description
Deltas are not disconnected ecosystems; they bridge the borders between land, freshwater and the ocean. Their successful management highly depends on managing these linkages. The IPDC and the S2S Platform join forces to launch a discussion on how the source-to-sea approach can strengthen cross-sectoral, multi-level and transboundary cooperation to unlock integrated delta management and accelerate actions towards climate resilience and sustainable development. The session brings together policymakers, experts, and practitioners to share experiences from deltas around the world and lessons learned from transboundary, multi-level and cross-sectoral dialogues. The IPDC and S2S Platform will be introduced and key questions for discussion on how these two initiatives and their approaches can strengthen and complement each other will be presented. Through interactive roundtable discussions, the key role of cooperation across land, freshwater, deltas, and the ocean in creating opportunities for collaborative climate action that benefits the environment, society and economy in deltas will be explored. The added value of the source-to-sea approach in developing integrated planning for climate action and sustainable development in deltas will be discussed. With cases from deltas around the world, participants will investigate the design of dialogues to seize opportunities for advancing water and climate action collectively.
Programme
- Welcome and opening by Harm Duel (Deltares)
- Introduction to IPDC (NL Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management)
- Experts interview by Audrey Legat (Deltares):
- Francisca Antonelli (Wetlands International)
- Alyssa Offutt (IHE Delft)
- Frank Zhang (SwAM)
- Introduction to round table discussions - Ruth Mathews (SIWI - S2S)
- Round table discussions:
- Ganges-Brahmaputra-Megna delta - Bangladesh - Shahnoor Hasan (IPDC)
- Madgalena delta - Colombia - Marta Faneca (IPDC)
- Parana delta - Argentina - Sabrina Couvin Rodriquez (IPDC)
- Drin-Bojana delta - Albania - Dimitris Faloutsos (GWP - S2S)
- Yellow river delta - China - Tom Panella (S2S)
- Pungwe-Buzi delta - Mozambique - Koen Verbist (UNESCO)
- Key finding source-to-sea approach for delta management - Ruth Mathews (SIWI - S2S)
- Follow-up actions and closing - Harm Duel (Deltares)
Convenors
Action Platform for Source to Sea Management
Deltares (S2S)
Global Water Partnership (GWP)
International Panel on Deltas and Coastal Areas (IPDC)
Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, The Netherlands
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
UNESCO Intergovernmental Hydrological Programme
speaker






session_host


Moderator

Summary
Water source protection efforts have a long history of engaging government, the private sector, and civil society in collective action to improve water security. We will explore efforts to ensure that Indigenous and community voices are at the forefront of planning, design, implementation, and governance.
Session Description
Resilient Watersheds have a long history of inspiring collective action to address water security. This work has involved partnering with government, private sector, industry associations, academics, and civil society to design and implement water fund activities. Indigenous peoples and local communities were often the targeted beneficiaries of such programs, but not necessarily the decision-makers. More recently, watershed investment programs have been intentional in involving Indigenous Peoples and local communities in Leadership positions from project inception and ideation through implementation and adaptive management. In this session, water fund managers, Indigenous Peoples, and community members will share their experiences and learnings to date. This shift has required new ways of working, the challenges of which are often shared across locations and experiences. Lessons learned include moving at the speed of trust to build new relationships, redesigning governance structures, considering the multi-faceted layers of equity, designing holistic solutions, and learning how to collaborate outside basin boundaries which seldom mirror traditional (or current) territories. The ultimate goal is for all watershed investment programs to partner and co-create projects with Indigenous Peoples and local communities, to produce more sustainable human-wellbeing and ecosystem impacts, at scale.
Programme
Opening Remarks
Elizabeth Wathuti, Founder and Chairperson, Green Generation Initiative
Welcome and Overview
Brooke Atwell, Associate Director, Resilient Watersheds, The Nature Conservancy
Experiences Engaging Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities in Nature-Based Solutions
Rio Grande Water Fund – John Waconda, New Mexico Indigenous Partnerships Program Director, The Nature Conservancy
Ghod Water Fund – community partner + Girija Godbole, Ghod River Water Fund Manager, The Nature Conservancy
Ecuador Water Funds – Ecuadorian Amazon Strategy Coordinator, The Nature Conservancy
Panel Discussion
Facilitated Q&A with Audience
Files
Convenors
Ghod Water Fund
Rio Grande Water Fund
The Nature Conservancy
session_host


Moderator

speaker


Summary
The High-Level Panel on Water’s pathway in the Global Processes is a platform for stocktake and dialogue on harnessing political momentum for collective action through ongoing water-related processes at the UN level. It highlights the importance of intersectoral cooperation and partnerships in meeting SDG 6 goals and achieving a peaceful and sustainable future.
Session Description
In its seventh edition, this High-Level Panel, co-convened by SIWI and The Government of The Netherlands will invite representatives to discuss advancements and achievements in water-related matters at the UN and global level since the UN 2023 Water Conference.
The session aims to emphasize that water management intersects with health, climate, resilience, development, and environment. It will highlight the necessity for integrated approaches involving multiple sectors working together.
The session will address opportunities arising from the implementation of the UN-wide water strategy, the UN’s Special envoy for Water and Sanitation, and water in specific UN processes like UNEA, COP for Climate Change, COP for Biodiversity, G7, and G20.
This High-level panel will address gaps within the Water Action Agenda and will be followed by a workshop to identify relevant actors’ actions towards filling those gaps. It will highlight impactful partnerships and solutions to accelerate action, showcasing successful examples and discussing roles and contributions of different stakeholders.
Respondents from alternative perspectives will inform the discussion with focuses on intergenerational working methods, indigenous and gender aspects.
The goal is to encourage multistakeholder partnerships and system change to address the lack of progress on the 2030 Agenda and to support preparations for the UN 2026 Water Conference.
Programme
Master of Ceremony: Ms. Arati Davis, Sweden-India Business Council (SIBC)
Welcome: Ms. Dani Gaillard-Picher, Head of International Processes and Policy, SIWI
Introduction: Bruce Gordon, Vice chair of UN-Water
Scene setter: H.E. Meike van Ginneken, Water Envoy for The Government of The Netherlands
Panel discussions moderated by: Ms. Maggie White, Senior Manager, International Policy and Processes, SIWI
Panel 1: Water and Health & Water for Development
Ms Veronica Manfredi, EU DG Environment, Director ENV.C - Zero pollution
Ms. Yogita Upadya Mumssen, Manager, Water Global Practice, World Bank
Ms. Cecilia Sharp, Director, Climate Resilient Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Programme Group, UNICEF
M. Andrew Roby, Senior Water Security Adviser, Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, United Kingdom
Panel 2: Water for Climate, Resilience and Environment & Water for Cooperation
H.E. Mukhtar Babayev, Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources and COP29 President-Designate, Azerbaijan
Dr. Miriam Haritz, Deputy Director General, Fundamental and International Aspects of Water Management, German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV)
H.E. Guillermo Reyes, Colombian Ambassador to Sweden
H.E. Mr. Christian Frutiger, Vice-Director General, Head Thematic Cooperation, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Panel 3: Remarks on Water Action Decade - Address the question of how do we all drive the Water Agenda together and identify next steps for Water in the Global processes and the interconnections with other processes
H.E. Minister Daler Juma Shofaqir, Minister of Energy and Water Resources, Republic of Tajikistan
Ms. Barbara Pompili, Special Envoy to the President of the French Republic for the One Water Summit
Ms. Shaima Gargash, Director of Energy & Sustainability Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, UAE
Dr. Mohamed Diatta, Sherpa in charge of the preparation and organization of the UN 2026 Water Conference on behalf of H.E. Dr Cheick Tidiane DIEYE, Minister of hydraulics and sanitation from Senegal
Reflections and Closing Remarks
Ms. Makasa Looking Horse, One Drop Ambassador and TEK Coordinator, Mohawk and Lakota from Canada
Ms. Emily Lorra Hines, Director of the Forum for Leadership on Water, (FLOW), Co-Chair of the Canadian Coalition for Healthy Waters (CCHW)
Ms. Dani Gaillard-Picher, Head of International Policy and Processes, SIWI
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The event will be followed by the launch of the Water Action Agenda Magazine in the Dutch Pavilion outside of the Centre Stage.
Coffee Break/Fika before Workshop to follow in the same room - Deep dive into the Water Action Agenda commitments and partnerships.
One Drop Ambassador and TEK Coordinator, Mohawk and Lakota from Canada
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Government of The Netherlands
speaker















Moderator


Summary
Session Description
Stockholm Junior Water Prize Royal Award Ceremony
In the presence of the patron of the Stockholm Junior Water Prize, Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Victoria, we will announce this year´s winners of Stockholm Junior Water Prize. Meet and celebrate all finalists from 34 countries together with friends of the Stockholm Water Foundation and the World Water Week.
Programme
Master of Ceremonies: Kanika Thakar
Welcome:
Olle Burell, Chairman of the Board, Stockholm Water Foundation
Dialogue on SJWP 2024
Ania Andersch, Senior Manager SJWP
Professor Lara Fowler, Chair of the international jury
Speech by Hayati Yarkadas, Sr Vice President & President Europe at SJWP Global Founding sponsor Xylem
Entertainment:
Dominique
Peoples Choice Award 2024
Presented by Ania Andersch
Diploma of Excellence 2024
Presented by Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Victoria
Motivation by Professor Lara Fowler
Stockholm Junior Water Prize 2024
Presented by Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Victoria
Motivation by Professor Lara Fowler
Dialogue with
Professor Andrea Rinaldo, SJWP jurymember and Stockholm Water Prize Laureate 2023
Dialogue with
Professor Taikan Oki, Stockholm Water Prize Laureate 2024
Entertainment:
Dominique
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker






Moderator

Summary
This workshop follows back-to-back on the High level Panel on "Water's Pathway in the Global Processes". In this workshop, we will dive into a more hands-on discussion, addressing the gaps within the Water Action Agenda (WAA) and identify what relevant actors are doing towards filling those gaps. We will also highlight impactful partnerships and solutions that can be leveraged and accelerate action.
Session Description
The workshop, as a follow up to the HLP on Water’s pathway in the Global Processes, is a space for stakeholders to come together to discuss what can be achieved collectively within each thematic area of the Interactive Dialogues. The workshop will offer a space to provide clarity on what is currently being done, showing that the WAA is not just a collection of promises but a dynamic tool to unite people around shared goals of individuals and organizations who contribute at local, national or global levels to common goals for 2026 and beyond. By facilitating partnerships and interaction between new and established initiatives, each roundtable discussion will strive to define more precisely what can be accomplished by 2026 to create tangible results and inspire more people to take action as well as dive further into how to carry out specific action and how to share responsibilities. The High-Level Panel, co-convened by SIWI and the Government of The Netherlands will invite high-level representatives from the Interactive Dialogues, the Water Action Agenda Commitments and other stakeholders and focus on Global processes and key initiatives. The workshop will focus on translating what was heard during the HLP into actions and dive deeper into existing actions and commitments and plan ahead. The workshop will take place at Center Stage in a cabaret/world cafe format organized according to the 5 interactive dialogue themes, each offering 2 tables of 8 participants each. Participants will be able to choose among tables that align with their work areas. During the workshop, they may also change tables to another ID as seen fit. Guided by a Chair connected to the initial ID of the UN 2023 Water Conference and a Rapporteur with specific expertise on the subject at hand, the participants will review existing commitments, discuss their action and find synergies as well as enablers required. The discussions will further be aided by UN DESA’s recent report on “Mapping and Progress of the UN 2023 Water Conference Water Action Agenda” providing valuable insight into the challenges, progresses achieved, and suggested pathways forward.
By combining a broad group of participants, across sectors and levels we want the participants to provide answers to the following questions:
1) What is the single most important common goal related to this theme that will make an important difference to accelerating progress and can be achieved by 2026 (or is one step in a longer-term process towards 2028, 2030, etc.)?
2) How can the goal be achieved? What steps are needed to get there? What are the elements of a road map?
3) Who can/should contribute to achieving this goal and how? What can you and your organization contribute? What are the shared responsibilities?
The goal will be to encourage a systems change for accelerating progress on water related targets in the 2030 Agenda through multi-stakeholder processes and to shift understanding on how we can work collectively to support this. In doing so, it will also contribute to further the reflections and preparations to deliver a successful UN 2026 Water Conference. The workshop will: Offer space to:
- Find solutions on how to operationalize the Water Action Agenda. How to progress on/scale/replicate your commitment?
- Provide a partnership networking opportunity where organizations can identify commonalities and synergies, explore how to partner together to bolster commitments, and provide space for potential collaboration or peer review follow-ups. They will further be able to identify who needs to be included in their action.
- Encourage the convergence of similar initiatives and/or facilitate partnerships and expert networks.
Programme
The High-level panel will address the gaps within the Water Action Agenda and the hands-on workshop will identify what relevant actors are doing towards filling those gaps.
It will also highlight impactful partnerships and solutions that can be leveraged and accelerate action. This session will showcase successful examples of and discuss the roles and contributions of different stakeholders and actors.
Respondents from alternative perspectives, will inform this discussion with focuses on intergenerational working methods, indigenous and gender aspects.
The goal will be to encourage countries, and intergovernmental processes, on the need for multistakeholder partnerships and a system change in order to address the lack in progress on the 2030 Agenda and how we work collectively to support this.
In doing so it will also contribute to further the reflections and preparations in order to deliver a successful UN 2026 Water Conference.
The goals of the workshop are to
- Provide a “Commitments” showcase where certain commitments are highlighted and discussed.
- Offer space to find solutions on how to operationalize the Water Action Agenda. How to scale/replicate your commitment? – Looking at smaller, successful commitments and how to scale and/or replicate their implementation.
- A partnership networking opportunity where organizations can explore how to partner together to bolster commitments and provide space for potential collaboration or peer review follow-ups.
- Encourage the convergence of similar initiatives and/or facilitate partnerships and expert networks
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
The Government of The Netherlands
speaker













Moderator


session_host


Summary
Achieving SDG 6 - ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all – will only happen through collaborative efforts to build a strong foundation of healthy ecosystems across countries, geographies and spatial scales. Healthy ecosystems generate services that are essential for water, energy and food security, the cornerstones of global development objectives. At the same time, activities in each of these sectors need to ensure optimal water supplies in terms of quantity and quality, which are also impacted by climate change. Ecosystem based adaptation is a critical climate response strategy that harnesses Nature-based Solutions (NbS) for restoring ecosystems to ensure adequate and predictable ecosystem services.
This session brings together key actors to explore why NbS is so important for people, nature and our climate and will examine the governance, development and finance solutions that together, make up the necessary conditions for success in building resilience.
Session Description
Resilience thinking has become the foundation for addressing the biggest development challenges of our time: providing water, energy, and food (WEF) to all, while staying within the limits of planetary boundaries that is in a climate crisis. A concurrent school of thought has led to the realisation that water, energy, and food systems are intricately linked (WEF Nexus), and should therefore be understood and managed in concert.
This session will explore how NbS can be leveraged for ecosystem resilience and, in turn, water, energy, food and climate security (WEFE Nexus 4 Climate). It will: i) highlight the centrality of leveraging NbS for resilience and water security in the WEFE nexus across scales, sectors, domains, and disciplines; ii) emphasise the centrality of cooperative governance and integrated institutions for bridging the implementation gap while guaranteeing social justice and equity, and sustainable economies (WEFE Nexus 4 Climate and Development) and iii) propose investment framework approaches for financing WEFE systems that enable climate resilience combined with positive development outcomes.
The speakers and panellists are drawn from thought leading and finance institutions well placed to discuss best practices and examples of leveraging and financing NbS to enable nexus approaches and climate resilient development outcomes. Interactive discussion with the audience will challenge current thinking and delve into the complexities of transformative approaches for NbS.
Programme
09:00 Talk show host opens
Hajar Yagkoubi
09:05 Live studio talk show with speakers
Guiding questions:
- What are NbS about and why the excitement and hype?
- What are the key enablers of NbS
- Are NbS just giving birth to a new silo, or are we onto a new normal here?
- How does NbS address the growing climate crisis and the SDGs?
- What are the optimal mechanisms for financing NbS?
- What are the key challenges for financing NbS?
Speakers: Joakim Harlin – Chief Manager, UNEP-DHI Centre, Belynda Petrie – CEO OneWorld, Diane Arjoon – Principal Rural Water Security Officer, AfDB Africa Water Facility
09:20 Q&A with live audience
09:40 Close
Convenors
OneWorld
African Development Bank
UNEP DHI Partnership – Centre on Water and Environment
speaker


session_host
Moderator
Summary
This session will present technical and social tools to monitor progress of SDG 6 and the human rights to water and sanitation, including innovations to integrate both. Participants will be able to engage and discuss how a human rights lens in WASH tools is fundamental to fostering peaceful, inclusive societies.
Session Description
This session will delve into applying frameworks and tools in WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) initiatives within the Latin American and Caribbean context. The session will present and discuss innovative approaches to integrating the Human Right to Water and Sanitation (HRWS) into WASH monitoring and decision-making processes.
The first segment will introduce the HRWS framework by ONGAWA, focusing on its decision-making applications, followed by insights from the Spanish Cooperation Agency for International Development (AECID) on a digital application developed for rural municipal authorities which aids in self-diagnosis and roadmap to HRWS fulfilment in rural WASH services. The segment concludes with SEI presenting the WASH-Flows tool to monitor WASH progress in SDG 6 at the community level, including efforts to integrate the HRWS.
For the second segment we will utilize a World Café approach to stimulate lively discussions among attendees. Participants will engage and rotate in group discussions (in Spanish and English) around the tools presented. This segment will encourage sharing experiences and insights, focusing on how the presented tools can be applied in different contexts, be effective and foster social peace.
Programme
16:00- 16:05 Welcoming and introduction
- Laura Oroz Ulibarri, Head of Cooperation with Latin America an the Caribbean, AECID
- Alberto Guijarro, Expert on knowledge and policy advocacy, ONGAWA
- Kim Andersson, Senior Expert, SEI
16:05 -16:07 Opening remarks
- Mr Pedro Arrojo-Agudo, Special Rapporteur on right to water and sanitation
16:07- 16:46 Introduction to frameworks and tools
- Alberto Guijarro: Introduction to the Human Rights Framework to Water and Sanitation
- Aurora Moreno Alcojor: Introduction to the Tool for Human Rights to Water and Sanitation in rural municipal management (AquaDHAS)
- Carla Liera and Nhilce Esquivel: Introduction to the WASH-Flows tool
16:46- 17:25 World Café session (Spanish and English)
17:25- 17:30: Session closure
Convenors
- ONGAWA Engineering for Human Development
- Spanish Cooperation Agency for International Development - AECID
- Stockholm Environment Institute - SEI
speaker




Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Change opens-up new opportunities. The world is in a different place talking about ‘global water dynamics’ then at the time SIWI started. We are halfway the Water Action Decade, we still feel the dynamics of the past UN 2023 Water Conference and are excited about the upcoming 2026 and 2028 UN conferences. The WWF in Senegal and Indonesia delivered a high bar for the upcoming WWF in Riyad. And with the One Water Summit, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water and its report, and water more and more prominent on global and local agendas at COP’s with a water pavilion, and in the trilogy of conventions: Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification.
Now, with all the upcoming changes in Stockholm, it is time to reset the focus, the ambition and with that the capacity – institutionally, individually, and informally. Stockholm and Sweden have choice to make, we have a choice to make: to keep Stockholm center-staged in the water world, with a legacy and a future for water action, inspiration and convening.
If you care for the future of water, of SIWI and the enabling environment it can empower, join us for one of these lunch dialogues and help us think through the future of a strong convening capacity in Stockholm.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Friends of Water,
Friends of Stockholm
session_host

speaker

Summary
This session will share learning, expand networks and identify future actions to support more equitable WASH systems. Key questions: how can we be politically astute in driving progressive change through system-based approaches and how we can engage and amplify gender equity across multiple agendas – including health, climate and peacebuilding?
Session Description
This session will explore system-based approaches to gender equity and social inclusion. It will bring together WASH system change experts and gender equity and social inclusion champions, to explore the following questions: What does a system strengthening approach to gender and equity entail? How can we become more astute political actors – in high-level forums and within communities – to drive gender- and inclusion-responsive change in WASH systems? What opportunities and challenges are there for better gender informed WASH systems, and how can we amplify agendas? What evidence gaps are there related to gender equity and WASH systems?
The session will involve introduction and scene setting on system approaches to gender in WASH; an update from the WHO-UNICEF JMP team on global progress to gender equity in WASH; a keynote on the importance of being political during progressive system-change; panel discussion on real-world challenges faced by implementers working on these issues; and, interactive, participatory sessions for the audience to explore ideas and challenges related to gender and WASH systems.
By the end of the session, participants will be equipped with practical insights and resources to act politically and advance gender equity and social inclusion in their WASH programming.
Programme
0900 - Welcome - Ruchika Shiva (IRC WASH).
0908 - WHO-UNICEF JMP Update on Gender and WASH - Rick Johnston (WHO) and Bethany Caruso (Emory University).
0918 - Keynote: Sareen Malik (African Civil Society Network for Water and Sanitation) - Systems thinking for political action: overcoming sectoral boundaries for gender equity.
0925 - Audience engagement activities on barriers to gender equity: facilitated by Paul Hutchings (University of Leeds) and Lauren D'Mello-Guyett (LSHTM).
0955 - Panel. Chair: Lisa Rudge (FCDO), Nancy J Eslick (USAID), Bethlehem Mengistu (Agenda for Change), Partha Hefaz Shaikh (WaterAid), Bethany Caruso (Emory) and Julita Chinseu (Water for People).
1025 - Conclusion and wrap up - Ruchika Shiva (IRC WASH)
1030 - Close.
Files
Convenors
FCDO
USAID
WHO/UNICEF JMP
University of Leeds
IRC WASH
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Agenda for Change
Emory University
GOAL
Sanitation and Water for All (SWA)
Self Help Africa
SNV
WaterAid
Water For People
session_host

speaker








Summary
This session will present the comprehensive approach we are using to build a vibrant and sustainable market for menstrual hygiene products in partnership with local government, local entrepreneurs, and community organizations in Western Kenya.
Session Description
Access to safe menstrual hygiene products is essential for the physical and mental well-being of women and girls. However, in many countries, such as Kenya, women and girls often face numerous barriers to accessing safe and affordable products. Addressing this gap requires developing vibrant and sustainable markets through community awareness, private sector engagement, and collaboration with local organizations.
Come to our session to learn more about ongoing activities designed in collaboration with local government actors, private enterprises, and community organizations in western Kenya. We will share lessons from our comprehensive social and behavior change campaign designed to combat harmful social taboos around menstruation and to ensure that regardless of sex everyone is aware of the menstrual hygiene product options. Hear about how local community organizations are building on their skills in community organizing to develop new menstrual hygiene products and invest in building their own sales channels to sustain access. Through these efforts, community organizations have increased employment opportunities for women, identified new and innovative sales channels for reaching underserved women and girls, and educated their fellow citizens on building an environment where everyone can freely learn about menstruation and ensure women and girls can access products when needed.
Programme
Files
Convenors
LACOMP Consult
Matitibabu Foundation
RTI International
Society Empowerment Project
USAID
USAID Western Kenya Sanitation Project
speaker




session_host

Moderator

Summary
26 countries and 3 Joint Programming Initiatives (JPIs) developed a joint transnational call to address risks posed to human health and the environment by pollutants and pathogens present in water resources. The Roadshow aims to disseminate and valorise the results of some of the AquaPollutants and the transfer projects.
Session Description
The pollution of our water resources such as rivers, estuaries and coastal ecosystems by anthropogenic activities is one of the biggest concerns facing the world today. These pollutants, or contaminants of emerging concern (CECs), include chemicals and microorganisms. To address these challenges, 32 funding partner organisations from 26 countries and 3 Joint Programming Initiatives (JPIs) came together and developed a joint transnational call for research and innovation projects on risks posed to human health and the environment by pollutants and pathogens present in the water resources. The call comprised of 3 thematic areas as follows:
Theme 1: Measuring – the environmental behaviour of contaminants of emerging concern (CECs), pathogens, and antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in aquatic ecosystems;
Theme 2: Evaluating – risk assessment and management of CECs, pathogens, and antimicrobial-resistant bacteria from aquatic ecosystems (inland, coastal and marine) to human health and environment; and
Theme 3: Taking Actions – strategies to reduce CECs, pathogens and antimicrobial resistant bacteria in aquatic ecosystems (inland, coastal and marine.
As a result, 18 international consortium projects across the globe are currently being implemented in response to the call. A majority of these projects are either completed or at the verge of being completed and have already produced novel, practical, strategic scientific results that can be used to address CEC challenges.
This will be the first roadshow for AquaticPollutants, with the desire to showcase excellence from the projects, the application of the results, their socio-economical potential impact and strengthening cooperation between the partner countries. The Roadshow, also aims to strengthen cooperation between policy makers, and the target audience.
Programme
Time: 15:00 to 16:00
Date: 28 August 2024
Venue: Online (Virtual) https://www.worldwaterweek.org/
Target Audience: Academia, Policy Makers, Civil society, NGOs, Businesses, Water Service, Institutions, Innovators, funders and investors, and programme owners.
Conveners: AquaticPollutants, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology / Project Management Agency Karlsruhe (KIT), Swedish Research Council (SRC), and Water Research Commission South Africa ( WRC)
Facilitator: Dr Amelia Marutle (WRC)
15:00-15:05 Welcome Dr Amelia Marutle (WRC)
15:05-15:15 Opening Address: International Project Cooperation - Importance of programmes such as Aquaticpollutants, Dr Mamohloding Tlhagale (WRC)
15:15-15:35 AquaPollutants Thematic Project Partner presentations: An overview of how research in the AquaticPollutants call is addressing and solving African challenges
PAIRWISE (5 min): Professor Charles Masembe, Makerere University, Uganda
REWA (5 min): Professor Bice Martincigh, University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa
SARA (5 min): Professor Cleme^ncio Nhantumbo, Eduardo Mondlane University, Mozambique
SERPIC (5 min): Dr Marelize Botes, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
15:35-15:50 Q & A and open discussion with African Project Partner Leads and Audience
Facilitator: Dr Nonhlanhla Kalebaila (WRC)
15:50-16:00 Closing Address: Are we making progress in addressing water challenges for sustainable development? A forward look. Dr Simon Frank (KIT)
Files
Convenors
AquaticPollutants
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology / Project Management Agency Karlsruhe
Swedish Research Council
Water Research Commission South Africa
session_host

speaker







Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
French Water Partnership
US Department of Energy
World Meteorological Organization
speaker




Summary
Climate change is a world-wide phenomenon affecting all communities indiscriminately, however, its impact is felt more by those already marginalised with no or limited access to water and energy supply to improve their overall wellbeing. Water for multiple uses and alternative clean energy sources can improve overall well-being.
Session Description
The session will present experiences of the Giyani Local Scale Climate Resilience Programme (GLSCRP) implemented in nine sites of Giyani village in Limpopo province, South Africa. The programme demonstrated how diversifying water sources for rural communities and supplementing fuel powered boreholes with clean solar energy can support communities to have uninterrupted water supply crucial for domestic uses and agricultural activities, Also, by implementing climate smart technologies ensured water security without compromising small scale farmers yields increasing food security and local economic development. 2 short presentations and inclusive participatory panel discussions with online and onsite participants' chat platform for Q&A and short surveys directed by a facilitator.
Programme
Programme
Session Name & Number: Building rural communities' resilience to climate change, 11551
Date & Time: 28 august 2024, 12:00 – 13:00
Venue: Online
Facilitator: Ms. Virginia. Molose
Time Title Session Speakers
12:00-12:05 Opening & Welcome Ms. V. Molose
12:05-12:15 Climate Change in the global, Dr. B. Petja regional; country and local context
12:15-12:45 Presentations: The Giyani Local Scale Climate Resilience Programme responses to climate change
- Strategies to building local resilience: Ms. V. Molose
- Technical solutions for secure water supply to help build stability and peace: Prof Nebo Jovanovic
- Performance assessment and capacity building to ensure sustainability: Mr. Seemole Sergio Shika
12:45 - 12:55: Questions & Answers: All
12:55 -13:00: Vote of thanks, Closure: Ms. V. Molose
Files
Convenors
South African Water Research Commission
speaker


Summary
This session will explore how Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) projects in fragile contexts which offer comprehensive utility-managed services to forcibly displaced people and their hosts can foster sustainability as well as social cohesion and peace.
Session Description
Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) services for forcibly displaced people are often provided by humanitarian actors through systems mainly designed for temporary emergency responses. With the rising number of protracted crises and resulting long-term displaced populations in many host countries, the need for a shift towards more sustainable and integrated WASH services provision for refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) through national structures becomes evident. Various projects have emerged to support host governments in this transition, among these the “Regional WASH Programme for Refugees, IDPs and Host Communities in East Africa” (R-WASH) jointly implemented by UNHCR and UNICEF in Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia and financed by the German Government via KfW, Xylem and host governments. The project is building on a decade of experience from Gambella, Ethiopia, showing that the transition from a humanitarian model of water supply towards an integrated utility-managed approach can lead to significant cost reductions and improved service levels. At the same time, projects promoting such a transition are about much more than just water provision. Utilizing a conflict-sensitive programming approach, they can promote stability, social cohesion, and peace by providing equal access to and general improvements in basic service delivery for all population groups, including refugees, IDPs and host communities. However, despite the benefits of an inclusive utility-led water provision, major challenges remain due to the limited ability of most refugees to pay for service provision which would be required to cover the operation and maintenance costs. This raises the question which financing mechanisms can be developed to enable a sustainable cost recovery for the respective utilities, and which other measures are important to ensure that the benefits of the approach can be sustained, and that social cohesion and peace can be promoted in the long run.
Programme
Together with speakers from the UNHCR, UNICEF, the German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), the World Bank, the Ugandan National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC), IRCWASH, and others, the session will explore how transitioning from emergency-based WASH systems to integrated utility management can enhance service levels and reduce costs. The session will engage the audience to discuss which financing mechanisms can support long-term sustainability, and how WASH service provision can promote social cohesion and peace in fragile contexts.
Agenda:
0-3 mins: Welcome and introduction to session content and structure
3-6 mins: “Setting the scene" presentation on topics of today’s discussions - David Mondorf, R-WASH programme team, UNHCR
6-12 mins: Perspective from a Government donor and financier of the R-WASH programme - Dr. Tania Fabricius, Head of Division for Displaced Persons and Host Countries, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)
How can donor-financed HDP-nexus projects in the WASH-sector foster social cohesion and sustainability?
12-18 mins: Perspective from R-WASH implementing agency - Lavuun Verstraete, R-WASH programme manager, UNICEF
What are the key experiences and lessons learnt from the R-WASH Programme in Itang and Rwanwanja?
18-24 mins: Perspective from a national utility - Dr. Rose Kaggwa, Senior Director Business and Scientific Services, National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC)
Can water utilities which serve areas with a high share of refugees work sustainably without subsidies?
24-30 mins: Perspective from a multilateral development bank - Ai-Ju Huang, Senior Water Specialist, World Bank
Which innovative financing and programming mechanisms are promising to promote financial sustainability and social cohesion during and after the transition to a utility-led refugee-inclusive water provision?
30-36 mins: In-depth insights on financial sustainability options - Catarina Fonseca, IRC WASH, Founder / CEO of Pulsing Tide
Which practical models can be applied in displacement contexts to promote financial sustainability?
36-56 mins: Moderated brainstorming for solutions - open discussion with the audience
Guiding question: Which approaches are promising to ensure long-term financial sustainability and promote social cohesion in displacement contexts?
56-60 mins: Wrap up and ending
Desired impact and session outcomes:
- Provide information on existing lessons learnt from ongoing projects;
- Inspire donors and other stakeholders to support refugee and IDP-inclusive WASH projects at the HDP nexus;
- Sketch possible sustainability solutions and draw further lessons learned for potential future programming and policy making.
Files
Sustaining Water Services for Refugees and Host Communities in Ethiopia and Uganda - a decade of experience: https://www.unicef.org/esa/reports/securing-cost-effective-sustainable-water-services-refugees-host-communities-eastern-africa
WASH for Peace Toolkit: https://www.unicef.org/washforpeace/#:~:text=The%20WASH%20for%20Peace%20website,fragile%20and%20conflict%2Daffected%20contexts.
Convenors
KfW Development Bank
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
session_host

speaker




Summary
Water, food and nutrition intersect with development pathways to achieve peaceful outcomes. In this session, presenters from different regions will share experiences and cases that represent peace at multiple scales, from household to community to landscape to national levels.
Session Description
Evidence from fragile and post-crisis communities demonstrates the urgent need for more attention and investment into building equity, empowerment, and leadership, leveraging the central role of water management for food and improved incomes. In this session, presenters from different regions will share experiences and cases that represent peace at multiple scales, from household to community to landscape to national levels. Learning from Central America and Sub-Saharan Africa, and at multiple scales, enables insights into managing the interlinkages between water, food, and human security.
National scale policies and plans can support multi-sectoral (public, private, non-profit) processes that catalyse local-level action, and local communities and initiatives can participate to ensure benefits for households and marginalized people. Private sector investment can be directed toward securing water for food and raising incomes, which can contribute to conflict mitigation and post-crisis management. Over time, the approaches to secure water for food and nutrition must also adapt to emerging challenges, to achieve peaceful outcomes.
Programme
Welcome and introduction (Paul Hicks, CRS)
Speakers:
Back to the source: Social cohesion for water security (Marcos San Juan, Water Fund, El Salvador)
Pathways from water to nutrition and equity: New research evidence at different scales and implications for future actions (Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute)
How to operate in post crisis to medium term stability through water for food action (International Red Cross)
Discussion: What peace have you experienced and observed at different levels related to water and food security?
Panel: Mechanisms to improve water and food security toward peaceful outcomes: policy, private sector investment, public-private partnerships (Panel chair: Richard Colback, IFC)
-Southern African Development Community
- Sarah Hayman, Julianna Westerblom, Swedish Red Cross
- Marion Kimani, Operations Officer, IFC Ethiopia
- Luba Shara, Senior Operations Officer, IFC Kenya
- Elad Levi, SVP, APAC Division, Netafim
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
International Finance Corporation-The World Bank Group (IFC-WB)
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), CGIAR
Catholic Relief Services (CRF)
session_host


speaker







Moderator





Summary
Private sector representatives will discuss their approaches and challenges in moving beyond traditional business cases and short-term CSR initiatives, to integrate social innovation as a long-term strategy. Focusing on collaboration over competition, we will address water related issues and explore how cross-disciplinary problem-solving can enhance social innovations that align SDGs and business objectives.
Session Description
The session brings together three private sector representatives: two leading global players in the sanitary industry and a renowned social business consultancy.
Each panelist will briefly present their company’s approach to water-related social innovations (products/services/processes). They will also discuss challenges that require collaboration in areas such as innovation, specific expertise, technology, market building, capital, and change management.
Engage in a session that encourages understanding and alternative approaches rather than rushed solutions.
The challenges discussed might include ROI metrics, SDG interpretation, executive buy-in, securing internal funds, talent retention, regulatory hurdles, development of frugal innovations, and discrepancies in goal longevity.
Online participants can contribute insights and questions via chat.
Programme
This aim is to dismantle disciplinary barriers by bringing together a diverse audience of academic experts, field professionals, students, NGOs, companies from varied industries, and governmental representatives.
By illustrating the power of collaborative problem-solving and knowledge exchange, we aim to foster partnerships that can tackle practical challenges in water-related innovations.
Facilitating dialogue and understanding the operational complexities of the private sector can reveal unexpected connections and valuable insights into business management practices. Therefore, achieving a common understanding and language is crucial.
Practical outcomes may encompass targeted research, expert networking, joint development or projects and sharing best practices or case studies.
Despite the potential for fruitful collaboration, biases against the private sector may hinder positive outcomes, exacerbated by time constraints of the session and the risk of conflicts of interest. However, the session aspires to lay the groundwork for future initiatives across different sectors.
The power of multidisciplinary perspectives can uncover blind spots in all the participants and propel the private sector towards tangible advancements and meaning contributions to the SDGs.
Files
Convenors
• Hansgrohe SE: Jessica Trejo. Social Innovation Manager
• Kohler, Innovation for Good: Joseph Schmitt. Business Dev. Manager
• Yunus Social Business: David Berners. Director - Head of Product Strategy & Investor Relations
speaker



session_host
Summary
Circular Economy (CE) principles can help make water and sanitation sectors more resilient, inclusive and efficient, while improving the financial sustainability of services. Participants will learn frameworks for applying CE to water and sanitation in diverse contexts, and how to incorporate them in their work by learning from real examples.
Session Description
Safe, inclusive and resilient water and sanitation services are foundational for nearly every Sustainable Development Goal. However, water is generally undervalued and water resources are often used inefficiently. Circular economy principles offer opportunity to recognize the full value of water (as a service, a source of energy and a carrier of nutrients and other materials), to create additional revenue streams for the sector, lower GHG emissions, contribute to other sectors such as agriculture and energy, and regenerate natural systems. 5min – Welcome interactive poll (UTS-ISF/World Bank) 20min – The principles of circular economy and resilience in the water sector (UTS-ISF/World Bank) 30min – Roundtable interactive group activity: Using the online WICER tool www.wicer-tool.com to assess how circular and resilient is your water project (or use a given case/scenario). Based on a hypothetical rural scenario, using the CIRCLE WASH principles and 8Rs framework to consider circular WASH opportunities. Prompt questions will guide discussions about possible opportunities, and what might be needed to progress them e.g. economic/financial analysis, social analysis, stakeholder engagement, business model innovation, policy change, etc. 20min – Panel “Lessons Learned and the Way Forward” (IWEM, World Bank, Government of Senegal, OECD) 15min - Q&A and conclusions
Programme
16:00 Welcome interactive poll.
16:10 Framing presentation - applying principles of circular economy and resilience in water and sanitation (UTS-ISF, IWEM and World Bank).
16:30 Roundtable interactive group activity. How can circular opportunities strengthen inclusive, climate resilient water and sanitation? Applying the World Bank WICER tool and the UTS-ISF CIRCLE WASH 8Rs framework.
16:55 Panel discussion responding to audience Q&A. Panellists:
- Dr Dinh Van Dao, Vietnam Academy of Water Resources
- Representative of the Ministry of Water and Sanitation of the Government of Senegal
- Ms Lara Loske-Garcia, World Bank
17:25 Closing remarks.
Files
Convenors
University of Technology Sydney-Institute for Sustainable Futures (UTS-ISF)
World Bank Group
Vietnam Academy for Water Resources Institute for Water Resource Economics and Management (IWEM)
UNICEF
Water for Women
speaker






Moderator

Summary
Rising climate shocks demand action. Across diverse regions, we analyze warning systems, actions taken, and how local adaptations fit specific contexts. Our findings show that integrated approaches significantly outperform separate interventions. Furthermore, empowering communities through locally led adaptation ensures relevant and sustainable solutions.
Session Description
The intensifying frequency and severity of climate shocks necessitate innovative and integrated approaches to strengthen community resilience. This study explores the combined effectiveness of early warning systems (EWS), anticipatory action, and locally-led adaptation in mitigating the impacts of climate shocks. We investigate case studies in diverse regions, evaluating the efficacy of EWS in providing timely and accurate warnings, the implementation of anticipatory actions based on these warnings, and the role of local action in tailoring solutions to specific socio-cultural and environmental contexts. Our analysis from Zambia, Senegal and Sri Lanka demonstrates that an integrated approach significantly enhances community resilience compared to siloed interventions. Effective EWS coupled with anticipatory actions, such as pre-positioning resources and implementing preventive measures, leads to reduced damage and faster recovery following climate shocks. Furthermore, local action empowers communities to take ownership of adaptation strategies, ensuring their relevance and sustainability. By integrating these elements, we can create a powerful framework for tackling climate shocks and building more resilient communities across diverse contexts.
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
CGIAR Initiatives on Climate Resilience "ClimBeR"
Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)
Ministry of Agriculture of Zambia
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
session_host

speaker






Summary
Earth observation technologies have increased availability and quality of hydrological and geo-spatial data offering significant potential for more effective transboundary water management. This event will highlight applications of these technologies and discuss challenges relating to legal and trust-building aspects in the use of such data.
Session Description
Earth observation technologies have led to a drastic increase in availability and quality of hydrological, meteorological and geo-spatial data. Much of it is publicly accessible. Open data and open source tools can be used to reduce costs and improve accuracy of transboundary basin management and are therefore promising tools for more effective and sustainable basin management. In spite of these promises, a number of key challenges persist, while new ones emerge. States continue to view water-related data as a matter of national security and see openly available data with great scepticism. While several national space agencies provide free access to certain data sets, other data providers may make data only available on a fee-basis or restrict access to a few. The ownership is not always clear, and the equitable accessibility of earth observation (EO) data is not guaranteed. Additionally, former means of more traditional data acquisition that have also helped building trust among riparian actors, such as joint measurement and monitoring programs, might become less relevant as might existing governance mechanisms (treaties and basin organizations). The session discusses these challenges and proposes innovative ways forward that ensure equitable, sustainable and effective transboundary basin management.
Programme
11:00 - 11:05 Welcome Remarks and introduction to the event, Susanne Schmeier, IHE Delft
11:05 - 11:35 Lightning talks
- Earth observation technologies for transboundary water management - What is available today?, Liz Saccoccia, World Resources Institute
- Earth observation technologies for transboundary water management - What does the future hold?, Gennadij Donchyts, Google
- Earth observation and international water law - What is the impact on information exchange obligations?, Christina Leb, World Bank
- Earth observation technologies and data sharing challenges in transboundary basins, Michael Kizza, Nile Basin Initiative
11:35 - 12:25 Panel discussion
- Bota Sharipova, IHE Delft
- Nina Kickinger, United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs
- Melissa McCracken, Tufts University
- Brian Eyler, Stimson Center
- Melissa McCracken, Tufts University
- Tomaž Rodic, Center of Excellence for Space Sciences and Technologies
- Michael Kizza, Nile Basin Initiative
12:25 - 12:30 Closing remarks, Claudette Spiteri, UNESCO/IW:Learn
Files
Convenors
GEF/IWLEARN
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
Fletcher School at Tufts University
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia
Oregon State University
United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs
World Bank Group
World Resources Institute
speaker






session_host




Summary
This session is part of the schedule for SJWP Finalists but open to anyone interested in this topic. Women and men in the water industry share their journey and engage in a conversation about gender parity in solving
Session Description
Panel discussion and introduction setting the scene. Panel to share their unique journeys and challenges, reflecting on the mentorship and sponsorship they’ve received, and offering advice to future generations. Panelists will then lead break-out sessions in smaller groups.
Programme
Introduction and Moderator:
- Cecilia Chatterjee-Martisen, International Program Director, Save the Children
Panelists:
- Dr. Lara B. Fowler, Chief Sustainability Officer, Penn State, Director, Sustainability Institute, Professor of Teaching, Penn State Law, Affiliate Faculty, Penn State School of International Affairs USA
- Hanna Albåge, Director, Business Development, Xylem
- Daniel Ddiba, PhD, Research Fellow, Stockholm Environment Institute
- Brooke Yamakoshi, Regional Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Manager, UNICEF East Asia and Pacific Regional Office
Break-out sessions in smaller groups discussing topics such as:
- Gender parity
- The role of the male ally
- How to build a network
- The importance of mentorship
Files
Convenors
Xylem
speaker



session_host

Summary
Empowering women in agriculture is essential for sustainable water management and sustainable development in Burkina Faso. Addressing gender disparities in agriculture and ensuring women's equitable access to resources and opportunities in water management is critical to achieve inclusive and sustainable development.
Session Description
World Waternet is working in several African and Asian countries to improve access to sustainable drinking water. One of these projects is located in Burkina Faso (Blue Deal). The aim of this specific project is to help the local water authorities with their IWRM activities. We are doing so by providing peer-to-peer support. Dutch experts from the Dutch Water Authorities work together with our partners in Burkina Faso and provide support on their IWRM activities. In Burkina Faso, the agricultural sector is by far (75%) the biggest user of water. We are, therefore, also working together with the local water user authorities to help farmers use water more efficiently. In the last few years, we have carried out several Nature-based Solutions to improve efficient water use among farmers. Women play a vital role in these projects, since they carry out a significant part of the labor. Our young expert from Burkina Faso has written a short paper on the role of women in these projects, which she will present.
Programme
Files
Convenors
World Waternet
speaker

Summary
This panel will move beyond proclamations for more meaningful engagement of Indigenous peoples in developing and implementing water policy to a consideration of what enables, what constrains, and what sustains such engagement. Tribal, federal, and state leaders from the Colorado River Basin will respond to these and related questions.
Speakers include Amelia Flores, Chairwoman, Colorado River Indian Tribes; Lorelei Cloud, Vice-Chairwoman, Southern Ute Indian Tribes; Camille Touton, Commissioner, US Bureau of Reclamation; Tom Buschatzke, Director, Arizona Department; Becky Mitchell, State of Colorado; and Daryl Vigil, Co-director, Water & Tribes Initiative.
Session Description
Native Americans are the first inhabitants of the Colorado River Basin and have relied on its water and other resources since time immemorial. However, Tribes were not involved in shaping the Colorado River Compact and associated governing institutions, and they have faced uphill battles to secure, protect, and develop their water rights—including the ability to acquire access to clean water. Over the past decade, however, Tribal, federal, and state leaders have worked to engage the basin’s 30 Tribes more meaningfully in collaborative problem-solving. After briefly explaining the legal, institutional, and historical framework for governing the Colorado River as a transboundary watershed – including the unique roles and responsibilities of the United States, the seven basin states, and Tribal nations -- this panel will focus on recent efforts to better integrate Tribal needs, interests, and priorities into management decisions, and to support opportunities for more meaningful engagement of Tribes in collaborative problem-solving. The panel will focus their discussion on what enables, what constrains, and what sustains Tribal (Indigenous) participation in water policy and governance. There will be an opportunity for the audience to share their experiences and to otherwise facilitate an exchange of best practices to enable Indigenous people's participation.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arizona Department of Water Resources
Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy
Colorado River Indian Tribes
Southern Ute Indian Tribe
State of Colorado
Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Department of the Interior
Water & Tribes Initiative | Colorado River Basin
Moderator

speaker





Summary
In Cote d’Ivoire, USAID is facilitating a collaborative institutional framework to empower key municipal stakeholders with transparent, data-driven WASH planning and budgeting. Strengthening water and sanitation services, including private sector involvement, enhances municipal resilience against population fluctuations from instability, violence, and climate change, offering a replicable model for other municipalities.
Session Description
This session will provide a comprehensive overview into an innovative institutional framework enhancing WASH service delivery. Featuring panel speakers from the USAID MuniWASH Activity, AfWASA, and local municipal counterparts, the session will cover the methodology behind establishing the framework, its implementation, progress, and the challenges faced by municipalities. Utilizing slides, the panel will present key objectives and takeaways. MuniWASH's process involved creating a collaborative framework that brought together various stakeholders, including mayors, regional government representatives, decentralized state service actors, private service providers, and civil society organizations. Stakeholder feedback and GIS data were instrumental in mapping infrastructure and visualizing household access to WASH services. The approach also included a costed needs assessment based on this mapping, demonstrating long-term needs and opportunities. The impact of this approach is evident in municipalities such as Bouaké and San Pedro, where prefectural decrees formalized the consultation framework as the primary discussion platform for WASH sector decision-making. The session will explore how quantified investment assessments and revenue data guide decision-makers, creates business opportunities for the private sector. Furthermore, the framework strengthens resilience against population fluctuations due to instability, violence, and climate change, which can be used as a replicable model for less resilient municipalities.
Programme
Files
Convenors
African Water Association
Municipality of Bouake
Municipality of San Pedro
Tetra Tech Inc.
USAID Municipal WASH Activity
session_host

speaker






Summary
After four years, over 100 supported innovators across five regions reached three million end-users and were able to mobilize millions of dollars. The WE4F Initiative has lessons learned, successes and failures for future programs that unite different actors and regions of the world to improve the water-energy-food nexus.
Session Description
A common theme across the water-energy-food nexus and the water sector as a whole, is the need for stakeholders to cooperate, to cross borders and to break silos. Whether it’s governments, the private sector, or individual farmers, each actor plays an important role in ensuring the efficient and sustainable use of water. However, there are many barriers to overcome, from enabling women and base of the pyramid farmers’ access to technologies and informational services that would improve their knowledge of climate change and sustainable water usage, to building global programs that can tackle these issues on a localized basis. After four years the Water and Energy for Food Grand Challenge has lessons learned, successes and failures, recommendations and cautions for those looking to build sustainable, private sector focused programs that unite different actors and regions of the world. Over 100 supported innovators across five regions impacted 3 million end-users, while saving billion liters of water and mobilizing hundreds of millions of dollars for financing. This panel will convene donors, program staff, strategic partners, and innovators for an exploration of the WE4F's inner workings while providing attendees with ideas for future paths forward.
Programme
Files
To view the Water and Energy for Food Final Evaluation click here
To view the Water and Energy for Food Final Evaluation Infographic click here
To view the Water and Energy for Food 2023 Annual Report Executive Summary click here
To view the Water and Energy for Food 2023 Annual Report on the Regional Innovation Hubs in MENA, S/SEA, and S/CA click here
Convenors
European Union
Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany
Government of the Netherlands
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation
Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
Water and Energy for Food
USAID
speaker








session_host



Summary
United Nations Global Compact Network USA recently published a white paper on corporate water stewardship. This live studio talk show will interview the lead author of the white paper to discuss how business can enhance their water stewardship strategies, build resilience, and drive positive change in vulnerable basins.
Session Description
"The value of water is not only determined by price but also shaped by the actions we take to protect and manage it responsibly. Through corporate water stewardship, companies lead by example and demonstrate their commitment to valuing water as a precious resource. In this effort, every drop counts, and every action has the potential to create a powerful ripple effect." We will be speaking with Mallory Cannon, the lead author of UN Global Compact Network USA's recent white paper, "From Ripples to Waves: The Value of Corporate Water Stewardship." Our discussion will explore how the private sector can engage in collective action to safeguard our most precious resource. Drawing on examples from the report's featured case studies including- Microsoft, Cargill, PepsiCo, Gotham Greens, S&P Global, and Xylem- we will delve into innovative examples of corporate water stewardship. Through this dialogue, we will uncover how businesses can not only bolster their water resilience but also drive meaningful, positive change in the world's most vulnerable basins. This conversation with Mallory Cannon, a young leader in the field, brings a fresh perspective to our critical conversation on how businesses can take ambitious water action.
Programme
Files
Convenors
United Nations Global Compact Network USA
speaker

Summary
Attend this session for a chance to hear three speakers representing three First Nations in northern Canada reflect on approaches for strengthening relationships to lands and water and for their sustainable management, through Indigenous stories, knowledge systems, and Indigenous science.
Session Description
Note: There will be a ceremonial opening for this session, attendees are invited to bring a vessel with water and to give thanks.
Through a moderated discussion, each speaker will be invited to share how they “walk with the land and water” through initiatives that guide healthy relationships with the water - including water monitoring, water strategies, co-governance, and Indigenous-led land and water relationships planning - in the Southern Lakes in Yukon, Canada.
Colleen, Patricia and Bêlit will speak to water as a vessel to advance reconciliation and reflect on approaches for strengthening relationships with one another and to the lands and waters.
Participants in the session will also have an opportunity to ask questions in a general Questions & Answers format.
Programme
14h00-14h05: Welcome and Overview
14h05-14h15: Ceremonial Opening
14h15-14h55: Moderated Discussion
14h55-15h25: Questions & Answers
15h25-15h30: Closing Remarks
Files
Convenors
Carcross/Tagish First Nations
Kwanlin Dün First Nation
Ta’an Kwäch’än Council
How We Walk with the Land and Water
Global Affairs Canada and the Canada Water Agency
session_host

Moderator

speaker



Summary
Rivers divide and connect, providing billions with water, food and energy. So the global river health crisis has profound implications. This debate will explore how best to stimulate attention and action to address the crisis. Specifically, we’ll explore whether better river health metrics or better communication will be most impactful.
Session Description
As well hosting an astonishing array of biodiversity, rivers and other freshwater ecosystems have profound importance for people. For centuries they have both divided and connected countries, communities and cultures, providing multiple benefits including water and food. But while pollution, flooding and drought sometimes grab headlines, few people beyond the water expert community have realised the extent of the global crisis in river health or its implications for sustainable development. The purpose of this session is to explore how we might change that by magnifying attention to and action on the crisis affecting our rivers.
The session will take the form of a lively and insightful Dragons' Den debate with two expert entrepreneurs arguing the relative merits for our Dragons to invest in either i) an improved portfolio of global river health indicators, drawing on rapidly developing data and monitoring options, as a means of helping policy makers and business leaders understand priorities for action; or ii) smarter communications approaches, drawing on social and cognitive sciences, that would motivate decision-makers and the public to act for river health.
The session will educate and engage participants and, hopefully, seed new ideas about how to talk to non-water experts about river health.
Programme
1. Introduction (Dave Tickner, WWF):
- The state of river health globally and the need to raise the profile of rivers as a critical sustainability issue
- Outline of the debate – a “Dragons’ Den” with two entrepreneurs presenting to three panellists representing (fictitious) major investors each of whom has up to $50m to invest in raising the profile of river health
- Audience survey – is the priority for investment indicators or narratives?
2. Entrepreneur #1 (Chris Dickens, IWMI) presents the case for investing in development of better global/regional indicators of river health
3. Entrepreneur #2 (Julia Martin-Ortega, University of Leeds) presents the case for investing in narrative approaches to communicating river health challenges and opportunities
4. The Dragons (Allen Townsend, WWF/Science Based Targets Network; Stuart Crane, UNEP-DHI; Iara Bueno Giacomini, Ministry of Environment & Climate Change, Brazil) interrogate our two entrepreneurs
5. Q&A with audience
6. The Dragons decide individually whether and how much to invest in each approach
7. Wrap up including repeat of audience survey and final conclusions (Dave Tickner, WWF)
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute
UN Environment Programme
World Wide Fund for Nature
speaker




Moderator

Summary
This session demonstrates how proactive collaboration among diverse funders has fostered peer learning and opportunities for catalytic co-investment and donor efficiency. Co-investment case studies will illustrate how funding silos and fragmentation have been overcome through collective action. Audience interaction enables cross-learning on how philanthropic capital can further catalyse sustainable impact.
Session Description
The UN 2023 Water Conference called for a paradigm shift in how public and private finances are coordinated and to make financing more accessible and sustainable in the developing world. The WASH Funders Group is an example of a successful cooperation model (SDG17), whose members use catalytic funding to support sustainable WASH services alongside multiple related sectors focused on poverty reduction (SDG 1), climate resilience (SDG 13) and sustainable development. We will briefly introduce the group, which is a unique and informal collaboration of 29 corporate and family philanthropic foundations and government-funded programmes, with very disparate strategies and multi-sectoral priorities. We will share examples of how intentional collaboration among this diverse set of funders has improved the effectiveness of our WASH grants and investments by reducing duplication and fragmentation as well as maximising our resources efficiently. Case studies will illustrate our collective impact across geographic, sectoral, thematic and organisational borders, outlining innovative funding models to address multi-dimensional WASH challenges (e.g., systems strengthening, market-based approaches, climate-resilience). The audience is invited to discuss and provide feedback on these models to share learning and insights on how flexible philanthropic capital can further catalyse impact and leverage accessible, sustainable financing from larger funders.
Programme
09:00-09:15 - Introduction to WASH Funders Group
09:15-10:15 - Roundtable discussions on how funder collaboration can deliver more & better coordinated catalytic finance for WASH. Four themes discussed by several tables each: 1) Innovative financial mechanisms; 2) Systems strengthening; 3) Market-based solutions; 4) Funding integrated programmes (WASH and beyond)
10:15-10:30 - Plenary discussion, wrap up and takeaways
Files
Convenors
Aqua for All
charity: water
Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
Danone Communities
Dovetail Impact Foundation
Excelsior Impact Fund
Grand Challenges Canada
Grundfos Foundation
One Drop Foundation
Osprey Foundation
Pictet Group Foundation
Shockwave Foundation
Siemens Foundation
The Case for Her
The Coca-Cola Foundation
The One Foundation
The Sanitation and Hygiene Fund
The Stone Family Foundation
Viega Foundation
Viva con Agua
VOx Impuls foundation
Water Project
Waterloo Foundation
Who Gives a Crap
speaker






















session_host


Summary
Water governance has long been a slippery subject at the international level. The recent UN Water Conference may usher a new era of cooperation for the achievement of water-related SDGs. One year in, what initiatives are clearing a new way forward for sustainable and peaceful water governance?
Session Description
The UN Water Conference held in 2023 was the first of its kind since 1977. The goals and ambitions it set will mobilize a vast array of international actors for the achievement of water-related SDGs, and the ushering of a new era of peace and sustainability in water management. One year in, this session aims to take stock at the initiatives and the organizations which are hard at work to bridge borders and make this water-safe future possible. Several examples will be highlighted in the session, including the One Water Summit organized by the French Republic, the Republic of Kazakhstan and the World Bank at the Autumn 2024, and which will act as an incubator for solutions and mark the first step in preparing for the next UN Water Conference in 2026. It will also be the opportunity for water stakeholders to share their commitments for making sure water management is a doorway to a peaceful and sustainable future for all.
Programme
Keynote speech – Meike van Ginneken, Water Envoy for the Kingdom of The Netherlands
Panelists
Federico Properzi, UN Water
Claudette Briere Spiteri, GEF IW:Learn
Bruno Pigott, EPA
Q&A
Closing remarks – Barbara Pompili, Special Envoy to the President of the French Republic for the One Water Summit
Files
Convenors
French Biodiversity Agency
One Water Summit
Global Environment Facility
Action Platform for Source to Sea Management
speaker





Moderator
session_host
Summary
Water is a prerequisite for sustainable food systems and thriving biodiversity – but water insecurity is growing, biodiversity falling and food systems are at risk. This session will explore the interlinkages between water, food systems and biodiversity, and how they can be addressed from a systemic perspective.
Session Description
Building on momentum from the UN Water Conference and the coming climate and biodiversity COPs, this session will gather frontrunners from a range of stakeholder groups who are seeking to tackle the related issues of water insecurity, food systems and biodiversity decline in an integrated and systemic way.
The threat of a water crisis, resulting from an interplay between climate change and the functioning of our current food system (the current food system is responsible for a third of greenhouse gases, 80% of deforestation, 70% of terrestrial biodiversity loss; WWF, 2021), is in many ways a matter of weak and fragmented governance and policy inconsistencies.
The urgency to better organize and coordinate knowledge, resources, and people to jointly address this crisis is rising drastically. To ensure effective water policy, it’s crucial that water considerations are incorporated into decision-making processes across various domains. Policy areas such as climate, health, agriculture, energy, spatial planning, and development cooperation are all highly dependent on water management. However, these areas are often addressed in silos at the ministerial level, leading to decisions that significantly impact water management being made without adequate consideration. Mainstreaming both international and systemic water policy is therefore a prerequisite for a livable world and sustainable water-food systems.
As our food systems come under increasing strain, action on water at the production level is necessary but not sufficient. Developing water-responsible food systems and reversing biodiversity loss requires a systemic approach and shared responsibility. This demands intervention at multiple levels from a wide range of stakeholders, including scientific researchers, policymakers, program implementers, businesses (including the financial sector), and civil society advocates.
Programme
Opening and Introduction
Moderator: Kathryn Pharr
Perspective 1: Policy
Presenter: Julius Seinen, International Biodiversity, Netherlands Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Food Security and Nature (LVVN)
Perspective 2: Research
Presenter: Arjan Budding, Programme lead sustainable water management, Wageningen University & Research
Perspective 3: Programme implementation
Presenter: Liliane Geerling, Partners for Water, the Netherlands Enterprise and Development Agency
Perspective 4: Technology
Presenter: Jessie-Lynn van Egmond, Water & Sustainability Manager, Van der Hoeven Horticultural Projects
Breakout Group Discussions
Conclusion and closing remarks
Files
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
Wageningen University
Netherlands Food Partnership
Van der Hoeven
speaker



Moderator

Summary
Himalayan rivers are vital for the region's water security, livelihood, and biodiversity. Enhancing transboundary cooperation and securing sustainable financing are essential for building long-term resilience against climate change impacts. This initiative aims to foster collaboration and investment to protect and manage these critical water resources for future generations.
Session Description
Glaciers of the Himalayan region nourish major Asian rivers, sustaining the lives of 210.5 million people and ensuring water, ecosystem services, and support for downstream activities, including irrigation and energy production, benefiting over 1.3 billion people. However, climate change is causing a rapid retreat of these glaciers, with 67% experiencing alarming rates. This retreat has significant impacts, including Glacial Lake Outburst Floods and flash floods. These consequences often cross borders, highlighting the need for transboundary water cooperation. The region needs to catch up in implementing SDG 6.5.2 through advanced institutional frameworks.This session discusses priority areas and strategies for promoting transboundary cooperation for climate and nature financing to manage the water cycle for community resilience from source to sea. The session will promote the exchange of experiences, address challenges, and highlight opportunities for reshaping Himalayan water diplomacy for peace, resilience, and inclusive development. Topics include analyzing institutional needs and gaps, exploring existing platforms, the role of private-sector banks, and collective actions on water security. The session will also discuss tools for watershed planning through better coordination of data and science, creating data-sharing mechanisms among agencies, and emphasizing the role of ecosystem-based approaches in achieving effective watershed management.
Programme
Session Introduction
Ms. Yumiko Asayama, Chief Manager, Asia-Pacific Water Forum (APWF) Secretariat c/o Japan Water Forum
Keynote Presentation
Dr Pema Gyamstso, Director General, ICIMOD
Panel Discussion
Panelists:
- Dr. Mohsin Hafeez, Director Water-Food and Ecosystems, International Water Management Institute (IWMI), Pakistan
- Ms. Maria Carreño Lindelien, Water Governance Officer, Water and Wetlands, IUCN Gland (HQ)
- Mr. Lance William Gore, Principal Water Resources Specialist, ADB
- Dr. AP Dimri, Director, Indian Institute of Geomagnetism, Fellow of Indian National Science Academy. India
- Dr. Kapil Gnwali, Senior Divisional Engineer. Water and Energy Commission Secretariat, Government of Nepal
- Onsite Moderator: Dr. Aun B Shrestha, Strategtic Group Lead, ICIMOD
- Online Moderator: Vishwa Ranjan Sinha, Programme Officer, Water and Wetlands, South Asia, Science and Strategy Group IUCN Asia Regional Office
Summary, Way forward and closing of session Dr. Aun B Shrestha, Strategtic Group Lead, ICIMOD
Files
Convenors
Asia-Pacific Water Forum
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development
International Union for Conservation of Nature
International Water Management Institute
Asian Development Bank
speaker






Moderator



session_host




Summary
Session 3 builds on previous sessions and explores practical ways to ensure water security within safe and just earth system boundaries. It explores the role of legal instruments, reflects on the experience of various geographies, and characterizes fit-for-purpose just water partnerships.
Session Description
Safe and Just Earth System Boundaries provide an adequate perspective and ambition to manage water at multiple geographical scales. This session will consider whether international water laws are fit for purpose and will sketch options to reform them. The session will also reflect on the experiences of various geographies and attempts to combine the water, biodiversity, and climate agendas on the ground. Just Water Partnerships will be discussed as potential instruments that can support a transition towards managing water within safe and just earth system boundaries. In principle, they can combine the green and blue parts of the hydrological cycle, putting land use and nature conservation at the core of a just transition. Lessons from this session can inform other fora, on water and beyond.
Programme
Agenda and Tentative List of Speakers
- Welcome and general introduction to the session, by the moderator, Hajar Yagkoubi (3’)
- Recap of previous discussions, by Nouf Afghani, Young Scientific Programme Committee member (5’)
- Presentation: How international water law addresses protection of water resources, by Elif OKUMUS
- OKSUZ, Turkish Water Institute (7’)
- Questions for clarification (10’)
- Reflecting on practical experience: Commonwealth efforts supporting peace, development and improved ecosystems, by Mxolisi SIBANDA, Commonwealth Secretariat (7’)
- Reflecting on practical experience: A European perspective on water resilience, by Dagmar BEHRENDT KALJARIKOVA, European Commission - DG Environment (7’)
- Questions for clarification (10’)
- The perspective of a corporate on partnerships that contribute to securing water within safe and just earth system boundaries, by Marie-Anne Paulin, Water in Agriculture manager, Danone (7’)
- Opening the floor for a discussion on action pathways to manage water within safe and just earth system boundaries (25’). Tentative topics relate to partnerships, public value, aligning interests at local, basin, or larger scales.
- Moving ahead: managing water within safe and just earth system boundaries, beyond Stockholm. (4’)
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
World Meteorological Organization (WMO)
Earth Commission
session_host




speaker




moderator
Summary
The global methane pledge aims to cut emission by 30% by 2030. Recent evidence points the significant role poorly managed sanitation plays in methane emissions. This session will share the most recent findings on sanitation and methane and discuss the opportunities to reduce methane emissions.
Session Description
The Global Methane Pledge launched at COP 26 set a global target to reduce methane emissions by at least 30% by 2030. Poorly managed sanitation is a major source of methane and may be responsible for up to 5% of global emissions. Non-sewered sanitation (NSS) creates conditions that favour methane production, but there are substantial uncertainties in the emissions released because of very limited empirical data. There are several initiatives to improve our understanding the contribution of methane from NSS, including field studies in four countries under the SCARE project. This workshop will present the findings from the SCARE project, and insights from EAWAG, UNICEF, the World Bank, and USAID. The session will present lessons of methane emissions and capture from around the world, including low and high income countries. The use of improved data on methane to scale-up emissions assessment at city and national scale, how methane emissions may be reduced and the trade-offs that may arise will be discussed. By presenting the key findings of the SCARE and related projects, we will advance knowledge in the sector. Including practical examples of using data to estimate emissions and options to reduce these, will build knowledge of workable solutions.
Programme
Welcome and introduction to the session: Why sanitation is important in relation to action on methane (Guy Howard, University of Bristol, UK) 5 mins
Methane from tanks and latrines in LMICs: key findings from the multi-country SCARE project (Miller Alonso Camargo Valero, University of Leeds, UK) 10 mins
How groundwater affects methane emissions from pits: combining empirical field and groundwater modelling (Prativa Poudel, Kathmandu University, Nepal) 5mins
The influence of on-site sanitation containment technology and management on methane emissions (Baba Ngom, Ecole Polytechnique de Thies, Senegal) 5 mins
Key issues to consider when applying empirical methane data to scale up estimates for city-wide scale assessments (Linda Strande, EAWAG, Switzerland) 10 mins
Using empirical and secondary data is estimate national methane emissions in Africa (Olivia Reddy, University of Bristol) 5 mins
Questions to speakers/panel (Chair: Guy Howard)
Wrap-up: key messages (Guy Howard)
Files
Convenors
Eawag
Ecole Polytechnique de Thies
Ecopsis
Global Green Growth Institute
Haramaya University
Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
Kathmandu University
Kyambogo University
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
University of Bristol
University of Leeds
USAID Center for Water Security, Sanitation and Hygiene
World Bank Group
speaker



session_host

Summary
Presentation of the government-to-government Peru Reconstruction Programme to build climate resilient infrastructure in response to the devastating El Niño flooding in 2017. The session presents a unique country-wide programme, which is partially completed, followed by a panel to discuss how other low-middle income countries could build climate resilience at scale.
Session Description
The session will introduce the agreement between UK Government and Government of Peru to build $5-billion of climate resilient infrastructure to protect the population of Peru against flooding and landslides, in response to the devastating flooding of 2017. The programme aims to decentralise spending outside of Lima and bridge borders across the regions by investing in parts of Peru that are historically underserved. The programme covers the construction of 74 schools, 14 hospitals, 100’s of kms flood defence schemes across 17 river basins (including early warning systems), 6 city-wide drainage schemes and 60,000 ha of afforestation. The projects have built in climate resilience and nature-based solutions in a country without standards or guidance related to these topics. International expertise is provided by UKDT, a consortium of UK-based engineering companies. UKDT provide technical, delivery and commercial assurance across the programme lifecycle, advising the government using international best practice and building capacity through a large knowledge transfer component. The aim of this session is to introduce the programme, its achievements, challenges and legacy, as well as to discuss how water-related programmes of a similar scale and ambition can be implemented across other low-middle income countries which face similar challenges to Peru.
Programme
1. 20 minute interview with our panel
2. 20 minute audience Q&A
Files
https://www.gob.pe/anin
https://www.arup.com/projects/peru-reconstruction-with-changes/
Convenors
Arup - UKDT
Government of Peru - Autoridad Nacional de Infraestructura
Government of United Kingdom - Department for Business and Trade
Moderator

speaker



session_host

Summary
Water insecurity driven by competition over access to sufficient, good quality water can lead to conflict, both within households and within communities. This session will share learnings from intrahousehold research in three countries (Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya), with varying water scarcity, variability, access and quality challenges and explore policy solutions to reduce conflict.
Session Description
This online session will share new research from intra- and inter-household mixed methods research studies as part of REACH-WISER and a REACH collaboration with CIAT from Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya. Discussion will be led by policy makers and practitioners to share policy-relevant research related to gendered and community drivers of water insecurity, and explore how the sector can use research outcomes from social research to inform policy and programming.
Programme
Welcome and introduction: Prof Katrina Charles, University of Oxford
Research snippets on:
- International, interdisciplinary methodological design: Prof Salome Bukachi, University of Nairobi
- Measuring water security, Dr Sonia Hoque, University of Oxford
- Land tenure, social relations, and household dynamics, Dr Marya Hillesland, University of Oxford
- Empowerment in WASH Index, Dr Sarah Dickin, Uppsala Universitet
- Intra-household Water Safety Perception and Practice, Dr Saskia Nowicki, University of Oxford
Panel discussion to explore how this research can be integrated in policy and practice to advance water security for all with experts from donors, UN agencies and practice:
- Kitka Goyol, UNICEF
- Dr Jenny Grönwall, SIDA
- Dr Jess MacArthur, Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS
- Dr Vanya Slavchevska, FAO
Files
Find out more about REACH Water Insecurity, Equity and Resilience at https://reachwater.uk/reach-wiser/
Other useful resources:
- Water, sanitation and hygiene – gender equality measure (WASH-GEM). https://waterforwomen.uts.edu.au/wash-gem/
- FAO 2023. The status of women in agrifood systems. https://openknowledge.fao.org/server/api/core/bitstreams/e7689bf7-00f0-465b-ad03-e0c56ffb14b1/content
- A blog from our partners at CIAT, Kenya: Water scarcity forcing rural Kenyan women to devise coping mechanisms https://reachwater.uk/water-scarcity-forcing-rural-kenyan-women-to-devise-coping-mechanisms-2/
- Hillesland et al, 2023. Unbundling water and land rights https://reachwater.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Unbundling-water-and-land-rights-in-Kilifi-County-Kenya-a-gender-perspective-1.pdf
- MacArthur et al. 2023. Gender equality approaches in water, sanitation, and hygiene programs: Towards gender-transformative practice https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/water/articles/10.3389/frwa.2023.1090002/full
- MacArthur et al. 2022 Gender-transformative approaches in international development: A brief history and five uniting principles
- Nowicki et al. (2022). Fear, Efficacy, and Environmental Health Risk Reporting: Complex Responses to Water Quality Test Results in Low-Income Communities. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010597
Convenors
Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology
REACH
UNICEF
University of Nairobi
University of Oxford
session_host

speaker









Welcome to the session (3 mins): Lesley Pories, WaterAid, SPC, co-convening team
Youth Keynote (7 mins): Persis Ramirez, OpenHydro/IWA: A Youth-led call to action
Moderator, Tanja Miskova, Ambassador-at-Large for Water Diplomacy at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia
Panel Discussion 1 (27 mins): Identifying efficient Global instruments and frameworks: “What are the global instruments and frameworks for water cooperation?
Panelists include:
- Federico Properzi; Chief Technical Adviser, UN-Water
- Sonja Köppel; Secretary of the Water Convention, UN Economic Commission for Europe
- Nick Hepworth; Director, Water Witness International
Panel Discussion 2 (28 mins): Using and enhancing Global instruments and frameworks: “How do national and regional actors apply these global instruments and frameworks in practice?”
Panelists include:
- Ms Barbara Pompili, Special Envoy of the President of France for the One Water Summit
- Hon Liana Kakhobwe Chapota, MP., Deputy Minister of Water, Malawi
- Ashkat Orazbay, Chairman, Executive Committee of the International Fund for Saving the Aral Sea (IFAS)
- Andy Roby, Senior Water Security Adviser at the Foreign Commonwealth and
- Development Office (FCDO), United Kingdom
Q&A (10 mins): Moderated by Tanja Miskova
Summary and Closing of the session (3 mins): Moderator, Tanja Miskova
Closing of the Seminar Series (7 mins): Yogita Mumssen, Practice Manager, Global Water Practice, World Bank
session_host










speaker






Moderator

Summary
How can we establish a robust, cohesive global governance system for water stewardship? How can we bridge the gap between leading voluntary initiatives and the more comprehensive regulatory frameworks set by policymakers? In this session, we will delve into the collaboration across various water stewardship initiatives, examining how we can expand these efforts to align with international standards. Additionally, we will discuss the role of international standards in amplifying voluntary actions.
Session Description
The urgency and importance of achieving results in water stewardship are now unmistakable. Ambitious innovations in this field are emerging through growing voluntary initiatives, encouraging businesses and investors to address water risks, report on water use, and exemplify good practices across the sector.
There is a growing recognition that international standards can accelerate the adoption of best practices by codifying and sequencing actions, giving regulators a ready benchmark for how rules can operationalize alignment in water stewardship. International standard-setting bodies, play a crucial role in working across initiatives to build trust, de-risk investments, and accelerate action. These standards can also leverage the extensive network of national standards bodies and regulators.
This session will explore the potential for connecting this expanding ecosystem of voluntary water stewardship initiatives to drive collective impact. We will present current challenges and future prospects in water stewardship alignment, with leading standard-setting organizations. We will discuss how international standards can contribute to the global transition to water security by aligning businesses and investors with best practices.
Programme
Content
Martin Townsend (Growth Director) - BSI
- Welcome – The international standards system
Leslie Morris-Iveson – BSI
- Water Secure World - bringing international standards to water stewardship
Lucie Gerber / Quantis
- Situation description and development of the WBCSD FAN
Christina Malin – South Pole
- Interoperability and challenges of practicality
Scott McCready – Alliance for Water Stewardship
- The future of water stewardship
Virginia Newton-Lewis – Grundfos
- Q&A, reflections + next steps
Files
Convenors
British Standards Institute
Grundfos Holding A/S
speaker




session_host

Summary
Join our session to explore how cross-sector collaborations can fortify water resilience and promote climate preparedness even in the midst of conflict. Engage with real-world case studies, sector experts and a Q&A to drive transformative discussions.
Session Description
In this thought-provoking session, we will explore the intricate nexus between conflict, water security, and economic resilience through water-related investments, institutional capacity building and integrated resource management. How can we leverage integrated cross-sector collaborations to enhance resilience from the devastating impacts of armed conflict on water systems? Amidst escalating climate challenges, what innovative, proactive measures can we practice to improve human security in conflict-affected settings? How do innovative solutions and strategies enhance resilience in managing water resources and supporting economic stability in settings affected by armed conflict?
Join us for this analytical round table discussion, reflecting on real-world case study examples and transformative, practical solutions. As the culminating session of this seminar series, our discussion will integrate and extend the themes explored in previous sessions, pointing the discussion toward the final question: “What can we actually DO now in active armed conflict situations to promote water and climate resilience?” We will also incorporate dedicated Q&A segments, providing you with the opportunity to pose your most pressing questions and engage directly with experts, fostering a deeper dialogue and exchange of ideas on these critical issues.
Programme
Agenda:
0-5 mins - Seminar topic and recap from Session 2
5-10 mins - Introduction to Session 3 - Sandra Ruckstuhl, IWMI - Chair
10-20 mins - Keynote - Mark Smith, IWMI
20-55 mins - Panel:
Ingrid Temboe, AGWA - Moderator
Callist Tindimugaya, Ministry of Water and Environment of Uganda
Andrew Harper, UNHCR
Sadi Ali, Palestinian Water Authority
Shambhavi Priyam, World Bank
Solomie Gebrezgabher, IWMI
55-75 mins - Q&A / Discussions
75-90 mins - Closing of Session 3 and Seminar by all Chairs - Dhesigen Naidoo, ISS Africa; Caroline Pellaton, Geneva Water Hub; Sandra Ruckstuhl, IWMI
Desired impact and session outcomes:
This session is designed to steer the discourse towards an understanding and critique of effective solutions and actionable insights to fortifying water systems and building resilience in armed conflict settings. We aim to ensure outcomes that will catalyse cross-sectoral collaboration among audience members. Our session will demonstrate how integrated approaches can ensure the resilience of water systems in armed conflict and enhance the climate adaption of communities, aligning with SDGs 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation), 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities), 13 (Climate Action), and 16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions). We hope to ignite further interest in the usefulness of research for development and climate adaptation initiatives in fragile, conflict and migration (FCM) settings. Participants will leave equipped with the knowledge to leverage global and local resources effectively.
Audience engagement:
The Q&A segments will encourage direct interaction with our roundtable experts, enhancing participation and deepening the discussion on these critical issues with the audience.
Prior knowledge: The session does not require any prior knowledge, however, participants will benefit from a perspective that focuses on humanitarian and development practice in the field, and tangible social, economic, environmental and climate adaptation in these situations.
Learning outcomes participants will gain:
Participants will learn about the economic impacts of conflicts on water systems, but more importantly, they will gain an understanding in the proactive measures that can be adopted to enable strengthened resilience among individuals living in conflict-affected settings. This session enriches knowledge in achieving several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities), SDG 13 (Climate Action), and SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions). The session will equip attendees with examples of past and concurrent climate adaptation strategies adopted to enhance economic resilience and water security in conflict-affected settings, fostering a comprehensive understanding of these complex challenges.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Geneva Water Hub
ISS Africa
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
session_host




speaker







Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
speaker



session_host

Summary
This session will highlight perspectives of youth on transboundary water management in West Africa, Europe and North America. Successful examples of youth engagement in transboundary water management processes will be presented and pathways for collaboration will be discussed.
Session Description
Over the last years and months, the world's population has been faced with immense challenges, from both the accelerating effects of climate change and the resurgence of conflicts in various parts of the world. Since the adoption of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 2250 on Youth, Peace, and Security in 2015, Member States are urged to set up mechanisms to enable young people to participate meaningfully in peace processes and dispute resolution.
In this international context, the importance of significantly including young people – who make up most of the population in many countries – in transboundary water management processes has increasingly been elevated as a pillar of sustainable and long-lasting agreements (Troell and Yaari, 2019).
As the frequency of water-related conflicts escalates, leading to the deprivation of this vital resource among populations, a growing number of young individuals are stepping up, actively engaging, and advocating for water and peace. In some cases, transboundary water issues are a source of conflict. But most importantly, transboundary water issues are a means of cooperation, collaboration and peacebuilding. Rather than viewing emerging challenges as inevitable, some passionate young advocates for water are examining the factors that could facilitate win-win collaborations among riparian states and initiating tangible projects to address them.
This session will thus aim to present successful examples of youth engagement in transboundary water management processes.
Programme
1. Introduction remarks (5min): Sarah Dousse, Executive Director, International Secretariat for Water (ISW)
2. Setting the scene: The role of youth on transboundary water management (7min) : Basilio Ghisletta, Policy and Law Programme Manager, Geneva Water Hub & Anesa Clokovic, World Youth Parliament for Water
3. Intergenerational panel discussion (50 min)
Henry Pitts, USA Focal Point, North American Youth Parliament for Water
René Bayili, President, Burkina Faso Youth Parliament for Water
Nadira Mukhamejan, Coordinator, Swiss Water Partnership Youth
Natasha Carmi, Senior Water-Peace Programme Manager, Geneva Water Hub (TBC.)
Janine Kuriger, Head of Section Water, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (TBC.)
Sonja Koeppel, Secretary of the Water Convention and co-Secretary of the Protocol on Water and Health, UNECE (TBC.)
Moderators: Lynn Porta, North American Youth Parliament for Water & Coline Arnoux, International Secretariat for Water
4. Q&A with audience (20 min)
5. Wrap up and closing (5min) – Teddy Katongo, President, World Youth Parliament for Water
Files
Convenors
Burkina Faso National Youth Parliament for Water
Central Asia Youth for Water Network
Geneva Water Hub
International Secretariat for Water
North American Youth Parliament for Water
Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Swiss Water Partnership Youth
World Youth Parliament for Water
speaker







Moderator

session_host


Summary
Overview of how companies are investing in technologies that scale the impact of water stewardship programs. Two conversations within this 90 minute session will detail how innovative technologies can enhance replenishment outcomes and replenishment project monitoring.
Session Description
This session will detail how partnerships between corporate water stewards like Amazon and leading water organizations are building technologies that accelerate progress on WASH (SDG6) and watershed restoration efforts around the world. There will be two panel conversations in this 90-minute session. The first will focus on how Water.org and Stroud Water Research Center are using the cloud to enhance their efforts to expand water access and optimize watershed restoration efforts, respectively. Water.org will demonstrate a Learning Management System they have developed with Amazon Web Services to accelerate training of microfinance institutions and thereby provide more loans for water and sanitation around the world. This is estimated to bring clean water to an additional 5M people over 10 years. The Stroud Water Research Center will discuss how they are expanding the functionality and geographic scope of the Model My Watershed tool in ways that allow funders and practitioners to optimize investments in watershed restoration efforts.The second panel conversation will show how Amazon and WaterPlan are deploying innovations in replenishment project monitoring to enhance the credibility of volumetric benefit claims.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Amazon Web Services
Stroud Water Research Center
Waterplan
Water.org
speaker




session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
UNICEF West and Central Africa Regional Office
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
session_host

Summary
Integrated Strategies for Effective Shared Water Resources Management
Session Description
This interactive workshop will explore strategies for transboundary water cooperation, conflict resolution, and governance improvement. It aims to facilitate a science-policy interface, bringing together policymakers, NGOs, experts, and practitioners to discuss actionable solutions for managing shared water resources and building peace.
Key topics to be discussed during this session include:
- Freshwater Security in Fragile Regions: Building peace and cooperation through water-peace-security initiatives.
- Climate Resilient Transboundary Water Management: Shared strategies for managing flood and drought risks and building climate resilience across borders and sectors.
- Inclusive Sharing of Water Resources: Ensuring no one is left behind, with a focus on rural communities.
- Ecologically Sustainable Water Management: The role of nature-based solutions in sustainable water resource management.
- Water-Food-Energy Nexus: Using this nexus as a tool for cooperation on shared transboundary waters.
Programme
- Welcome and Opening by Anders Jägerskog, Program Manager of the Cooperation in International Waters in Africa (CIWA) and Focal Point for Transboundary Water, World Bank
- Keynote and Scene-Setting by Birgit Vogel, Executive Secretary, ICPDR (tbc)
- Interactive Roundtable Discussions (two rounds of 30 mins each) on the topics as listed above
- Results from discussions in plenary and Closing by Harm Duel, Department Head Water Resources and Delta Management, Deltares.
Files
Convenors
- Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
- ACTO
- Deltares
- IDB
- MEDRC
- SDC
- World Bank
session_host






speaker






Summary
Drawing on lessons learned from the protracted Israeli-Palestinian conflict, this session will explore opportunities for leveraging water as a tool for peacebuilding and propose actionable strategies for using sustainable water management to lay the groundwork for lasting peace in Gaza and the West Bank.
Session Description
The session will discuss the historic developments of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the lens of water resources. It will review the missed opportunities and lessons learned since the establishment of the Joint Water Committee at the Oslo Accords as the entity responsible for coordinating management of water resources. The session will analyze the reasons for its failure in securing sustainable water resources for Palestinians. The session will also discuss the role of water in the conflict in Gaza and explore opportunities for leveraging water resources as a tool for peacebuilding. The session will also review the water gap between West Bank and Gaza and Israel, which has widened as a result of the decreasing control over the water resources in West Bank and Gaza and the role of service providers in addressing the increasing demand and securing quality water supply and sanitation at an affordable price. Building institutions is necessary to deliver better services, but the constraints in increasing the bulk water supply, collection, treatment and reuse of wastewater may prevent West Bank and Gaza from achieving SDG 6 of ensuring availability and sustainable management of water and
Programme
Files
Convenors
Palestinian Water Authority (PWA)
Coastal Municipalities Water Utility (Gaza)
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
World Bank Group
speaker






session_host



Moderator

Summary
Groundwater plays an increasingly important role in food and water security. To ensure equity, sustainability and prosperity, active management is urgently needed. This session presents groundwater policies and active management cases from Brazil, Ethiopia, Pakistan and the US and identifies entry points for collaborative action to prevent conflict.
Session Description
Over the last two decades, groundwater development has become a key resource for accelerating agricultural and overall economic growth, achieving food and water security, and ensuring climate resilience. However, little is known about local groundwater availabilities; extraction levels surpass recharge volumes in a growing number of locations; and both groundwater policies and active management are either entirely missing or badly lacking in most regions depending on this resource.
This session brings together policy makers, researchers, and practitioners from some of the world’s largest food producers to discuss challenges and opportunities for active groundwater management and key elements of successful groundwater policies. This includes policies and tools to support the knowledge, motivations, and mechanisms needed to govern and manage groundwater.
Case studies include the US, which has made dramatic strides with active groundwater management, Brazil, one of the world’s largest food producers in Latin America, Ethiopia, a major food producing country in Africa, and Pakistan, a country particularly affected by groundwater depletion. The session aims to synthesize active groundwater management strategies that have been successfully used in these locations and to identify key elements that should be incorporated in successful groundwater policies that are sustainable and support collaboration and peace.
Programme
16.00-16.05: Moderator Nicole Lefore: Introduction to the session
16.06-16.11: Claudia Ringler, IFPRI: The benefits and perils of active groundwater management: global food security implications
16.12-16.19: Thomas Harter, Professor, UC Davis: An overview on active groundwater management in the US
16.20-16.27: Mohsin Hafeez, Director, Water, Food and Ecosystems: Active groundwater management in Pakistan’s Punjab Province
16.28-16.35: Christopher Neale, Director of Policy, Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute: Use of Climate Modeling and Remote Sensing to Inform Governance of Irrigated Agricultural Expansion in Mato Grosso, Brasil
16.36-16.43: Darren Siekman, Vice President, Policy & Industry Strategy, Valley Irrigation: Building University-Industry Collaborations to Improve Irrigation Decision Making and Support Groundwater Management
16.44-16.51: Hagar ElDidi, IFPRI: Groundwater governance in Ethiopia: An input to active groundwater management?
16.52-17.17: Policy Panel: Representatives of SADC (Southern African Development Community): Kevin Pietersen, BGR (The Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources): Ramon Brentführer and IFPRI (International Food Policy Research Institute): Ruth Meinzen-Dick
Files
Ending groundwater overdraft without affecting food security. Nature Sustainability https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-024-01376-w
Getting Ahead of the Game: Experiential Learning for Groundwater Governance in Ethiopia. International Journal of the Commons, 18(1), pp. 66–81. https://doi.org/10.5334/ijc.1316
NEXUS Gains Annual report https://cgspace.cgiar.org/items/3514ec17-9c0a-4a47-b9eb-902ccc193518
DWFI resources: https://waterforfood.nebraska.edu/
Convenors
Federal University of Vicosa
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture
International Food Policy Research Institute
Minas Gerais
Ministry of Water and Energy
Robert B. Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute at the University of Nebraska
Valmont Industries
Moderator

speaker










Summary
The Tibetan Plateau is headwaters of South and Southeast Asia's major rivers and is integral to water scarcity and building peace in the region. The panel will explore ecological, socio-economic, and human rights issues related to the region’s water management and provide cautionary native peoples' case studies. We also will offer successful evidence-based, cooperative planning tools to demonstrate how these lenses offer integrated paradigms to foster greater peace, knowledge and prosperity.
Session Description
The scope of the Tibetan Plateau’s importance to water scarcity and tensions over water rights in South and Southeast Asia is impossible to overstate. The source of the region’s major rivers, Tibet is vital to sustainability, socio- economic justice, and peace for nearly 1.8 billion people. Within this frame, the panel will discuss an overlay of three perspectives to illuminate deeper insight into the Tibetan Plateau.
This will include analysis of Tibet’s ecology, risks associated with continued large-scale development, including hydroelectric dams and mining, and the relevance of Tibetan traditional knowledge systems. Cautionary case studies illustrating the harm to the environment and native peoples' cultures of unfettered development also will be broached. As well, novel solution sets that support functional ecosystems, protect communities — especially low income and women’s rights — will be demonstrated, especially those that can function in a carbon constrained world.
Panelists include International Campaign for Tibet's Palmo Tenzin, M.A., Dr. Marina Mautner from the Stockholm Environment Institute, and Ghoóch Tlâ Colleen James, a Tlingit of the Daklaweidi (Killer Whale) clan, and a citizen of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation.
Programme
Program:
Representing the International Campaign for Tibet, Palmo Tenzin will present on the Tibetan riparian system, ecology, proliferation of hydropower dams, and its impacts on human rights and the environment both within Tibet and downstream. She also will address the importance of traditional knowledge and inclusive input.
Dr. Marina Mautner of the Stockholm Environment Institute will provide insight into the benefits of evidence-based tools and participatory processes for water planning to unite competing interests towards cooperation. She will discuss the data and methods that have been used in select case studies to allocate and monitor limited water supplies to support better decision-making and promote stability.
Ghoóch Tlâ Colleen James, a Tlingit of the Daklaweidi (Killer Whale) clan, and a citizen of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation. Ghoóch Tlâ means wolf mother, and James is a mother, a grandmother and a great-grandmother. She will speak to the importance of fostering our connections with animals, protecting the land and water, and recognizing their importance as integral to all our relationships. James also will share the story of unfettered development’s impact on her people’s environment and way of life.
Following the presentations, the floor will be open to an extended dialogue with the panelists.
We hope you will join us is exploring potential new paradigms for thinking about water, knowledge, and peace, and that together we will leave inspired to further explore and pursue novel research and advocacy.
Files
Convenors
International Campaign for Tibet
Moderator

speaker


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
USAID URBAN WASH
USAID Western Kenya Water Project
USAID/KEA
Moderator

speaker

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
International Water Management Institute
SADC Groundwater Management Institute
speaker










Summary
The session objectives are to present robust scientific evidence and showcase technical solutions and their integration to the WEFE Nexus and transboundary water management, share lessons learned and create a common understanding of challenges and scaling opportunities in applying WEFE Nexus technical solutions to enhance cooperation in national/cross-sectoral and cross-boundary levels.
The session should also contribute to an enhanced understanding of the potential transboundary implications of any water-related intervention, such as WEFE Nexus applications, conducted unilaterally in shared water resources.
Session Description
The implementation of WEFE Nexus approaches in riparian countries may enhance water use efficiency, integrating the water needs of different sectors, and can therefore be beneficial to transboundary water cooperation in the case of shared water resources.
WEFE Nexus solutions include a variety of technical innovations and interventions that benefit at least two of the four WEFE Nexus sectors while ensuring positive impact and outcomes for all sectors. These include a range of technical applications to improve the management of water resources, improve use efficiency, increase crop productivity, or mobilize alternative sources of water to increase availability. These applications involve small to medium-scale interventions at the local level, or larger-scale, multi-purpose infrastructures, like solar-irrigation systems, multi-purpose dams, and wastewater treatment plants with resource recovery.
Sharing water resources, be it either surface or groundwater, between countries requires transboundary water cooperation. WEFE Nexus solutions that impact such shared water resources may have a transboundary effect. Cooperation on such solutions is therefore necessary to avoid conflicts on different levels.
This session aims at contributing to an enhanced understanding of the transboundary challenges and chances of the WEFE Nexus, by hearing inputs on technical solutions and a panel discussion.
Programme
5 minutes
Session opening:
Barbara Gerhager, Head of Section, Competence Center Water, Wastewater, Waste Management, GIZ
20 minutes
Keynotes Speaker(s):
Dr. Mohsin Hafeez, Strategic Program Director of Water-Food and Ecosystems, IWMI
Dr. Stefan Uhlenbrook, Director Hydrology, Water and Cryosphere, WMO Moderator:
Dr. Maha Al-Zu’bi, Regional Researcher, IWMI
60 minutes
Presentation (Technical Solutions):
Presentation 1: Roland Bäumle, Senior Hydrogeologist, BGR
Presentation 2: Sid Vollebregt, Co-Founder, Elemental Water Makers
Panel Session:
Panelist 1: Dr. Youssef Brouziyne, Regional Representative & CGIAR Water System Lead in the MENA region, IWMI
Panelist 2: Dr. Stefan Uhlenbrook, Director, Water and Climate Coalition Secretariat at WMO
Panelist 3: Dieter Rothenberger, Cluster Coordinator, Global Water and Sanitation Programmes, GIZ
Panelist 4: Diane S Arjoon, Principal Rural Water Security Officer, African Water Facility
Panelist 5: Samar Al Kreidy, Youth Ambassador, Blue Peace Middle East.
Q and A Moderator: Dr. Juan Carlos Sanchez Ramirez, Research Group Leader - Water Governance and Political Economy, IWMI
5 minutes
Wrap-up and Closing
Barbara Gerhager, Head of Section, Competence Center Water, Wastewater, Waste Management, GIZ
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Veolia
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
GIZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH
session_host





speaker





Moderator

Summary
This session addresses challenges in providing quality water services in low and middle-income countries. Drawing insights from Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Ghana, it explores policy options to bridge coverage gaps. The panel brings together government actors, development partners, and impact investors to discuss effective macroeconomic and regulatory environments for public-private collaboration.
Session Description
Many low and middle-income countries, particularly fragile and conflict-affected countries, continue to struggle to provide cost-effective, quality water services at scale. This gap is due to multiple challenges, including lack of capital for expanding water infrastructure, especially to reach vulnerable and remote areas, tariffs far below cost-recovery levels, and limited capacity to manage water services efficiently. In many cases, there is a potential role for the private sector in providing capital and capacity for effective service delivery. This session will discuss practical policy options that can help equip the public sector to work with the private sector to solve the water coverage gap.
The session will start with an overview of experiences in three countries (Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Ghana), which will highlight the opportunities and challenges in engaging the private sector in water services. These presentations will provide the background for a panel discussion with the audience on the role of public actors, development partners, and impact investors in shaping the macroeconomic, policy, and regulatory environment needed to engage the private sector effectively.
Programme
1. Introduction and Welcome: The session will begin with an introduction to the topic, objectives, panelists, and audience; as well as with a general overview of the challenges in water service delivery in low and middle-income countries.
2. Challenges and Insights for Water Services Provision: Experiences from Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Ghana. The presentations will draw insights into successful strategies, risks, challenges, and innovative solutions in engaging the private sector to participate in the provision of quality water services in resource-constrained contexts, drawing from experiences in Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Ghana. The Stone Family Foundation, Mercy Corps, and Ecopsis will share insights and innovative solutions from their work in these countries.
3. Uniting Efforts: Advancing Private Sector Engagement for Sustainable Water Services. A panel of representatives from governments, the private sector, and impact investors will discuss effective strategies for public-private collaboration. The conversation will cover their role in shaping the macroeconomic, political, and regulatory environment necessary for effectively engaging the private sector, considering anticipated challenges and risks, strategies for standardizing approaches and contracts in water sector partnerships, and exploring regional opportunities in Africa and Asia. Audience participation will be encouraged through an interactive tool, fostering a dynamic dialogue.
4. Closing: The session will conclude with a recap of key points, lessons learned, and final comments from the audience. A summary of key takeaways and potential next steps will be presented, along with concrete actions to drive transformative changes in water service delivery, encouraging continued dialogue and collaboration beyond the session.
Convenors
Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
Ecopsis
Maple
Mercy Corps
The Stone Family Foundation
Uduma
Aqua for All
speaker







session_host


Moderator

Summary
Building on the previous two sessions, Session 3 aims to contextualize water diplomacy in the current climate through case studies.
Session Description
There is no better way to understand water diplomacy in action than by delving into examples. Each study will provide an overview of the context: the specific problem and its uniqueness, stakeholders involved and their interests and priorities. They will explore relevant aspects of the process, how the problem was approached and which tools were used, before giving a status update: the results of efforts thus far, expectations for the future, and what might be learned or applied to future issues.
Programme
Experts will present a diverse set of case studies from across the globe: Jordan-Israel, Botswana-Namibia-South Africa, Ecuador-Peru and Kenya-Uganda.
There will be an opportunity for participants to choose three case study roundtables to dive into, before a joint reflection and series conclusion.
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
EcoPeace Middle East
session_host




speaker








Summary
This event will present the results of the integrated process of collecting country data on the SDG 6 global indicators in 2023. Participants will have an opportunity to discuss results and lessons learned with UN custodian agencies and country representatives and their implications for policymaking and acceleration toward achieving SDG 6.
Session Description
To follow-up on and review progress towards SDG 6 it is important to know the status of water and sanitation at multiple points in time. To support countries in monitoring water- and sanitation-related issues, and to report on global progress towards SDG 6, in 2014 UN-Water launched the Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 6, which includes the eight UN agencies who are the custodians of the eleven SDG 6 indicators. During 2023, the focus of the Initiative was on working with Member States to generate, compile and analyse data for SDG 6 and all its global indicators, and in this session, the 2023 results will be presented. Participants will have an opportunity to discuss these results with UN custodian agencies, to share lessons from the process, and to consider how these data can be used for policymaking and to accelerate progress toward achieving SDG 6 as well as toward other SDGs. Objectives: - To inform about the capacity building and data collection process for SDG 6 - To present 2023 data on the SDG 6 global indicators - To discuss the implications of the findings and opportunities using the data for policymaking and for acceleration toward the SDG 6 targets
Programme
Session moderator:
Ms. Maggie Kossida, UN-Water
11:00 Welcome and Introduction to UN-Water Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 6 [15 min]
Presenter:
Mr. Will Reidhead, UN-Water
11:15 Key findings on SDG 6 targets [40 min]
Presenters:
Mr. Rick Johnston, WHO
Ms. Dianna Kopansky, UNEP
Ms. Patricia Mejias Moreno, FAO
Ms. Sonja Koeppel, UNECE
Mr. Bruce Gordon, WHO
11:55 Q&A [20 min]
Moderated by UN-Water
12:15 Concluding comments on importance of data in decisionmaking [15 min]
· Ms. Nancy Eslick, the Global Water Coordinator, United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
· Ms. Miriam Haritz, Deputy Director General, German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV)
Files
Convenors
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
UN Environment Programme
UN Habitat
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
UN-Water
World Health Organization
World Meteorological Organization
session_host

Moderator

speaker






Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
This session explores innovative strategies for transboundary water management in the Latin America and the Caribbean region, focusing on science, technology, and cooperation to address water challenges.
Session Description
This session focuses on innovation and technology for the management of transboundary water resources in Latin American and the Caribbean. It highlights the crucial role of innovation and new collaborative mechanisms to address climate change and water management issues through the presentation of case studies and practices. Participants will explore how cross-border data gathering, information exchange, analysis, and decision support tools serve as catalysts for cooperation, emphasizing the synergy between policy, local scientific efforts, and academic contributions in supporting shared water management strategies. The discussion will delve into how innovation can be instrumental for managing ecological-socio-economic systems, identifying mutual interests, and overcoming barriers such as limited state capacity, and resource constraints. Integral to the conversation will be the principles of rights-based development and the vital contribution of youth, ensuring a comprehensive and forward-looking discourse. By showcasing practical examples of how science, technology, and new collaborative mechanisms contribute to achieving SDG 6.5 and 6.5.2, this session will offer a holistic vision for the sustainable and resilient management of transboundary water resources.
Programme
Introduction and objectives
- Ana Laura Elizondo, FEMSA Foundation
Let’s talk about innovation
- Anamaria Nunez, IDB
Importance of innovation in climate resilience for management and financing in transboundary waters
- Dr. Bapon Fakhruddin
Case studies
- Carlos Ortuño, General Secretary, CIC
- Juliana Corrales, RTI International
- Silvia Benitez, TNC
- Verónica Ríos, UNDP
- Andrea Yañez, FEMSA Foundation
Conversation with case studies experts
- Moderated by Andrés Sanchez, OAS
???????Conclusions and Call to action
Closing Remarks, Focus on the Americas 2024
- Sergio Campos, IDB
Files
Convenors
Organization of American States
Inter-American Development Bank
Argentine Water and Sanitation
FEMSA Foundation
RTI International
The Nature Conservancy
United Nations Development Programme
speaker







session_host


Moderator


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
WaterAid
Wayuu Indigenous Communities
session_host

speaker

Summary
Current approaches to macroeconomic planning, forecasting, and development are insufficient at addressing the dynamic and uncertain nature of climate change, and its impact on natural resources such as water. This session will explore a novel approach for economic planning that builds around water as the currency for resilience across sectors.
Session Description
The past two decades have seen macroeconomic shocks and stresses ranging from currency crises to a global pandemic and mortgage-backed security failures. Adding to this complexity is the emergence of climate change, whose impacts are now driving significant losses across political borders and economic sectors. While engineers and planners have made progress on de-risking particular investments, resilience has not matured into an economic objective that can help guide countries and sectors to persist and even thrive in a dynamic, evolving climate. Prevailing economic models treat water as a fixed input rather than a shared, dynamic flow, ignoring the potential systemic risks as new and unforeseen conditions emerge. One of the insights emerging from groups such as the IPCC is that “water-based adaptation” is a strategic approach for promoting coherence, coordination, and efficacy for resilient programs, policies, and projects across sectors. Rather than treating water as one hazard among many, we propose water as the currency for resilience in economic planning. Is economic resilience preconditioned on water resilience? This session will explore new interventions and launch a multi-stakeholder and multi-discipline discussion about solutions that meet the scope of the fragility changes we now face.
Programme
Opening Remarks - Niels Vlaanderen, Netherlands Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management
Brief Case Studies
- California Investing Now to Forestall Climate Change’s Worst Water Impacts - Felicia Marcus, Stanford University
- Case Study - South Africa: The Resilient Transition - Diego Rodriguez, World Bank
- Case Study - Water Resilience for Economic Resilience in Spain: A Critical Crossroads - Carlos Mario Gomez, IMDEA Agua, University of Alcalá
Financial Materiality, Risk, and Resilience - Lylah Davies, OECD
Audience Q&A | Lead Moderator - Sophie Trémolet, OECD
Updates from the Global Commission on the Economics of Water - Henk Ovink, Global Commission on the Economics of Water
Closing Remarks - John Matthews, Alliance for Global Water Adaptation
Files
Convenors
Alliance for Global Water Adaptation
Government of The Netherlands
World Bank Group
speaker





Moderator


session_host

Summary
Increased investment in permanent water supplies have allowed pastoralist families to settle, access services more easily and reduced women's burden and insecurity fetching water. But with increasing resource scarcity and water salinity can we really say our water interventions are 'building resilience'? The session will explore new evidence from Horn of Africa and ask "How can we do better?"
Session Description
In recent years, parts of the Horn of Africa have seen large investments in the water, sanitation and hygiene sector, or ‘WASH’ as a way to build resilience to droughts. In Kenya alone, investments by civil society organisations increased by over 200% between 2017 and 2019, with a significant proportion focusing on drylands. WASH investments come in many forms and shapes. They include the drilling of new boreholes and rehabilitation of old ones, installation of diesel and solar power systems, water resource management, water trucking, improved sanitation and ‘capacity building’. For many development actors, the premise is that WASH investments such as these enhance the resilience of dryland communities against shocks, including climate-induced shocks such as drought. But are investments in new water supplies in the drylands a solution, or part of the problem? The session will present emerging evidence from Kenya and Ethiopia through videos and slides and give participants an opportunity to exchange ideas with a panel of local experts.
Programme
0-5mins - Welcome and Introduction - Nancy Balfour, Centre for Humanitarian Change
5-10 mins - Setting the scene: a narrated video from Kenya and Ethiopia
10-20 mins - Slides and Q&A - Key findings and conclusions from the study into water and resilience
20-50 mins - Panel and Plenary Discussion - Trade Offs and Inconvenient Truths - Sharing experience on the outcomes of water supply developments in the drylands - Jackson Wachira, Centre for Research and Development in the Drylands; Masresha Taye, Independent Consultant; Hussein Tadicha, Centre for Research and Development in the Drylands
50-60 mins - Closing remarks and results of the photo caption competition
Files
Convenors
SPARC Knowledge
speaker



session_host

moderator

Summary
This session will discuss the challenges and opportunities for mobilizing resources to support countries and decision makers in their work towards transboundary water cooperation and basin development.
Session Description
This session will dive into the crucial role of innovative funding and financing mechanisms for sustainable management of transboundary resources. Over two-thirds of Latin America and the Caribbean is covered by shared water sources, vital for nearly half the region's population. Managing and developing these transboundary resources requires significant funding. However, current financial constraints on cooperation and management threaten the sustainable use of these water bodies, potentially jeopardizing regional stability and peace. In this context, this session will i) provide a space for discussion about the financial needs for transboundary water management and basin development and the role of transboundary cooperation as enabler of transboundary investments and access to finance; ii) highlight the importance of developing innovative financing mechanisms and instruments that enhance the value of public sector spending by involving the private sector; and iii) build on ecosystem services through exploring novel approaches such as green infrastructure and the mainstreaming of nature-based solutions and ecosystem services to allow the application of different methods for optimization of water use in basins.
Programme
Opening
- Franz Rojas, Director de Agua y Saneamiento de CAF
Keynote
- Susanne Schmeier, Associate Professor of Water Law and Diplomacy, Head of the Water Governance Department, Courtesy Faculty Member, Oregon State University (OSU), Global Environment Facility (GEF) Scientific and Technical Advisor Panel Member for International Waters
Presentations - Cases and Challenges
- "NADBank: An Institution focused on binational cooperation for the U.S.-Mexico Border." M. E. E. Salvador López, Chief Environmental Officer, NADBANK
- Mario Velasquez, Water for People
- Todd Gartner, Director, Cities4Forests & Natural Infrastructure Initiative (WRI)
- Christopher Husbands, Coordinator, CWUIC SP
- “Sustainable Financing in the Guaraní Aquifer”, Alberto Manganelli, Executive Director, CEREGAS
Conversation with experts
- Astrid Hillers, Senior Environmental Specialist, International Waters, GEF
- Ana Laura Elizondo, Head of Water Security, Fundación FEMSA
- Silvia Chávez Cereceda, Manager for International Cooperation, CONAGUA.
Files
Convenors
CAF - Development Bank of Latin America
Inter-American Development Bank
CONAGUA - National Water Commission, Mexico
FEMSA Foundation
Water For People
speaker









Moderator

session_host




Summary
Stubborn chemicals and antimicrobial resistance are pervasive in our current water cycle, presenting an unknown risk to the environment and human health. In this workshop, we highlight innovative, technical mitigation solutions with a focus on implementation strategies that can help to ensure a water-safe and sustainable future.
Session Description
The increasing release of man-made substances into water bodies poses severe threats to human health and the environment. Pollutants originating from all sectors of society, as well as everyday products like pharmaceuticals and personal care items contribute to this problem. Moreover, we also see proliferation of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) that is contaminating water resources at alarming levels. Existing wastewater treatment technologies cannot reduce these compounds sufficiently and sustainably.This session will present solutions for how innovative solutions can help to secure safe water. Innovative mitigation technologies developed by 6 research projects as part of a three-year ERA-NET cooperation to address contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) and AMR will be presented, along with ecotoxicological assessments and regulatory aspects. We aim to increase awareness of the problem of CECs and AMR and show which mitigation technologies are available to help stakeholder communities find appropriate solutions for their problems. Discussions will guide stakeholders in selecting appropriate treatment options and navigating implementation challenges, considering factors like climate change robustness and full-scale implementation. Audience engagement will be encouraged through an online survey, culminating in a 15-minute panel discussion. Join us to explore cutting-edge solutions to bridge borders towards a water-safe, peaceful and sustainable future.
Programme
14:00
Session Opening: Katie Carter (DECHEMA e.V., coordinator of APTransNet)
14:05
Setting the Scene - Context of 6 Research Projects on Mitigation Technologies for CECs & AMR: Lars Österlund (Uppsala University, coordinator of GreenWaterTech), Nanette Zahrtmann (B4C ApS; partner of NanoTheC-Aba)
14:15
Different Water Scenarios Afford Specific Technologies to Remove CECs: Paola Verlicchi (University of Ferrara; parnter of SERPIC)
14:30
Exploitation & Implementation - Stakeholder Engagement & Transfer: Tiina Leiviskä (University of Oulu; coordinator of REWA)
14:45
Panel Discussion and Audience Q&A
Moderator: Katie Carter (DECHEMA e.V.)
Panel Experts: Lars Österlund (Uppsala University), Nanette Zahrtmann (B4C ApS), Jan Gäbler (Fraunhofer IST, coordinator of SERPIC), Víctor Matamoros (IDAEA- CSIC; coordinator of NATURE), Henrik Rasmus Andersen (Technical University of Denmark; partner of PRESAGE)
Files
Convenors
B4C ApS
DECHEMA e.V.
Instituto de Diagnóstico Ambiental y Estudios del Agua (CSIC-IDAEA)
Technical University of Denmark
University of Ferrara
University of Oulu
Uppsala University
speaker








Moderator

Summary
This workshop aims to explore strategies for attracting private investment in the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) sector in developing markets. By leveraging game theory and strategic discussions, participants will identify innovative financing models and actionable solutions to advance SDG6.
Session Description
A world with secure and sustainable access to WASH services for all requires mobilizing diverse yet interdependent stakeholders. This session delves into the critical challenge of attracting private capital into the WASH sector of developing markets, proposing out-of-the-box perspectives from practitioners in the Global South. Through first-hand stories and interactive dialogue with the audience, speakers will walk us through the challenges and opportunities for investors; how entrepreneurs and investors are navigating through imperfect ecosystems to achieve financial sustainability; and how they are structuring investments to provide sustainable financing for SMEs in WASH. The dialogue will foster understanding of market dynamics, risk mitigation strategies, and innovative financing models to achieve SDG6.
Programme
1. Welcome and Introduction
Carolina Latorre, WASTE
2. Set the Scene: Spotlight Session
Speakers:
Anton Jantunen, SHF
Namita Banka, Banka BioLoo
Insights from speakers' perspectives on the challenges and opportunities in attracting private capital to the WASH sector.
3. Interactive Game Theory Panel
Scenarios and Speakers:
Namita Banka, Banka BioLoo (Speaker for all scenarios)
- Scenario 1: Criteria and Enablers for Investors
- Sylvia Giezeman, Cardano
Suresh K. Krishna, YSB/Take a Stake Fund - Scenario 2: Enabling Environment for Entrepreneurship
- Alexander Rostami, UNICEF
Anton Jantunen, SHF - Scenario 3: Scaling Innovations and Role of Partnerships
- Kajetan Hetzer, WASTE
Esther Shaylor, UNICEF
4. Strategy Development: Roundtable Discussions
- Group 1: Financial Strategies and Risk Management
Facilitators: Sinisa Vukic, Cardano; Alexander Rostami, UNICEF - Group 2: Scaling Up Innovations
Facilitators: Sylvia Giezeman, Cardano; Esther Shaylor, UNICEF; Pamela Bundi, Kenya, FINISH Mondial - Group 3: Entrepreneurial Growth and Market Development
Facilitators: Namita Banka, Banka BioLoo; Suresh K. Krishna, YSB/Take a Stake Fund - Group 4: Enabling Environment
Facilitators: Kajetan Hetzer, WASTE; Anton Jantunen, SHF; Sida (TBC) - Wrap-Up and Sharing
5. Wrap-Up and Next Steps
Carolina Latorre, WASTE
Meet the speakers
Carolina Latorre - Senior Programme Manager, WASTE; Expert, PIR, Water Supply and Sanitation Global Solutions Group, World Bank
Anton Jantunen - Sanitation Markets Specialist, Sanitation and Hygiene Fund (SHF); leads SHF’s sanitation markets activities and portfolio globally
Namita Banka - Founder and Managing Director, Banka BioLoo Limited
Sylvia Giezeman - Portfolio Manager, Impact Investing, Cardano; manages the Financial Inclusion Fund and develops blended finance structures in WASH
Suresh K. Krishna - Chair, Global Leadership Team, Yunus Social Business; Fund Manager, Take a Stake Fund Initiative
Kajetan Hetzer - Director, WASTE; leads the Take a Stake Fund Initiative
Esther Shaylor - Innovation Manager - WASH, UNICEF Sustainable WASH Innovation Hub; scaling innovations and partnerships in WASH
Alexander Rostami - Senior Advisor, Sustainable Financing; Founder and Former Head of Global Innovative Finance Hub, UNICEF
Sinisa Vukic - Lead Portfolio Manager, Cardano
Pamela Bundi - Program Coordinator Kenya, FINISH Mondial, WASTE
Files
Convenors
FINISH Mondial
Sida - Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
WASH Innovation Hub at UNICEF
WASTE
Yunus Social Business
UN's Sanitation and Hygiene Fund (SHF)
speaker










Summary
This session will showcase key tools developed by UNICEF and SIWI to strengthen the evidence base for multiple risk-informed decision making. The Global WASH Sector Resilience Index raises awareness and enhances knowledge about multiple risks, while the conflict-informed approach to climate resilience provides actionable results for priority setting.
Session Description
Evidence grows of increasing changes in the nature, intensity, and frequency of threats to WASH services. Together with underlying social and economic vulnerability, these dynamics act as drivers and multipliers of risks. Achieving sustainable access to services calls for a strong focus on resilience in WASH decision-making. WASH for resilience is a risk-informed decision-making process that requires a good understanding of multiple concurrent threats and risks.
This session will showcase two tools developed by UNICEF and SIWI to support the development of the evidence base for risk-based decision processes. The first tool, the Global WASH Sector Resilience Index (GWSRI), measures the level of WASH sector resilience to multiple risks at the national level, allowing for comparisons between countries and across time. The second tool, the conflict-informed approach to climate resilience, demonstrates the potential for conflict prevention and recovery as a key pathway for climate resilient WASH services.
Programme
- Opening & welcome
- First approach to generate evidence & enhance risk-informed decision-making: the Global WASH Sector Resilience Index (GWSRI)
- Implementation of the GWSRI in the Democratic Republic of Congo
- Second approach to generate evidence & enhance risk-informed decision-making: Conflict-informed approach to climate resilience
- Implementation of the conflict-informed approach to climate resilience in Papua New Guinea
- Panel discussion: Relevance & use of these approaches to strengthen the evidence base and enhance resilience
- Q&A
- Closure
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)
Moderator

speaker







session_host

Summary
The session will discuss how satellite Earth Observation benefits transboundary basin management, focusing on water quantity, quality. Examples will highlight successful integration of EO into management practices, emphasizing stakeholder involvement and capacity-building. Long-term impact includes enhanced water resource management aligned with SDG targets.
Session Description
The session will provide an insight into how satellite Earth Observation can benefit integrated water resource management in transboundary basins. We will focus on two key issues for basin management for which satellite data is particularly relevant: water quantity (river discharge, storage in lakes and reservoirs), and water quality (water color and temperature).
Concrete examples of the use of EO by basin organizations will enable us to share lessons learned on success factors: involving local stakeholders and experts, committing to capacity-building activities, and integrating EO into transdisciplinary, cross-border scientific work to take into account the specificities of each socio-hydrosystem. The advantage of using EO data in transboundary basin management in terms of enabling the obtaining of standardized and comparable data and facilitating transboundary cooperation will also be highlighted. On water quality issues, we selected relevant examples throughout the world. On water quantity and water use issues, we will illustrate how EO can meet the needs of stakeholders in terms of hydrological monitoring and decision-making applications through various case studies conducted in the transboundary basins.
Programme
How water can be observed from space, Delphine Leroux & Nicolas Gasnier, CNES
Water quality over the Amazon basin using satellite observations, Jean-Michel Martinez, IRD
Intergovernmental perspective and world water quality portal, Esra Siltu, UNESCO
Management of the Senegal River transboundary basin, OiEau/International Office for Water, Blaise Dhont
Files
Convenors
Delphine Leroux, CNES (French National Centre for Space Studies)
Nicolas Gasnier, CNES (French National Centre for Space Studies)
Esra Siltu, UNESCO Intergovernmental Hydrological Programme
Blaise Dhont, OiEau (International Office for Water)
session_host




Summary
The session is focused on sharing lessons from practice and showcasing diverse perspectives from First Nation’s Perspectives. Drawing on projects from various regions and areas of water management to highlight collaboration in action. The session unpacks the value of purpose-built teams in effectively navigating across cultures and perspective.
Session Description
Access to clean water is a fundamental human right and something that is intrinsically important to our day-to-day lives. However, we don’t necessarily all view, utilise and think about it in the same way. This session aims to explore methods of effective and meaningful engagement and collaboration to help bring to light these differing perspectives and achieve better outcomes for all. There will be a focus on best practice collaboration methods to understand First Nations knowledge and perspective of water and how we can potentially integrate that with Western knowledge systems and processes. In short, how we can best bridge the barriers in understanding and knowledge systems as they pertain to water management. This will be a 90 minutes session which would involve the presentation of a series of perspectives relating to collaboration and water resource management from First Nations perspectives globally. The session seeks to engage with the audience through interactive discussions and reflections throughout the session.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arup
Griffith University
Southern Ute Indian Tribe
University of Canberra – Centre for Applied Water Science
Indigenous Women’s Leadership Network
Oxfam
speaker





Moderator


Summary
Session Description
Meet the Laureate -
In the presence of the patron of the Stockholm Water Prize, H.M. the King Carl XVI Gustaf, we will recognize this year´s Laureate Professor Taikan Oki. Together with guests onstage in an informal talk about Professor Oki´s work and in connection friends of the Stockholm Water Foundation and the World Water Week.
Professor Oki’s work is based on his world-renowned research on the virtual water trade, digital river mapping, and inclusion of human activity in the water cycle.
Prof. Taikan Oki is an international leader in global hydrology. He has made outstanding scientific contributions to advance our understanding in the nexus of hydrology, climate change and sustainability. And also made significant contributions on global water balance studies, on understanding virtual water flows over the globe, and on the spatial and temporal variability of annually renewable water.
Programme
Files
Convenors
speaker






session_host

Moderator

Summary
Water has never been a more relevant issue. And that’s why it’s never been more important to communicate about water. Throughout World Water Week, Water in Communications hosts a series of inspiring talks and discussions that highlight the crucial role of communication?in societal transformation. Join the conversation and become part of the solution.
Session Description
Session 30009 August 28 at 14:45 -15:15
Increasing the value of water for future generations
The future of humanity depends on whether we will be able to share and manage the planet’s water resources equitably and sustainably. To achieve this, the value of water needs to be understood worldwide, especially by the leaders of tomorrow. However, getting younger generations involved in water can be a tough ask.
Unlocking the full potential of water requires a conscious recognition of its importance and the climatic and anthropological threats it faces. Key population groups also need to be engaged and mobilised to safeguard this precious resource.
The growing global youth population has the potential to accelerate concerted efforts and effectively integrate water’s intrinsic value across all social, economic, cultural, and political spheres. As a young water professional at British Water, Charles Shachinda has a unique perspective on what it takes to build interest in water and water management amongst young people.
CSR Manager at Grundfos India, Apoorva Manichandar, has many years’ experience gained from spearheading Grundfos’ social responsibility initiatives and community engagement programmes including educational modules to increase knowledge about sustainable water practices among the young. She sees considerable potential in bringing in young people’s ideas and perspectives with the aim of building lasting impact by engaging the decision-makers of tomorrow.
At the House of Natural Sciences in Denmark, CEO Maiken Lykke Lolck and her team run an educational programme that bridges academic institutions and wider sections of society such as business and the research community. Young learners from the age of 11 get hands-on experience and understanding of real-life challenges in science and engineering. Water is at the core of the programme, which shows children how they can make a difference.
Water in Communications is a partner programme co-created with the Grundfos Foundation. After the Centre Stage session, we invite you to join the follow-up mingle at the foundation’s booth (4:03). Guests joining online can continue the discussion in the Grundfos Foundation & Co. digital booth.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Grundfos Foundation
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker



session_host

Moderator

Summary
The Water in Business program seeks to inspire and engage the private sector in addressing the world’s water issues. This session will delve deeper into the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) and the actions businesses are taking to accelerate their water, climate and human rights accountability.
Session Description
The second Water in Business panel looks at the forthcoming Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD). The impacts caused by companies’ supply chains can no longer be ignored. The CSDDD will require companies to integrate due diligence in their corporate strategy and consider people and planetary consequences of their decisions. Are there companies that already are on the ‘beyond compliance’ journey? What can be learned from them and how will this affect SMEs? Join us to shape the future of water and foster meaningful dialogue and partnerships across sectors.
This session seeks to answer questions such as:
- What is CSDDD and how does it differ from the CSRD?
- Compliance vs. Impact and due diligence – how are companies preparing for the CSDDD and what are the challenges?
- How can the private sector go beyond compliance in terms of water resources – expectations and best practice?
- What is the global perspective on corporate EU legislation - what steps are companies beyond Europe taking and what are systematic approaches to due diligence across global supply chains?
Water in Business is a collaborative initiative with the Government of the Netherlands.
Programme
Files
Convenor
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Government of the Netherlands
speaker



session_host


Moderator

Summary
Innovative governance and institutional arrangements must adaptively address rising water scarcity. Transboundary and national (ground)water institutions stand to strengthen groundwater management. National Focal Groups (NFGs) in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) facilitate multistakeholder collaboration, to foster sustainable groundwater development and conjunctive use with surface water.
Session Description
The session will begin with institutional presentations covering alternative governance arrangements, followed by a panel discussion, and concluding with an interactive discussion between panellists and the audience. Speakers and panellists will give input on alternative NFG models and case studies of multistakeholder partnerships and institutional arrangements. The session will provide a critical opportunity to examine emerging models, share experiences and insights, and further explore approaches for advancing transformative groundwater governance.
Participants will learn from the experiences of alternative models in southern Africa and explore the potential for adapting and/or upscaling these to other countries and regions. This knowledge-sharing based session will enable all participants to leapfrog the experiences of countries gained from SADC-GMI and OneWorld’s journey of facilitating the establishment of NFGs in most SADC Member States.
The session will distil the necessary conditions of successful groundwater governance models for building bridges that blend needs and skills of multi-scalar and multidisciplinary actors. It will position the key roles that make up the integral components of successful bridge building in any water-scarce region, such as citizen science, and blended finance approaches.
Programme
09:00: Introductions and setting the scene
Ruth Beukman, OneWorld Associate
09:05: Overview of governance and institutional arrangements (NFGs) in SADC
James Sauramba - Executive Director, SADC-GMI
09:15: Panel Session: Moderated Knowledge Clinic on the experiences of establishing NFGs in different southern African contexts
NFP - Malawi NFG, NFP - South Africa NFG, NFP - Tanzania NFG, and Belynda Petrie, OneWorld Water Governance & Finance Expert
09:45: Moderated discussion and audience Q&A
Ruth Beukman, OneWorld Associate / All
10:00: Conclusion and wrap-up
Ruth Beukman, OneWorld Associate
Files
WWWeek 24 flyer - Strengthing groundwater session online
James Sauramba ppt - Introducing SADC GMIs governance model
Belynda Petrie ppt - Groundwater NFGs Necessary conditions of success
Zione Butao ppt - Malawi Groundwater NFG Successes and challenges
Zachariah Maswuma ppt - South Africa Groundwater NFG
Convenors
OneWorld
SADC Groundwater Management Institute
Tanzania, South Africa and Malawi Groundwater Management National Focal Groups
speaker




session_host
Moderator

Summary
Join Bacardi, the largest privately held spirits company in the world, in a intimate conversation on the role of business in managing their water use to have a positive environmental and social impact.
Session Description
.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Bacardi
speaker


Summary
Conjunctive surface water and groundwater management is not commonly practiced – although both resources are used - and this often leads to water insecurity. The need for an understanding of good conjunctive management will be illustrated with case studies from around the world in different contexts of conflict and cooperation.
Session Description
The fragmented management of the water cycle has clear consequences for the sustainable and secure development of regions. While surface and groundwater are naturally connected, their governance and management is often fragmented. Unplanned and unmanaged extraction of groundwater in periods when surface water is not available, can lead to overexploitation of this strategic resource, and lead to water, food and ecosystems insecurity. In this session, we will expose the risks of ad hoc use of surface and groundwater and compare this with planned management of the same. This will lead to identifying the key aspects for good conjunctive management for conjunctive use, to meet the goals of sustainable water management and secure development.
In a conversation with the facilitator, we will introduce the concept of conjunctive management, its key role in IWRM, and the state of implementation. Through the discussion of cases from around the world, we will share lessons learned and learning points related to conjunctive management and how to make it an integral part of IWRM.
Programme
0-20mins - Live talk show moderated by Hajar Yagkoubi
Some of the questions that will be answered:
- What is conjunctive surface water and groundwater management?
- Why is it relevant? under which conditions?
- Are there examples of its implementation?
- How do we make it an integral part of IWRM practices?
- What are the challenges/hindering factors for its implementation and how do we overcome those?
20-40mins - Dialog with on-site audience
Files
Convenors
Deltares
Global Water Partnership (GWP)
Southern African Development Community Groundwater Management Institute (SADC-GMI)
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean (CAF)
speaker



session_host


Moderator
Summary
Session Description
Change opens-up new opportunities. The world is in a different place talking about ‘global water dynamics’ then at the time SIWI started. We are halfway the Water Action Decade, we still feel the dynamics of the past UN 2023 Water Conference and are excited about the upcoming 2026 and 2028 UN conferences. The WWF in Senegal and Indonesia delivered a high bar for the upcoming WWF in Riyad. And with the One Water Summit, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water and its report, and water more and more prominent on global and local agendas at COP’s with a water pavilion, and in the trilogy of conventions: Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification.
Now, with all the upcoming changes in Stockholm, it is time to reset the focus, the ambition and with that the capacity – institutionally, individually, and informally. Stockholm and Sweden have choice to make, we have a choice to make: to keep Stockholm center-staged in the water world, with a legacy and a future for water action, inspiration and convening.
If you care for the future of water, of SIWI and the enabling environment it can empower, join us for one of these lunch dialogues and help us think through the future of a strong convening capacity in Stockholm.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Friends of Water,
Friends of Stockholm
session_host

speaker

Summary
Come on a journey with the UNICEF-LIXIL Make a Splash! Partnership where we share 5 key lessons from 5 years of strengthening markets to reach 12.7 million people. Through storytelling and role play we share practical insights, from working beyond supply and demand interventions to leveraging public-private promotions.
Session Description
Through an engaging and interactive session, we embark on a journey of market strengthening to tackle the global sanitation crisis. Through immersive storytelling, role play, and video, we provide invaluable lessons learned for incorporation into new or existing sanitation market strengthening initiatives. In this dynamic session, 5 key lessons will be weaved together into a captivating story, with the following points:
1. Beyond Supply and Demand: Discover how the partnership delved deeper than traditional approaches, addressing critical factors such as finance, implementation of regulations and information.
2. Public-Private Promotion: Explore the power of blending public health initiatives with private sector incentives to create sustainable demand for sanitation solutions.
3. Market Fragmentation: See how innovative strategies bridged gaps in fragmented supply chains, connecting rural consumers to essential sanitation services.
4. The Role of Finance: Learn how strategic use of public finance complemented commercial investments, catalyzing progress towards universal access to safe sanitation.
5. Navigating Regulatory Challenges: Explore the partnership's journey in identifying and overcoming regulatory barriers, paving the way for more efficient sanitation markets.
Throughout the session, we will foster dialogue and share insights on how to replicate the Make a Splash!’ success in diverse contexts worldwide.
Programme
14:00 - 14:05 Welcome and icebreaker
14:05 - 14:15 Introduction to the UNICEF-LIXIL Make a Splash! Partnership
14:15 - 14:30 Exploring sanitation supply chains: 'Pass the SATO pan' role play
14:30 - 15:00 Five key learnings on strengthening sanitation markets from the MaS! partnership
15:00 - 15:25 Panel: the challenge of scaling and system strengthening
15:25 - 15:30 Wrap up and finish
Convenors
LIXIL
FINISH Mondial
UNICEF
Moderator

session_host


speaker






Summary
Session Description
Programme
Keynote speech - Ruth Matthews, Source2Sea Action Platform
Roundtable 1 – Aligning Nature-based Solutions and Source2Sea thinking
Moderator : Andrea Ferret-Lambert, French Biodiversity Agency
Flore Lafaye de Micheaux, Ramsar Convention Secretariat
Verena Schrameyer, DHI
Michael Nelemans, Wetlands International
Roundtable 2 – Source2Sea integration : questions and challenges
Moderator : Frank Zhang, Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management
Diego Jara, IUCN
Clive Mitchell, NatureScot
Andréa Ferret-Lambert, French Biodiversity Agency
Concluding remarks – Dana Dedeck, SIWI
Files
Convenors
French Biodiversity Agency
ISPRA
NatureScot
Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management
speaker






Moderator
session_host
Summary
In this session, participants will learn about a proven methodology to accelerate innovation in Nature-Based Solutions to improve resilience to extreme weather events, and explore problems and opportunities for innovation to support ecosystem recovery and improving biodiversity.
Session Description
The session will generate ideas to accelerate innovation in ecosystem security and explore the role NBS can play in this.
We will set the scene with examples of current NBS best practices in different contexts, and opportunities for innovation, followed by an introduction to challenge prizes - a tested method of attracting new innovators to an existing problem and challenging incumbents to redirect their efforts or think differently.
Participants will then work in small groups to identify challenges in protecting biodiversity and infrastructural resilience to climate change and the role of NBS in addressing them. Workshop activities will also include a discussion of the current state of play, the pathway to a desirable future state, and stakeholder mapping.
Challenge Works have a track record of delivering innovation programmes with governments, regulators, private foundations and private companies. The portfolio ranges from tackling marine plastic waste in Africa to accelerating collaboration and innovation in the UK water sector, spanning the areas of climate response, resilient societies, global health and technology frontiers. NBS offer a chance to catalyse many of these: they can improve our water management and enhance infrastructural resilience to extreme weather-related events while safeguarding communities and a stable and biodiverse future.
Programme
- Welcomes (5 mins)
- Current Best Practices in Nature-Based Solutions: Alastair Chisholm, CIWEM (7 mins)
- Scaling NBS - Challenges and Opportunities: Mashiri Zvarimwa, WE4F (7 mins)
- An introduction to challenge prizes: Elettra Pellanda, Challenge Works (5 mins)
- Workshop activities in small groups, facilitated by the Challenge Works team (60 mins)
- Wrap-up and next steps (5 mins)
Files
Convenors
Challenge Works
CIWEM
Water and Energy for Food (WE4F)
session_host


speaker


Summary
This session will show the development/interpretation of a complete Hydrogeological conceptual model through a case study where scientific studies (aquifer modeling/saline trajectory) were performed to reduce the extensive global warming impact on the coastal aquifer of Gambia. It will also cover the developed guidelines/strategy for sustainable groundwater abstraction.
Session Description
The Republic of Gambia is one of the most vulnerable countries to the adverse impact of climate change in Africa. Any significant global warming-induced sea level rise could potentially submerge much of the country (the Great Banjul area is below 1 meter). The threat of extensive saline-water intrusion into River Gambia and coastal aquifers is increasing due to sea level rise (Hypothetic elevation of +35 cm by 2050), high abstractions correlated to groundwater depletion, higher evapotranspiration and irregular rainfall patterns. The session will resume the ongoing scientific approaches towards the analysis/limitation/diversification of the groundwater resources between the Shallow and Sub-Shallow (SSA) and the Maastrichtian aquifer (deep aquifer) to improve drinking water access to the Great Banjul population. The session will go through steps to develop/interpret a complete Hydrogeological conceptual model including the following aspects: Minimum data collection required SSA aquifer modelling Sub-regional approaches of the Maastrichtian aquifer (Aquifer shared with Senegal/Mauritania) Model calibration iterative process (hydraulic properties, boundary conditions) Evolution of the saline impacts (saline flow trajectories vs aquifer flow trajectories) Sensitivity analysis: Relationship between the model parameters and Recharge/ evapotranspiration, Permeability/porosity, model groundwater flow, temporal changes assessment) Calibration and predictive simulations
Programme
Welcome
Context of Water Resources in the Gambia
Overview of WASIB Project - focus on water resources
Hydrogeological modelling study (Continental Terminal aquifer)
Q&A
Files
Convenors
Antea Group
French Development Agency
National Water and Electricity Company of Gambia
Universite Cheick Anta Diop de Dakar
session_host


speaker




Summary
Session Description
Programme
12:00-12:40
Cargele Masso, Overview of CGIAR’s strategy on environmental health and biodiversity
Javier Mateo-Sagasta, IWMI’s work on water pollution and agricultural impacts
Ibrahim Wanyama, ILRI’s work on pig manure management for improving water quality in Uganda
Hilda Pius Luoga, Lake Vicotoria Basin Commission’s work on water environment management
Bezaiet Dessalegn, ICARDA’s work on treated wastewater in Egypt
Chris Dickens, IWMI’s work on environmental flows and river eco-health indicators
Wanjiku Gichohi, WorldFish’s work on reducing water pollution in fish production
Thomas Falk, IFPRI’s work on water governance to address scarcity & environmental pollution
Anton Urfels, IRRI’s work on addressing water pollution in rice production
12:41-13:00 Q&A / Discussions
Files
Convenors
International Food Policy Research Institute
International Water Management Institute
speaker









moderator

session_host

Summary
Water Policy that embraces and elevates Traditional Knowledge, together with cultural and spiritual values, elevates better surface and groundwater management outcomes for Indigenous Peoples.
Join the discussion between female Indigenous leaders and government agencies as they share insights on developing water policy using meaningful engagement principles, and the opportunities for shifting from consultation to collaboration to self-determined actions and outcomes.
Session Description
Indigenous communities are facing the loss of traditional food sources and medicines, disruption of sacred sites, access to water for cultural purposes, and diminished economic development opportunities due to climate change and government policies. Globally, there is a growing recognition that involving Indigenous communities in water management policy development is an opportunity to address challenges presented by climate change. Indigenous Peoples have significant experience in environmental conservation and water management in a changing climate. Meanwhile, governments are grappling with how to achieve genuine engagement that goes beyond simple consultation; that necessitates a paradigm shift in valuing knowledge, recognising Indigenous people as vital to achieving better outcomes, and committing to enduring partnerships. There is an urgent call for robust approaches that incorporate Indigenous knowledge to inform water management. Drawing on conversations from Australia and around the world, this session will explore some key concepts and approaches across female cultural contexts that have served to improve Indigenous engagement and generate positive outcomes for water policy development. It will focus on the ‘how to’ aspect of meaningful engagement with Indigenous people and the pressures faced by government policy makers. The panel discussion will be frank and fearless, emphasising actionable strategies for informed water management that respects and integrates Indigenous wisdom and genuine movement towards self-determined management of water.
Programme
Convenors
Australian Water Partnership
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, Australia
session_host

speaker




Summary
This session explores multi-country perspectives of Universal Languages for Behaviour Change (UL4BC) of sport, music and art to strengthen WASH systems. Welthungerhilfe, Viva con Agua and IRC-WASH host an interactive exploration of UL4BC and its impact on community empowerment, demand creation and strengthening local authorities and governance.
Session Description
Despite decades of efforts in health promotion, achieving sustainable behavior change in WASH practices remains an enduring challenge. Research shows that many individuals revert to unhealthy habits, like inadequate handwashing, once projects conclude. This session invites you to explore an innovative approach designed to overcome these challenges: Universal Languages 4 Behaviour Change (UL4BC).
UL4BC harnesses the universal power of sports, music, and art to foster positive, lasting behavior change at the community level. In this session, we will delve into how this creative and dynamic approach is being integrated into WASH systems strengthening, particularly focusing on the critical pillar of "Demand, Behaviour & Political Will."
We begin with a compelling video showcasing the impact of UL4BC in Madhya Pradesh, India, where community empowerment, awareness raising, and resilience building have paved the way for universal access to WASH services. Following this, the session will spotlight the diverse experiences from India and Uganda across three critical levels:
- Community Level (Micro): Witness how engaging UL4BC activities are driving sustainable behavior change, featuring a powerful testimonials.
- Local Administration (Meso): Learn about the effective implementation of government schemes through skill-building and local engagement, enriched by UL4BC elements, with insights from government officials and policy experts.
- Policy Level (Macro): Explore the role of national platforms in advocacy and collective action, with a unique perspective from an artist on the broad impacts of UL4BC.
The session will then transition into a dynamic panel discussion with UL4BC experts, government officials, systems strengthening professionals, and artists. This discussion will not only explore UL4BC's transformative influence on communities and decision-makers but also address the challenges of scaling up this approach to achieve broader impact.
Finally, we invite you to actively participate in an interactive Q&A segment, where your insights and experiences can help shape the conversation and contribute to the ongoing dialogue on fostering sustainable WASH practices.
Join us to discover how the integration of sports, music, and art into WASH systems can create lasting change, empower communities, and strengthen governance for a healthier future.
Programme
Facilitator:
Christian Wiebe (Viva con Agua)
Welcome & Introduction
Join us as we set the stage for today’s session, outlining what you can expect and the exciting discussions ahead.
Setting the Scene: The Role and Challenges of Integrating Behaviour Change Communication (BCC) in Systems Strengthening
Speaker: Ruchika Shiva (IRC WASH)
Discover the critical role of Behaviour Change Communication in strengthening WASH systems. Ruchika Shiva will share insights into the challenges and opportunities in integrating BCC within existing frameworks.
Reflecting on Gen WASH: Insights and Lessons from the Week
Speaker: Belinda Abraham (Viva con Agua)
Reflect on key learnings and insights from session Gen-WASH: Creative and fun behaviour change approaches for systemic WASH (11540) and explore how sports, music, and art can be integrated with BCC in fieldwork through the innovative UL4BC approach.
Unveiling UL4BC: What is Universal Languages for Behaviour Change?
Speaker: Aparna Lall (Welthungerhilfe India)
Get an introduction to UL4BC and learn how this approach leverages the universal languages of sports, music, and art to inspire lasting behavior change in WASH practices.
Interactive UL4BC Experience: Engage, Play, and Learn
Instructor: Berna Namwanje (Viva con Agua Uganda)
Join in a fun and engaging UL4BC game! Experience firsthand how joy and creativity are used to drive behavior change, making learning both impactful and enjoyable.
Panel Discussion: The Power of Sport, Music, and Art in Strengthening WASH Systems
Moderator: Christian Wiebe (Viva con Agua)
Panelists:
- Aparna Lall (Welthungerhilfe India)
- Belinda Abraham (Viva con Agua)
- Dr. Ulaganathan Perumal (Secretary, Water & Sanitation Department, West Bengal)
- Berna Namwanje (Viva con Agua Uganda)
- Davina Cochrane (Visual Artist)
- Ruchika Shiva (IRCWASH)
Join our multi-stakeholder panel as we delve into how sports, music, and art can empower communities, create demand, and strengthen local governance in WASH systems. Your participation in the discussion is encouraged!
Audience Q&A:
This is your chance to engage with the panelists! Ask your questions and share your thoughts during this interactive session.
Wrap-up & Future Directions:
As we conclude, we’ll reflect on today’s key takeaways and discuss the next steps. Learn how we plan to continue building on the insights shared today and how you can stay involved.
Files
Convenors
IRC WASH
Viva con Agua
Viva Con Agua Uganda
Welthungerhilfe
speaker






session_host

Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Environment Agency
The Rivers Trust
The Nature Conservancy
Nature for Water Facility
speaker






Moderator

Summary
This session explores building resilient water systems as a cornerstone for peace and sustainability. We'll showcase key characteristics, practical strategies, and innovative solutions for building and measuring progress towards resilient water systems spanning political and hydrological boundaries. Join us for interactive presentations, discussions, and collaboration!
Session Description
Over half the world shares water resources, demanding cooperation across borders and sectors. This session, aligned with World Water Week 2024’s theme, “Bridging Borders: Water for a Peaceful and Sustainable Future,” focuses on building resilient water systems as a foundation for peace, stability, and development.
Drawing on expert insights, we’ll delve into the key characteristics of strong resilient water systems highlighting how a robust, reliable, flexible, integrated, inclusive, and just water systems can foster peace and harmony. It delves into practical strategies for building and strengthening the system resilience, showcasing successful case studies and innovative solutions. The session features three key components:
- Elaboration of the Water Resilience Assessment Framework and guidance documents with real-world examples.
- Presentation and discussion of an innovative suite of resilience indicators to measure progress.
- Interactive discussions to build understanding and partnerships.
This interactive session is designed to promote a world where shared water resources become catalysts for collaboration rather than conflict. It achieves this through presentations by experts, a panel discussion fostering dynamic exchanges, and breakout sessions for deeper exploration of specific themes. By encouraging active dialogue and knowledge exchange among participants, the session aims to achieve this goal.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Alliance for Global Water Adaptation
Antea Group
BHP
Foresight Canada
International Water Management Institute
MGM Resorts
Pacific Institute
The CEO Water Mandate
Water Research Institute
Water Resources Institute
Water Value
speaker






session_host

Summary
Community monitoring and social accountability: Impact and sustainability
This session will explore the collective power of community-based monitoring, accountability and advocacy in South Africa (Equality Collective) and in Tanzania (Shahidi wa Maji). It will highlight the inputs needed to sustain impact, ending with the launch of the Fairwater Action Fund, supported by Water Witness International.
Session Description
This session will focus on community-driven action to influence systemic change in marginalised communities.
The session will centre on community champions' lessons and drivers in Amanzi Kumntu Wonke in South Africa and in Shahidi Wa Maji in Tanzania, both supporting community members to monitor and hold accountability, yielding tangible improvements in water services.
Programme
Welcome, overview and introductions - Ajay Paul (Viva con Agua)
Systems strengthening and human rights – the role of community monitoring in Amanzi Kumntu Wonke (Water for All) - Alana Potter (Equality Collective)
What are we learning about accountability? Tim Brewer (Water Witness International)
Maintaining momentum - Water Ambassadors and Community Champions from:
* Amazi Kumntu Wonke, South Africa – led by Noluvo Mandukwini (Equality Collective)
* Shahidi Wa Maji, Tanzania - led by Abel Dugange (Shahidi Wa Maji)
Summary and lessons: Tino Muringani (Equality Collective)
Fair Water Action Fund: Tim Brewer (Water Witness International)
Files
Convenors
Equality Collective and Viva con Agua South Africa
session_host


speaker





Summary
Session Description
Programme
Moderator: Mariet Verhoef-Cohen, current vice-Chair of WASAG, Women for Water Partnership
14:00 -14:15 Opening remarks
Timmo Gaasbeek, Senior Policy Officer Food Security at the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs
WASAG Video on water scarcity in agriculture (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oh998X2bq7I)
14:15 -14:30 WASAG operating mechanisms
Jean Boroto, Land and Water Officer, FAO
14:30 -14:40 Outcomes of the Towards a High-level Dialogue on the Global Framework on Water Scarcity in Agriculture (WASAG)- Technical Preparatory Meeting
Rosaida Dolce, Environment and Water Specialist, FAO
14:40- 15:20 Discussion on the engagement of Member Nations and partners for an impactful WASAG
Panel:
Christopher Neale, Director of Research, Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute (DWFI), University of Nebraska
Heba Al Hariry, Land and Water Officer, FAO Regional Office for Near East and North Africa
Rachana Mattur, Water Youth Network
15:20- 15:30 Closing remarks
Fabrice Fretz, Deputy Head Water Section, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)
Files
Convenors
Global Framework on Water Scarcity in Agriculture
Government of Cabo Verde
Government of Italy
Government of the Netherlands
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage
Robert B. Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute at the University of Nebraska
Swiss Federal Office for Agriculture Women for Water Partnership
Summary
This session will focus on bridging borders between organisations and sectors that have not historically worked together. With a focus on the built environment, we will bring together professionals from the water, energy, waste, and carbon sectors to understand how integrated thinking can unlock water circularity opportunities.
Session Description
This session will engage with decision makers and users in the built environment to understand how organisations that have typically worked in siloed industries can come together to create cross-sectoral partnerships. This will focus on bringing organisations together to develop more circular water use from the supply chain all the way through to building use, aligning with the World Green Building Council and Arup’s recent publication: Building a Water-Resilient Future. Opportunities for industries such as energy, waste, construction, and carbon to create a more water resilient world will be highlighted through several presentations that exemplify great cross-sectoral collaboration. Co-convening between industry (Arup) and networks (World and Sweden Green Building Councils) will offer the chance to highlight how the built environment industry can develop a circular water economy at all scales. The session will take the format of a series of presentations outlining case studies of cross-sectoral collaboration unlocking circular water opportunities followed by a panel discussion of the role of partnerships in the built environment towards building water resilience. There will be a series of pre-prepared questions, followed by the opportunity for an audience Q&A.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Arup
World Green Building Council
session_host



speaker






Summary
This session features the importance of cross border collaborative approaches to address drought proactively at all levels, through holistic approaches that include early warning, prevention, response and ultimately building drought resilience. The discussion will be informed by relevant ongoing joint activities of the convening organizations.
Session Description
Drought puts livelihoods and ecosystems at risk. This session features the importance of a collaborative and cross border approach and coordinated action to address drought proactively at all levels, through holistic approaches that include early warning, prevention, response and ultimately building drought resilience. Fueled by land degradation and human-induced climate crisis, drought is not just the absence of rain. The rise in devastating droughts globally has alerted the international community to the urgency of the problem. Discussions at UNCCD COP 15 revealed the gravity of the situation which led to the decision to establish an Intergovernmental Working Group (IWG) on drought, which will consider options for appropriate policy, advocacy, financing, and implementation measures at all levels. This session will share experiences at the global, regional, and national levels, spanning borders, sectors, and scales, putting a spotlight on the appropriate policy, advocacy, financing, and implementation measures that are integrated, inclusive and sustainable. The role of integrated drought approaches will be stressed.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Integrated Drought Management Programme
International Drought Resilience Alliance
International Water Management Institute
The Nature Conservancy
United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification
United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health
speaker


session_host

Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Welcome remarks, instructions for online participants and introduction of speakers/panelists: 5mn / Moderator to be confirmed
Context of West Africa region: highlighting climate change impact on security, health and access to WASH services particularly for women and girls 5mn- Lucien Damiba, WaterAid
Panel discussion: experience sharing from WaterAid, Diageo and CARE on how they involved women in their programmes and interventions; 30mn / Moderator and panelist
Discussions and Q&A: 15mn
Concluding remarks and sharing recommendations from the Policy Brief on Gender, Climate Change and WASH 5mn Moderator.
Files
Convenors
WaterAid
Moderator

session_host




speaker



Summary
Climate mitigation in forest systems is critical for limiting global warming and has important implications for biosphere functions. The research initiative “ReForMit” aims to close knowledge gaps related to the future resilience of forest-based interventions. This session will engage stakeholders in co-designing global scenarios of forest-based climate change mitigation.Session Description
Climate mitigation in forest systems is critical for limiting global warming and has important implications for biosphere functions related to freshwater and biodiversity. However, there are major knowledge gaps related to the future resilience of forest-based interventions - i.e., their capacity to remain functional in delivering desirable water-climate-biodiversity functions despite natural and anthropogenic perturbations. The research initiative “Understanding and securing the resilience of forest-based climate change mitigation” (ReForMit) aims to close these gaps, by generating knowledge on how to safeguard the biophysical and social-ecological resilience of forest-based climate change mitigation measures under shifting hydroclimatic conditions. The first step is to design archetypical forest-based mitigation scenarios in close collaboration with stakeholders. To prepare for this session, we will additionally conduct a pre-survey. This session engages stakeholders in co-designing global scenarios of forest-based climate change mitigation. This involves identifying relevant modeling variables, definition of areas to conserve and measures with which to restore degraded areas, such as managed forests, natural regrowth, or woody biomass plantations. It will result in the establishment of a global reference group for ReForMit with representative stakeholders that will be consulted about selection of indicators, modeling variables and case studies that will ultimately be shared with global policy-makers.
Programme
- Welcome and introduction, Lan Wang-Erlandsson (SRC)
- Modelling framework – Fabian Stenzel (PIK)
- Social-ecological resilience assessment – Sara Anamaghi (KTH)
- Results from the stakeholder survey, Fabian Stenzel (PIK) & Anna Tengberg (SIWI) (5 min)
- Panel discussion, moderated by Zahra Kalantari, KTH (35 min)
- Amani Alfarra, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
- Sara Casallas Ramirez, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
- Lis Mullin Bernhardt, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
- Vivek Shah, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
- Fredrik Silfwerbrand, Swedish Forest Agency
- Group discussions, moderated by Massoud Behboudian (KTH) (25 min)
- Closing, Lan Wang-Erlandsson (5 min)
Files
Convenors
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Stockholm International Water Institute
Stockholm Resilience Centre
speaker








session_host

Moderator


Summary
The session will explore how evidence is generated to better inform the adoption of anticipatory action for addressing water insecurity in areas experiencing the consequences of climate-induced and forced migration through case studies in specific contexts of East and Horn of Africa.
Session Description
This session offers a comprehensive exploration of the complex interplay between water insecurity, climate change, and forced migration within fragile settings, centred on the building of evidence for anticipatory action in addressing challenges in these environments, with a specific focus on cases from East and Horn of Africa. Delving into the nuanced dynamics at play, will shed light on the vulnerabilities faced by hosting communities and examine the far-reaching impacts of climate-induced migration. The session format will engage expert panels and utilise interactive workshops, where attendees will have the opportunity to delve into the intricacies of building evidence bases for anticipatory action strategies and governance, uniquely tailored to the contexts of these regions. Round table discussions will highlight the challenges and opportunities surrounding anticipatory action in water-insecure settings, drawing on existing policies and practices, including recommendations for improvements. By fostering dialogue and sharing insights, the session aims to pave the way for more effective and sustainable approaches in both humanitarian and development interventions. Participants can expect to gain valuable perspectives, practical knowledge, and actionable strategies to enhance resilience and mitigate the adverse effects of environmental and water-related stressors in these contexts.
Programme
This roundtable discussion-styled session aims to create strategic insights and actionable approaches to generating evidence for anticipatory action to affect policy decisions when addressing water insecurity and climate risks in fragile settings, focusing on the vulnerabilities of host communities in fragile and conflict-affected settings. By examining the complexities of migration, social balance, and environmental risks, participants will better understand the interplay between water security, climate change, and forced displacement. Through interactive discussions and case study presentations, attendees will explore innovative approaches to anticipatory action evidence-building. This session's outcomes will help inform policy and programming efforts, guiding the integration of water resource management into anticipatory action strategies at both national and regional levels. By fostering collaboration between humanitarian agencies, governments, and research institutions, the session aims to contribute to more effective and sustainable interventions from interconnected early action, response and development, that mitigate the impacts of climate-induced migration and promote the resilience of hosting communities in settings faced by food, land and water challenges at the intersection of fragility, conflict and migration. Participants can expect to gain valuable perspectives, practical knowledge, and actionable strategies to enhance resilience and mitigate the adverse effects of environmental and water-related stressors in these contexts.
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
World Food Programme (WFP)
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
speaker




Moderator

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
COP29 Presidency (Azerbaijan)
Stockholm International Water Institute
Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
The session explores the dynamic interplay between water management, peace, and security, and how to transform the vicious cycle of water conflict into a virtuous one of peace and cooperation. Participants will engage with the cutting-edge methodologies and first-hand experiences from different cases both at global and regional level
Session Description
This session explores the interplay of water management, conflict resolution, and sustainable peace. It commences with an overview of the water-security nexus, underscoring the dynamic and interdisciplinary nature of conflicts related to water, along with potential strategies for their mitigation. Experiences of mitigating water conflicts will be shared, highlighting both the approaches and practical applications across various geographical scales: global, regional, national, and local. The session's convenors represent a diverse range of organizations: WPS, GoNL, SIWI, IFRC - reflecting the multidisciplinary nature of efforts addressing the intersection of water, security, and development. A panel discussion will address the challenges and opportunities in mitigating water-related conflicts. Drawing from a broad spectrum of stakeholders, including individuals with first hand experience from conflict-prone regions, policymakers, and representatives from the 4D community (development, diplomacy, disaster, defence), the discussion will offer diverse perspectives and insights. Following the panel discussion, participants will engage in an interactive Q&A session, facilitating an exchange of experiences with the panelists to foster a comprehensive understanding of the water-security nexus.
Programme
Speakers
· Session moderator: Audrey Legat, Deltares
· Aart van der Horst, MFA, The Netherland
· Hiba Abualrob, International Federation of Red Cross
· Kerry Schneider, Stockholm International Water Institute
· Yasir Mohamed, WPS / IHE-Delft Institute for Water Education
· Anders Jagerskog , World Bank
· Daisy Cheruto Kosgei, WPS/ International Alert
Agenda:
· 10:00-10:05 – Welcoming by the moderator, and the session outline (Audrey Legat)
· 10:05-10:10 – Opening Remarks (Aart van der Horst)
· 10:10-10:20 – Keynote Presentation: "Exploring the water, development and peace nexus" (Anders Jagerskog).
· 10:20-10:50 – Panel discussion:
o Round introduction of the panellist (Hiba Abualrob, Kerry Schneider, Daisy Cheruto Kosgei)
o Panel Discussion: lessons learned from the field (briefly present a case study from the field: achievements and constraints).
· 10:50-11:00 – Closing Remarks: Summary of key points and session wrap-up (Yasir Mohammed).
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
Stockholm International Water Institute
Water, Peace and Security partnership
speaker






session_host


Moderator

Summary
Good governance is critical to defusing tensions and preventing conflicts from escalating, particularly around water rights and use. In this session, examples from the Asia and Pacific context will be explored to show how governance structures can be more dynamic, flexible, and participatory to result in improved water equity.
Session Description
Through an engaging and interactive session, participants will be guided through a series of examples of improved governance and transformative approaches which have challenged underlying systemic norms and resulted in increased water security, peace and decrease in community tensions regarding water resources. The session will be targeted at partners working within the WASH sector, including practitioners, policy makers, local governments and civil society organizations. Rich examples of cross-sectoral partnerships between WASH and GEDSI actors for inclusive systems change, presented by practitioners from Asia and The Pacific, will concretely demonstrate how governance and transformative approaches can support collective action to influence normative changes promoting equity and inclusion in WASH systems - a prerequisite for achieving Agenda 2030 and SDG6 by 2030 (and those SDGs that also depend on SDG6).
Programme
Files
Convenors
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
CFAR
Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney
Plan International
Water for Women
speaker



Moderator

session_host


Summary
Water intense low-carbon energies like hydrogen and bioenergy are part of the energy mix of the future. Water is fundamental throughout the life-cycle of renewable energy infrastructure and resource development.
In this session leaders in the energy transition share, explore and discuss their water related challenges and best practices with a focus on hydrogen and bio fuels.
Session Description
The need for an accelerated energy transition has never been greater. It is important to understand the risks and impacts on communities and nature, water being an important part of this.
Low-carbon technologies like hydrogen, biofuels, wind, sun, and geothermal heat make up the energy mix of the future. The energy sector is the second largest water user after agriculture and water plays a key role in the energy transition; this holds for water intensive energies like hydrogen and biofuels in particular.
In this session leaders in the energy transition share, explore and discuss their challenges and opportunities in relation to nature goals, emerging regulations, communities, and water and climate related risks.
Aim of the session is to share lessons, to influence policymakers and to foster collaboration as to accelerate a water smart energy transition.
Programme
9.00 - Session Overview
Lennart Silvis, Royal HaskoningDHV (Moderator)
The aim of the session and the agenda for the 90-minute workshop will be clearly outlined, encouraging audience participation throughout.
Introduction on interconnectedness of water and energy systems, highlighting the impact of renewable energy investments on water resources. To set the tone for a collaborative and insightful discussion, prompting the audience to consider the complexities of the water-energy nexus and its relevance to sustainable development.
9.10 - Statements by panelists
Each panelist elaborates on the role of his/her organisation is playing in the energy transition, the challenges experienced related to water, strategies for integrating water considerations into renewable energy initiatives. They will each mention a concrete example, best practices or lesson learned of a project.
1. Joshua Wong, Ipieca (global oil & gas association for advancing environmental and social performance across the energy tranistion)
2. Meike van Ginneken, Government of The Netherlands
3. Diego Rodriguez, World Bank
4. Christine Colvin, WWF
9.30 – Round Table dialogue
The round table dialogues take each one of the below four perspectives as starting point. Each perspective aims to foster a comprehensive dialogue during the round table discussions, aligning with the session’s goals and the broader theme of World Water Week:
- Private perspective - Integrating Water Considerations in Renewable Energy Projects: Discuss strategies and challenges in considering water resources when planning and implementing renewable energy initiatives. (Lead at table: IPIECA)
- Public perspective - Policy and Regulation for Water-Smart Energy: Explore the role of governmental organizations in shaping policies that promote sustainable practices in the water-energy nexus. (lead at table: Government of the Netherlands)
- Finance perspective - Financing Water-Smart Energy Transition: Discuss financial models and investment opportunities that support the integration of water considerations into renewable energy projects. (lead at table: World Bank)
- Community & Nature perspective - Community Engagement and Impact: Delve into the ways communities are affected by renewable energy projects and how they can be actively involved in decision-making processes. (lead at table: WWF)
The table hosts are asked to illustrate their conclusion with best practices: concrete examples and lessons learned from projects that have tried to / successfully integrated water sustainability in renewable energy, particularly in developing countries.
10.05 Interactive panel dialogue
The panel should focus on the outcomes of integrating water considerations into renewable energy projects, discussing the challenges faced, strategies adopted, and the results achieved.
Panelists are asked to share real-world examples and case studies that illustrate the integration of water considerations into renewable energy projects. This will offer tangible insights and learning opportunities for the audience.
The panel dialogues aims to provide actionable insights and takeaways that the audience can apply in their respective fields. This could involve discussing policy recommendations, best practices, or innovative solutions..
10.25 Closing of session
Brief summary by moderator and closing statement by panelists.
Files
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
IPIECA
Royal HaskoningDHV
World Bank Group
World Wide Fund for Nature
speaker




Summary
The session discusses the Water Sensitive Compass as a tool to support transformations towards more water sensitivity in Indian secondary cities. As part of the Water4Change Research Programme, this session aims to raise awareness and co-create knowledge to extend its use to other similar geographies through interactive engagement.
Session Description
In Indian secondary cities, the challenges of water governance are intensified by climate change, rapid urbanization, and insufficient governmental action, leading to unreliable and inequitable water services (Mollinga, 2008).
The Water4Change Research Programme addresses these complex challenges to urban water systems and proposes transformative changes that are needed for cities to transform towards more water sensitivity (Wong&Brown, 2009). We embed the paradigm of water sensitivity in India’s socio-cultural, spatial-ecological, technological, and socio-political landscape, and introduce the concept of 'repair' as a mode of transformation, which is characterized by incremental and iterative processes that are sensitive to local contexts and resources while also addressing historical wrong doings (Broto et al., 2021, Mungekar et al. 2023, Wahby, 2021). Transformations can be facilitated through water sensitive planning and design (van der Meulen et al. 2023), participatory governance mechanisms, and context-specific technology.
To enable such transformations, the programme has co-created with stakeholders of Bhuj, Bhopal, and Kozhikode a cross-sector Water Sensitive Compass. This Compass is a tool that facilitates officials, practitioners, community-based organizations and the likes to reflect on the city’s water challenges in a transdisciplinary way and guides them to craft transformative pathways based on the characteristics and resources of the city.
Programme
Coming soon..
Files
Coming soon..
Convenors
IRC WASH
Centre for Water Resources Development and Management
CEPT University
Delft University of Technology
Deltares
Dutch Research Institute For Transitions
IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
Indian Institute Of Technology Gandhinagar
Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
Manit, Bhopal
University of Twente
speaker











Summary
The short film spotlights Early Warning Systems (EWS) like AWARE innovation, empowering vulnerable communities to face climate threats. AWARE integrates data for localized warnings on floods, droughts, and landslides, saving lives like in Sri Lanka's flood evacuations. By integrating local knowledge and promoting proactive action, AWARE builds resilience across communities worldwide.
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
CGIAR Initiatives on Climate Resilience "ClimBeR"
Sri Lanka Red Cross Society
World Vision Lanka
UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Sri Lanka
session_host

speaker





Moderator

Summary
The session aims to foster public's greater awareness about the interactions between climate change, cryosphere dynamics and people’s everyday lives. We will discuss specific examples of cooperation and capacity building around technology-based solutions for improved cryosphere monitoring and water allocation as key elements for future water adaptation in Central Asia.
Session Description
Following UN General Assembly Resolution 77/150 declaring 2025 as the International Year of Glacier’s Preservation, just recently on August 13, 2024, again the UN General Assembly declared the “Decade of Action for Cryospheric Sciences, 2025-2034”, to promote global scientific cooperation to address the challenges associated with melting glaciers and changes to the cryosphere. Both resolutions were led by the Republic of Tajikistan, where 60% of Central Asia’s water resources are generated, 70% of which come from snow and glacier melt.
Through an interactive dialogue between a high-level decision-maker, a scientist, a policy advisor and the audience, we will share the lessons learned and good practices of cryosphere-related work carried out within the Integrated Rural Development Project/TRIGGER, a project co-funded by the European Union and the German Government and implemented by GIZ in Tajikistan.
During the session we will explore why the approach followed can be helpful for the international community working on water adaptation globally and the audience will learn from specific examples of how technology and stakeholder cooperation can assist in translating the changes in the state of the cryosphere into quantifiable impacts on water resources availability to support actionable information for science-based water allocation decision making.
Programme
Join us in this lively discussion about the much-to-be-discovered world of the cryosphere and its relevance for water adaptation in Central Asia and beyond. The speakers and the audience will discuss about unique examples and approaches to cooperation and capacity building around cutting-edge technology tools.
Meet the speakers:
Mr. Daler Juma with a distinguished career in the field of energy and water resources, since November 3, 2020, serves as the Minister of Energy and Water Resources of Tajikistan, bringing extensive experience and leadership in the energy and water sector to his role.
Mr. Sonu Khanal is a senior glacio-hydrological modelling and climate change expert of FutureWater, a global research and consulting organization dedicated to combining scientific research with practical solutions for water management. Sonu represents a FutureWater-led Consortium formed by the University of Utrecht with a solid background in snow and University of Fribourg, all supporting partners to the Ministry of Energy and Water Resources of Tajikistan.
Mr. Esteban Boj Garcia is Project Manager and Head of Water Resources Management and Climate Change within GIZ Tajikistan supporting the Integrated Rural Development Project, co-funded by the EU and the German Government. Currently, based in Dushanbe, Tajikistan he advises the Ministry of Energy and Water Resources of the Republic of Tajikistan on integrated water resources management and climate change adaptation since 2021.
Files
speaker


session_host

Moderator
Summary
This innovative, experimental exercise will apply systemic societal constellation methodologies to two practical water governance case-studies. Societal systemic constellations are a powerful tool to gain in-depth insights in often unconscious and overseen system or organizational dynamics. Participants will engage in exercises to experience this methodology’s effectiveness in the water domain.
Session Description
The Valuing Water Initiative and its partners are exploring innovative methodologies to improve societal understanding of the value of water. A core part of this mission is to develop and facilitate transformative processes that improve decision-making on water – making it more equitable, transparent and inclusive, with the objective of delivering more sustainable water outcomes. Drawing on systemic constellation theory and practice, this highly participatory session will feature neither panels nor PowerPoints. Led by experienced facilitators and using practical water governance case studies from the Valuing Water network, the session will bring attendees together in a uniquely participatory way. Following the success of a first introduction at the World Water Week 2023 and VWI experiences in Latin America, we will continue exploring the potential of systemic constellation work within a public setting in the water sector, highlighting the potential for value-based decision making as a way to address shared water challenges. This year, we are expanding the scope and ambition of the session – aiming to bring together more than 100 participants to improve our mutual under understanding of unconscious dynamics within water-related relationships, organizations and societal contexts
Programme
Welcome
On behalf of the Valuing Water Initiative team, and the Government of the Netherlands, by Iris Bijlsma (Program lead) for Valuing Water, Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO).
Introduction to the Session
This session, hosted by the Valuing Water Initiative (VWI) in collaboration with the Government of the Netherlands, the Netherlands Enterprise Agency and (the Government of Mexico) aims to explore how innovations in interpersonal communication can enhance dialogue, making it more inclusive, personal, and value-driven. Furthermore, it will investigate how engagement in these dialogues can be elevated to a higher level.
The Valuing Water Initiative is focused on initiating a paradigm shift by facilitating dialogues rooted in both personal and systemic value perspectives. The objective is to stimulate new energy, foster involvement, and enhance commitment to water collaboration at local, regional, and global levels.
This session will feature a demonstration of systemic and constellation methodologies—approaches designed to reveal relational effects and social dynamics in decision-making processes. These methodologies emphasize the importance of inclusivity, particularly by identifying missing or excluded stakeholders or factors that influence outcomes. The session will aim to show how such methods can contribute to the development of value-oriented solutions to water challenges.
Case Study: CONAGUA, Mexico’s National Water Commission
The session will include a case study presented by Silvia Chaves, Director of International Affairs at CONAGUA, Mexico's National Water Commission. The case will address the challenges and opportunities associated with attracting international funding for climate adaptation initiatives in Mexico and Central America. The case will be explored within a constellation framework, providing insights into the complexities of water-related climate adaptation efforts in the region.
Participant Engagement
Audience participation will be a key component of the session. Attendees will be involved in the presented case study and in interactive, small-group exercises designed to demonstrate the potential of systemic methodologies in enhancing value-driven dialogue and decision-making processes. These exercises will require true and active engagement from participants, offering a practical demonstration of the methods under discussion.
Conclusion and Future Directions / Wrap-up, way forward and closing remarks
The session will conclude with a summary of key takeaways and an outline of opportunities for future involvement in regional Valuing Water activities. Additionally, a follow-up engagement will be offered immediately after the session for participants interested in further discussion, questions, and exploration of potential collaborative opportunities.
“This was not only a great session. This was nothing less than a healing experience”.?
– participant in 2023 VWI constellation session, Cartagena, Colombia
Files
Convenors
Government of the Netherlands
Comisión Nacional del Agua Mexico
speaker


Moderator

Summary
This session will explore how government, civil society, and Indigenous Peoples work together to manage freshwater fisheries sustainably for both nature and people. Case studies will be shared from the Amazon River Basin in Latin America and Lake Tanganyika in Africa.
Session Description
Freshwater fisheries feed billions of people and provide livelihoods for millions. The freshwater ecosystems upon which fisheries depend are also complex, often spanning multiple countries. Managing these systems requires transboundary collaboration across governments, regional organizations, and importantly Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Ninety-nine percent of freshwater fisheries are small-scale, and Indigenous Peoples and local communities’ local knowledge is essential for informed decision-making. This session will explore how government, civil society, and Indigenous Peoples work together to manage freshwater fisheries sustainably for both nature and people. Two case studies will be shared. One experience will come from the Amazon River and its tributaries, focusing on the efforts of a local organization dedicated to connecting community conservation and development efforts across the Amazon Basin. The other experience will focus on the efforts of the Lake Tanganyika Authority, established by the governments of Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania, and Zambia. The authority promotes regional cooperation required for socio-economic development and sustainable management of the natural resources in the Lake Tanganyika Each group will share their experiences in transboundary cooperation between Indigenous Peoples, communities, governments, and civil society that centers culture, food security, livelihoods, and ecosystem needs.
Programme
Welcome and Overview
Caitlin Doughty, Freshwater Equity and Rights Advisor, The Nature Conservancy
Experiences from Lake Tanganyika
Beatrice Nyakorema Marwa, Director of Fisheries and Aquaculture, Lake Tanganyika Authority
Gabriel Butoyi, President, Burundi National Fish Federation
Experiences from the Amazon
Gabriela Celi, Ecuadorian Amazon Strategy Coordinator, The Nature Conservancy
Diana Chávez Vargas, Leader of International Affairs and Organizations, PAKKIRU Kichwa Indigenous Nation of Pastaza
Sannie Brum, ICTIO Specialist, Wildlife Conservation Society and representative of Aguas Amazonicas
Panel Discussion
Facilitated Q&A with the Audience
Files
Convenors
The Nature Conservancy
Lake Tanganyika Authority
Alianza Aguas Amazónicas
session_host

speaker




Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Eawag
Sanivation The University of Western Australia
Water For People
World Bank Group
session_host


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
WaterAid
session_host

speaker





Summary
Join this interactive session with global and local experts, implementers, data scientists, and donors to discuss real-world examples of leveraging data for water security in fragile and conflict-affected environments. Delve into discussions on critical data factors—formats, use, transparency, and equity—to discuss how to progress effective strategies and partnerships.
Session Description
Even under the best of circumstances data and evidence do not always inform water decision-making. This is made even more challenging in fragile and conflict-affected environments, where quality, timely data is often not readily available, and actors face competing demands and challenges. This session gathers global and local data scientists, implementers, donors, decision-makers and practitioners for an interactive, facilitated discussion on the disconnects preventing analytical tools from being effectively used to inform for water resource management and service delivery planning in fragile and conflict-afflicted In this ideas incubator, participants will hear from teams that are exploring data-based water security approaches in Syria, Ethiopia, and elsewhere across the globe. A core portion of the session will be breakout group discussions where participants will focus on the critical factors for data that can effectively inform water security decision-making in fragile and conflict-afflicted environments: formats, use, transparency, and equity. Uniting data scientists, government actors, donors, and implementers, this session will provide a space for participants to identify better ways to collect, analyze, design, utilize, and share data for informed decision-making and planning in fragile and conflict affected environments at the local level.
Programme
1. Welcome, Objectives, and Introduction
2. Scene-Setting and Primer: Introducing four “Prevailing Narratives” to unpack around Leveraging Data for Water Security in Fragile and Conflict-affected Environments
3. Breakout Groups: Discuss with other actors the barriers, challenges, successes, and potential around leveraging data for water security in fragile contexts.
4. Panel Insights: Hear from panelists whose experiences reflect a variety of contexts and expertise around how they have navigated and supported leveraging data for water seceurity programs in fragile contexts.
5. Leave with resources!
Files
Convenors
Mercy Corps
PRO-WASH & SCALE
USAID Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance
USAID Center for Water Security, Sanitation and Hygiene
Columbia University
World Resources Institute
session_host


speaker




Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
BASEflow Malawi
DigDeep
ETH Zurich
Government of South Africa
Openwashdata
University of KwaZulu-Natal
WASHWeb
World Health Organization
session_host




speaker





Summary
Water is needed throughout every stage of the textile supply chain; with water use, comes waste. Untreated wastewater and pollution can have immediate, long-lasting impacts across the boundaries of people and nature. As water challenges increase, improved strategies and innovative solutions are imperative to ensure water quality and availability.
Session Description
Water is an integral part of life and is a critical component throughout the textile supply chain. As water availability and quality continues to decrease, the increase in demand for water is likely to cause competition between textile companies, other sectors, communities and nature. Water-related risks to companies are compounded and continue to grow in significance and urgency. Stewards are taking meaningful steps through leadership and innovations to minimize the effects of shared water challenges and risks. However, pollution and wastewater from the textile industry remains an issue. Pollution and wastewater are seen largely as byproducts of ineffective or inefficient water resource use and production processes. By implementing innovative solutions for cleaner production, this can result in lower water-related risks and increased economic, environmental, and social benefits. NGOs and industry leaders have developed and employed place-based solutions to - increase water use efficiency, reduce supply chain pollution and wastewater, and collaborate to address shared water challenges and adopt technological advancements for cleaner production processes. In this session participants will learn and discuss innovative approaches to reduce wastewater and pollution in the textile supply chain, along with the opportunities, challenges, and outcomes of implementation.
Programme
- 11:00 - 11:05
Welcome and opening remarks
- 11:05-11:55
Speaker Presentations:- ZDHC - Mr. Prasad Pant
- Artistic Milliners - Mr. Saqib Sohail
- WWF-Pakistan - Mr. Sohail Ali Naqvi
- BZU - Dr. Fiaz Ahmad
- 11:55 - 12:25
Panel Discussion and Q&A
- 12:25 - 12:30
Closing remarks
Files
Convenors
World Wide Fund for Nature
Zero Discharge of Hazardous Chemicals
Artistic Milliners
Bahauddin Zakariya University - BZU
speaker



Moderator

session_host

Summary
The two current crises of climate and conflict can only be tackled effectively by stronger cooperation and cohesion. Strengthening equity and resilience through building trust and accountability in our water and WASH systems is critical to achieving this global goal. This session shares tools and approaches that do exactly this.
Session Description
We are depressingly behind on our SDG targets, threatened further by climate change, conflict, and growing inequalities globally. Accelerating action on SDG6 is urgently required for a peaceful and sustainable future. To combat the two Cs of climate and conflict with the other two Cs of cooperation and cohesion, there is a pressing need to find better ways of working with each other at both systemic and community levels to build the momentum for accountability and trust, to work through a unified pathway to achieve climate-resilient solutions for water and WASH. We know that equality and inclusion are central to this goal. In this interactive session, Water for Women will showcase a range of tools and approaches on how partners have integrated these principles into their programming to more effectively contribute to reaching SDG6 targets, while reducing social and regional inequalities that may fuel conflict in the face of climate change. ‘Clean Water and Sanitation for All’ can only be achieved if decisions are made by all.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
CFAR
iDE
SNV Netherlands Development Organisation
Water for Women
WaterAid
speaker







session_host

Summary
This session aims to boost investments in Nature-Based Solutions (NbS) across Small Island Developing States (SIDS) by leveraging blended finance models. Using the source-to-sea approach, we will explore regional partnerships and barriers for NbS, collaborative opportunities, policies, and avenues for the private sector to enable sustainable development in the region. This is achieved through the interactive 20-min talkshow session followed by a 20-min World cafe. We look forward to meeting you!
Session Description
Small Island Developing States (SIDS) face exceptional challenges due to their size, topography, and vulnerability to climate change driven impacts. The frequency and magnitude of these events create challenges for the economic development and security within the wider geographical regions. These vulnerabilities necessitate innovative and sustainable nature-driven approaches to build resilience.
Despite the economic, environmental, and social benefits they generate, investments in Nature-based solutions (NbS) projects remain limited: with a projected global financing gap exceeding $700 billion. The closure of this financing gap requires public financing, philanthropic funds, and private investors to meet the investment targets by the UN Environment Program. This interactive session will delve into the unique challenges and opportunities associated with financing NbS initiatives in SIDS, aiming to catalyze transformative change towards sustainability and resilience.
This platform combines a spectrum of experts who are connected through the wider ‘source to sea’ relations and can drive the development of nature-based designs. Both the talkshow and the World cafe will include dynamic discussions and knowledge-sharing activities, facilitated by experts in finance, environmental conservation, and sustainable development. We will explore case studies showcasing successful NbS projects, discuss the financing of bankable and non-bankable elements and project opportunities to build regional capacity. The intended audience includes public and private financiers, project implementors (B&D, O&M), regional (SIDS) government officials or organizations, state and civil society representatives, international organizations, academia, and non-governmental organizations.
Programme
Studio Talkshow (20 mins), Moderator Kanika Thakar
Panelists
- Dr. Petra Dankers, Leading Professional for Nature-based Solutions and Senior Advisor on Morphology and Eco-engineering solutions (Royal HaskoningDHV)
- Danilo Cançado, Business Development Director for Climate Resilience for Latin America and the Caribbean (Royal HaskoningDHV)
- Beauty Mbale, Fresh water Program Lead, (WWF Zambia)
Discussions are based on developments and projects from Royal HaskoningDHV, WWF, EcoShape and partners in the Coalition for for accelerating blue finances for nature-based solutions (SIWI, RaboBank, Van Oord and Conservation International).
World Cafe (20 mins)
- Icebreaker Questions
- Speed networking rounds to enhance Nature-Based Solutions in the SIDS region
Closing
Files
Convenors
Royal HaskoningDHV
World Wide Fund for Nature
Invest International
speaker



session_host

Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
United Nations Development Programme
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
Summary
This session introduces Net Positive Water Impact (NPWI) and discusses it from the perspective of bridging application scales and aligning with other corporate water stewardship approaches. This will be discussed from the views of the framework developers, other thought leaders, corporates and practitioners.
Session Description
Tools and frameworks in the corporate water stewardship (CWS) space are rapidly evolving through the input from a vibrant community of corporates, practitioners and thought leaders. This session has three parts: Firstly, it showcases Net Positive Water Impact (NPWI), and how it can help build basin-wide water resilience in 100 priority basins. Historically, many corporates have undertaken their CWS approaches independently or in siloes. NPWI moves beyond site-level impacts to the basin scale, promoting collective action and partnerships at broader scales helping to bridge borders and drive catalytic impact. Getting CWS tools, frameworks and ambitions to increasingly complement each other is an essential step to making CWS clear, accessible and implementable. Secondly, thought leaders of other CWS frameworks, tools and standards will weigh in on the alignment and complementarity of NPWI with their respective CWS approaches. NPWI has been intentionally developed to align with several leading approaches to ensure that corporate partners integrate and maximize their stewardship efforts and meet multiple corporate objectives and SDGs. In the third part of this session, the floor is given to corporates and practitioners actively piloting or implementing NPWI and other CWS approaches. We will hear about their experiences, insights and progress.
Speakers
- Ambria McDonald – 3M
- Marta Ceadel – Danone
- Kari Vigerstol – TNC
- Laura Weintraub – LimnoTech
- Scott McCready – AWS
- Kirsten Jame – Ceres
- Lucie Gerber – Quantis
- Klaudia Schachtschneider – PI/Mandate
Programme
Files
Convenors
- 3M
- Alliance for Water Stewardship
- Ceres
- Danone
- Limnotech
- Pacific Institute
- Quantis
- The CEO Water Mandate
- The Nature Conservancy
speaker







session_host


Summary
Compared to the ideals in IWRM, its implementation is often difficult due to various obstacles. This session shares a practical approach in IWRM and the good practices applied in Indonesia and Bolivia, and discusses its applicability with participants facing challenges in the field for achieving a peaceful and sustainable society.
Session Description
Expanding economic activities and climate change are causing water shortages to worsen in many regions, resulting in conflicts of interest over water. In order to solve the water problems faced by local people while resolving conflicts, integrated water resource management (IWRM) must not be limited to a philosophy but must be put into practice. To this end, it is important to develop entities responsible for the management of water resources in each region and to establish multi-stakeholder partnerships (MSP) as democratic consultative bodies to resolve water-related issues based on the consensus of all stakeholders. This session will introduce an approach to improving IWRM, which will be useful for participants, based on good practices that JICA and partner countries have collaborated to achieve results. The case of land subsidence control in Indonesia established a MSP involving many stakeholders across central and local governments, taking into account groundwater management, climate risk, water supply, and flood control in an integrated manner. The case of pollution control in Bolivia involved the establishment of a platform, led by the local government, to promote IWRM, while implementing innovative initiatives such as participatory monitoring of the river environment by residents through the concept of citizen science.
Programme
9:00 Session Overview
9:02 Opening Remark
Mr. Alan AtKisson, Executive Secretary of the Global Water Partnership
9:12 Introductory Session: Concept of Practical IWRM
Dr. Kenji Nagata, Senior Advisor on Water Resources, JICA
9:22 Practical IWRM Case 1:Consensus building based on Scientific Evidence: Land subsidence in Jakarta, Indonesia
Dr. Pulung Arya Pranantya, Assistant Director, Ministry of Public Works and Housing, Indonesia
The case will show importance of scientific evidence for over-abstraction of groundwater in Jakarta. The importance of responsible organization should be also highlighted for immediate implementation of land subsidence countermeasures.
9:36 Practical IWRM Case 2:IWRM cycle in practice: The Challenge resolving water conflict in Cochabamba, Bolivia
Ms. Marisela Rodríguez, Departmental government of Cochabamba, Bolivia
Dr. Takahiro Otsuka, JICA
The case show importance of multi stakeholder partnership and of capacity building through practice toward the challenges of how the local government should address water issues amid conflicts between the government and residents.
9:50 Q & A session on the case studies
Moderator- Global Water Partnership
Panelists: The above presenters
9:58 Wrap Up
Files
Convenors
Japan International Cooperation Agency
Global Water Partnership
speaker





Summary
Adopting the triple bottom-line approach to accounting for enhanced rainfed agriculture practices and improved landscape management requires accessing multiple sources of financing, including climate and private sector financing. The session will explore real-world examples of using this approach and question how these efforts can be systematically up and out scaled across Africa.
Session Description
The actions taken by small-holder farmers to reduce runoff and soil erosion and increase rainwater infiltration makes them the frontline water managers of Africa. However, they don't get paid for this job. They are expected to change their behaviour for improved landscape management, something which implies a significant investment of their time and labour, while taking on the risk that the newly adopted measures might not result in the hoped-for increase in yield. What is needed are financial mechanisms to reduce this risk and compensate the farmer for their labour as they adopt enhanced rainfed agriculture methods.
The session will present successful projects that have allowed farmers to build financial resilience over the long term through access to climate finance and other innovative financial mechanisms. The business case developed through the TIARA programme seeks to unlock benefits across a triple bottom-line, including: 1. Return to the farmer (increase in crop yield and reduction in risk), 2. Return to the environment (reduced soil erosion and catchment degradation, reduced biodiversity loss, increased infiltration of rainfall, and carbon sequestration), and 3. Return to local agricultural value chains and the creation of rural job opportunities (specifically for women and youth).
Programme
A: Presentations (30 min):
• Opening of session by moderator (Stefan Heilscher)
•Intro to “Mobilizing alternative funding for African rainfed farmers” - Nonsi Nkomo, Solidaridad (5 min)
•ZAMCOM ministerial declaration on enhancing investments in rainfed agriculture and pipeline of projects – Leonissah Munjoma, ZAMCOM (5 min)
•TIARA and the triple bottom line approach – Maganizo Kruger Nyasulu, Stockholm Resilience Center/ SIWI (10 min)
B: Panel discussing remaining challenges for attracting investments and scaling up of enhanced rainfed practices (moderated by SIWI) (35 min)
•Value-chain perspective - Solidaridad (Pamidzai Bota, Regional Programme Manager, Cotton) and Freddie Catlow (CEO & Co-founder, Planboo)
•Regional water perspective - ZAMCOM (Gerald Mundondwa)
•Science - Stockholm Resilience Centre/SIWI (Maganizo Kruger)
•Innovative finance - MS Innovation Lab (Arleen Mitchell)
Moderator: Stefan Heilscher
•Mentimeter - participants’ input and take away from session (10 min)
Closing of session (5 min)
Files
Convenors
Solidaridad
Stockholm International Water Institute
Zambezi Watercourse Commission
session_host




speaker





Moderator

Summary
This session focuses on how access to innovative technologies enable small-hold farmers to produce more food in significantly less water, improve livelihoods and create a more resilient and sustainable food production system. Various stakeholders will participate and the format will be a mix between panel, film and Q&A.
Session Description
Water is a vital resource for food production. But water resources are under evident stress in many food producing areas, such as parts of Africa and Asia, making it difficult to feed a growing population. The most impacted are the world’s 500 million small-hold farmers who produce one-third of the food globally and up to 80 percent of the food consumed in developing countries. By 2050 the world food production will have to grow 50 percent to meet rising demands, requiring 30 percent more water than today,* making current ways of food production untenable. Small-hold farmers, who are the backbone of food production, can be Impact Generators and mitigate water stress, provided they have access to innovative green technologies. This session focuses on how access to innovative technologies enables small-hold farmers to produce more food in significantly less water, improve livelihoods, and create a more resilient and sustainable food production system. With less usage, ground water levels have a chance of recovering, which is vital for combating water stress and mitigating water and food-shortage conflicts. For a versatile discussion, various stakeholders will be participating, such as farmers, technology innovators, NGOs, grant-making organizations and policy makers. *CSIS
Programme
Files
Convenors
Spowdi & partners
speaker



session_host


Summary
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
session_host


speaker



Summary
The Cuando River Basin is shared by four Member States namely Angola, Botswana, Namibia and Zambia. The Kavango-Zambezi Trans Frontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA) Secretariat, the Zambezi Watercourse Commission (ZAMCOM) and the World Wide Fund (WWF) for Nature have supported development of the Cuando River Basin Integrated Water Resources Management Plan (IWRMP) to 'bridge borders' and promote sustainable use of the water resources.
Session Description
The Cuando River Basin is a Sub-Basin of the Zambezi River Basin located in Southern Africa. The session will focus on the following areas:
- Development process of the Cuando River Basin IWRMP.
- Priority areas for intervention identified in the Cuando River Basin IWRMP.
- The unique value of the Cuando River Basin to attract WWF and ZAMCOM.
- Actions for actualisation of the Cuando River Basin IWRMP.
- Stakeholder engagement and inclusion in the development process.
Programme
Live Studio Talk Show:
Speakers
- Nalucha Nganga-Ziba, Country Director, WWF Zambia.
- Leonissah Munjoma, Programme Manager, ZAMCOM.
- Ms. Betty Muyatwa, NAMSC Chair Representative - Namibia.
Files
Convenors
World Wide Fund for Nature
Zambezi Watercourse Commission
speaker



Moderator

Summary
The event underscores the importance of governance in preventing crises and promoting sustainable water security in the arid South of Madagascar. It aims to raise awareness among the audience on the role of governance in transforming water management, and policy frameworks to ensure equitable and sustainable water use
Session Description
Water insecurity is globally considered structural violence that manifests in the form of illness resulting in deaths; low productivity; and loss of educational opportunities and livelihoods (Gehrig & Rogers, 2009). Considering the impact of water-related mismanagement on human and water security, mainly the women and youth, it is crucial to examine the factors influencing local water issues to enhance crisis prevention and contribute to peacebuilding in water development. The issue of nonviolent conflicts and water disputes within communities is widely overlooked and Madagascar is not an exception. The storytelling and discussion focus on local water crises constituting structural violence towards women and youth since most research, when talking about water disputes relates to transboundary water resources. The factors influencing the local water crisis within the context of community-based water management in Madagascar are broadly categorized as institutional-related factors because they either relate to water access or its management and policy framework. The discussions will be directed to share among the audience concrete examples illustrating the importance of governance including institutions, regulation, accountability on sustainable access to water, and peacebuilding in rural areas where only 54.4%of the population has access to basic water services.
Objectives and outcomes
Objective 1: To raise awareness among the partners and donors on the role of Governance in transforming water access, management, and policy frameworks to ensure equitable and sustainable water use
Outcome 1.1.: The partners and donors, having a better understanding of real impact of water crisis, engage in governance improvement and advocacy efforts to bring about positive changes in water management policies and practices
Outcome 1.2.: Insights from the session lead to the identification and promotion of best governance practices, influencing future projects and initiatives for improved outcomes.
Objective 2: To motivate the actors to adopt the system-strengthening approach while addressing the water crisis
Outcome 2.1: The influence in policy discussions related to water system strengthening is reinforced and is potentially leading to the adoption of best practices at a broader scale
Outcome 2.2: The funding needs in Madagascar to address the water crisis is acknowledged as a priority by the donors.
Desired impacts
- The donors would better consider the WASH Governance strengthening in their call for proposals
- More interests are given to this specific context of Madagascar in terms of funding support.
- The Swedish Government and donors commits better to adaptation to climate change and to building communities resilience
Programme
1. Context
- WaterAid Video
- Presentation of the geographical, socioeconomic and climatic contexts of the Deep South
- WASH, human rights, peace and security
2. Approach: IRC Video on WASH System
3. Problematics in the specific context of Amboasary: brief presentation of the WASH service levels and the WASH building blocks baseline results
4. Governance-related responses and challenges by:
- WaterAid
- Ministry of WASH
- Rano Maharitra USAID funded project
5. Q&A
Files
Convenors
WaterAid
session_host

speaker





Summary
Best experiences on cooperation between rural WASH and WRM will be presented in areas such as basin management, multipurpose infrastructure & climate financing. A toolkit aimed at guiding governments in the articulation of these sectors will be shared in order to scale up the best practices in LAC and worldwide.
Session Description
The session is aimed at representatives of the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene sector and Water Resource Managers at all levels, from community to transboundary management. The session will be composed of two parts. The first part will be an introduction to the workshop exercise. This part will contextualize the importance of cooperation between the Rural Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) and Water Resources Management (WRM) sectors in Latin America and the Caribbean. Best experiences on cooperation between WASH and WRM will be presented in areas such as basin management, multipurpose water infrastructure & climate financing. Finally, a toolkit aimed at guiding governments in the articulation of these two sectors will be presented, as well as the results of its application in a pilot project. In the second part of the session, a workshop will be held where participants will perform an exercise to explore the proposed toolkit. The objective of this exercise is to identify if the tool is clear and friendly in its application; as well as receive feedback for a proposed roadmap for the integration of the WASH and WRM sectors in the countries of the region.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Inter American Development Bank
Stockholm International Water Institute
Moderator

speaker


Summary
The event will present a different way of doing business. Innovative WASH service delivery that can provide health and agriculture benefits as a by-product. Yet it is cost-effective and fully meets the SDG agenda. Maintenance costs require low-capacity and low-finances, making it a sustainable option to replicate.
Session Description
To share innovations and cross-sectoral cooperation in rural WASH: • Institutional, technical & financial model for providing SDG-level sustainable service delivery at low-cost • The program changes behavior of communities complimented by fecal waste and solid waste management which lead to reduced stunting • Climate friendly options and catalysts to scaleup • Sustainable O&M of clean water and sanitation • Multi-sectoral impacts in health, nutrition and poverty The event will include an Ignite Talk followed by World Café style of discussion, analysis and conclusions. Ignite Talk will provide a data blitz and key information about the Program implemented and challenges, also creating a nexus between stunting– poverty- rural development– sanitation– water. Moderated Q&A with the audience to provide information on the interventions and their rationale. This will enable audiences to (i) learn from the presentor, (ii) allow cross-learning from other parts of the World through input from audiences and (iii) generate a knowledge debate to improve multi-sectoral programs.
Programme
Online presentation
Q&A and Discussion
Files
Convenors
Farhan Sami, Senior WSS Specialist, World Bank Group
Asad Ullah, CEO, Punjab Rural Municipal Services Company
speaker

Summary
This workshop will discuss sources of lead contamination in drinking water and discuss steps governments, development partners, and the private sector can take to reduce lead exposure from drinking water in low- and middle-income countries.
Session Description
There is no safe level of lead exposure. Exposure to lead contributes to cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease and developmental and intellectual disabilities. Approximately one-third of the world’s children have blood lead levels above WHO's recommended action level. Experts believe that more than 30% of the developmental and intellectual disabilities seen in children today are the result of lead exposure. Recent evidence has shown that lead contamination in drinking water is widespread in both urban and rural drinking water systems. In most cases, the source of lead contamination is the parts and components used to construct these systems leaching lead into the drinking water. This source of contamination is 100% preventable by using parts and components that either do not contain lead at significant levels or are proven not to leach lead into drinking water. To advance the global lead-free water pledge that was launched at the 2023 UN Water Conference, this workshop will review the sources of lead contamination in drinking water and discuss steps stakeholders can take to monitor and reduce lead exposure from drinking water in low- and middle-income countries.
Programme
Files
https://www.globalleadfreewater.org
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240020863
Convenors
The Aquaya Institute
Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials
RTI International
Rural Water Supply Network
United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
University of Leeds
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
World Health Organization
World Vision
speaker










session_host


Summary
What can we learn from this year’s World Water Week and how will we take the lessons forward? Here we discuss What’s Next and reveal the theme of World Water Week 2025.
Session Description
In the final hour of World Water Week 2024, we focus on what lies ahead. Which solutions have we uncovered in the past week, and how can our new tools and partnerships help us foster cooperation and bridge borders? Together with exciting speakers, we explore how these insights can be applied to next year’s theme.
Programme
- Welcome from SIWI
- Susanne Halling Duffy, Director World Water Week
- Andreas Karlsson, Director of Communications, SIWI
- World Water Week 2024 in pictures
- Reflections
- Nkateko Nicole Langa, Junior Rapporteur, World Water Week
- Nof Afghani, Young Scientific Programme Committee, World Water Week
- Announcement & Discussion of the 2025 World Water Week theme
- Dani Gaillard-Picher, International Policy Advisor, SIWI
- Jon Lane, Chair, Scientific Programme Committee, World Water Week
- Pema Gyamtsho, Director General, International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development
- Call to action
- Elizabeth Wathuti, Founder, Green Generation Initiative and Commissioner, Global Commission on the Economics of Water
- Closing remarks
- Olle Burell, Chairman of the Board, SIWI
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker









session_host

Moderator

Summary
Let's wrap up this year's World Water Week with some fun! It's an opportunity for everyone to relax and enjoy our last evening together. There will be food, drinks, entertainment and of course dancing!
This event is open to all registered World Water Week participants onsite, no sign-up required
Session Description
Programme
Files
Convenors
Summary
The Water in Business program seeks to inspire and engage the private sector in addressing the world’s water issues. This final session will recap the week’s water in business discussions and explore what role the finance sector have to ensure a water secure world.
Session Description
Building on key takeaways from previous water in business panels and the water and finance roundtable convened by SIWI and the Government of the Netherlands, this panel will reflect on the commitments made as well as the opportunities that the CSRD and the CSDDD present. We anticipate frank discussions on the role investors and the financial services sector can play moving forward.
This final Water in Business discussion will be forward-looking, addressing barriers and opportunities for improved management of water.
This session seeks to answer questions such as:
-
The current state of investment in water. What urgent actions are needed today for a water-secure world?
-
What are the business cases and challenges for investing in climate and water? What support does the investment community need from the water/NGO and public sector?
-
What new opportunities do the CSRD and the CSDDD present? What are the joint efforts that our different communities can continue to leverage?
Water in Business is a collaborative initiative with the Government of the Netherlands.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
Government of the Netherlands
speaker



session_host


Moderator

Summary
Water has never been a more relevant issue. And that’s why it’s never been more important to communicate about water. Throughout World Water Week, Water in Communications hosts a series of inspiring talks and discussions that highlight the crucial role of communication?in societal transformation. Join the conversation and become part of the solution.
Session Description
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has vast potential – both good and bad. The World Economic Forum has identified AI-generated disinformation as the world’s greatest near-term threat, ahead of extreme weather events caused by climate change. How do communicators working on water issues address the risks AI-generated misinformation poses to science-based content, and can AI be used to help?
This session will focus on the dangers, challenges and opportunities associated with AI. What implications does AI have for water and science communicators, and the water sector as a whole? How can stakeholders improve collaboration across sectors to build trust through science-based knowledge and action?
Helping us make sense of the rapidly evolving AI space will be Aleksis Pirinen, Senior Researcher in AI specialising in climate adaptation at Research Institutes of Sweden (RISE), Marcus Lundstedt, Head of Communications at the Stockholm Resilience Centre, and Mulumba Jane Nabunnya, Country Director IRC, Uganda.
Water in Communications is a partner programme co-created with the Grundfos Foundation. After the Centre Stage session, we invite you to join the follow-up mingle at the foundation’s booth (4:03). Guests joining online can continue the discussion in the Grundfos Foundation & Co. digital booth.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Grundfos Foundation
Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI)
speaker



session_host

Moderator

Summary
Agricultural Ecosystem-based Solutions (Ag-EbS) are gaining recognition as effective approaches to address land and water degradation, as well as enhance food and water security. This session will introduce an Ag-EbS tool that features quantifiable impact-oriented indicators that are complimented with qualitative indicators which allows for tracking of progress in interventions/projects.
Session Description
The session will commence with opening remarks and setting the scene from the FAO and co-convener from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. A video on “Agriculture Ecosystem-based Solutions” will be displayed, showcasing Ecosystem-based Solutions (EbS) benefits and their contribution to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). An introduction of the Agricultural Ecosystem-based Solutions (Ag-EbS) tool will be presented, highlighting its Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and rubric to interpret scoring, indicating the success or failure of AgEbS interventions. A panel discussion comprising of distinguished speakers will delve into discussions of how assessment tools can foster project improvement and optimize resource allocation to maximize EbS impacts in agriculture, and identify successful interventions and strategies while pinpointing areas needing adjustment, challenges in implementing and opportunities for EbS. The audience will engage with panellists in interactive discussions followed by a Mentimeter segment where all participants will test their knowledge of EbS from simple questions shared online. A wrap-up segment will be presented by FAO, summarizing the session’s outcomes and the next steps for the Ag EbS tool.
Programme
09:00 - 09:10
Opening remarks:
Dr. Rachid El Hafid, Director of Research, Development and Technology, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC)
Dr. Nathaniel Newlands, Research Scientist, Agriculture and Agrifood Canada (AAFC)
09:10 – 09:20
Setting the scene:
Dr. Amani Alfarra, Land and Water Officer, FAO
09:20 – 09:30
Agriculture Ecosystem-based Solutions Tool – An introduction:
Mr. Adam Wicks and Dr. George Akoko
09:30 – 09:35
Video “Agriculture Ecosystem-based Solutions
09:35 – 09:45
Mentimeter
09:45 – 10:10
Panel discussion:
Prof. Kaveh Madani, Director, Institute for Water, Environment and Health, United Nations University, Canada.
Ms. Kari Vigerstol, Director of Water Security Science and Innovation, The Nature Conservancy.
Dr. Maria Ana Borges, Water for Landscapes Manager, International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Dr. Ben Sonneveld, Deputy Director, Amsterdam Centre for World Food Studies of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
Dr. Malin Lundberg Ingemarsson, Programme Manager, Water for Resilient Landscapes, Stockholm International Water Institute.
Dr. Youssef Brouziyne, Regional Representative, Middle East North Africa Region, International Water Management Institute.
10:10 – 10:25
Interactive discussions
10:25 – 10:30
Closing remarks
Mr. Jean Boroto, Senior Land and Water Officer, FAO
Files
Convenors
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
The International Water Management Institute (IWMI)
speaker








Moderator

session_host

Summary
The session delves into the challenges that corporations have faced when developing multi-stakeholder collective action for water security, and strategies to overcome these challenges. Discussion will explore the difficulties corporations encounter and how they can learn from both the obstacles and successes to contribute to a more water secure future.
Session Description
This session will focus on lessons learned while scoping for and supporting the development of collective action initiatives. Panelists will share challenges they have experienced when prioritizing, scoping for, developing, and/or supporting collective action water initiatives. The discussion will provide a candid conversation highlighting examples of when collective actions were faced with challenges, what lessons were learned, and solutions that helped overcome the challenges. Case studies will be highlighted from various regions around the world from companies representing different sectors as well as from The Nature Conservancy’s technical assistance team, Nature for Water Facility.
This session will provide attendees with a better understanding of what to look out for when scoping, developing and engaging in collective action initiatives, potential solutions to help overcome these challenges, and tools, resources, and methodologies available to advance collective action initiatives. Attendees will be encouraged to actively engage through polls and discussion with other attendees and panelists.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Diageo
Microsoft
Nutrien
The Nature Conservancy
Global Water Partnership
speaker





session_host

Moderator

Summary
This Talkshow aims at connecting the human rights-based principles behind the right to a clean, safe and healthy environment and the rights to water and sanitation recognising that:
1. The conservation of biodiversity is critical in many areas to ensure sustainable access to clean water for drinking and personal use
2. The principles of a human rights-based approach, and the involvement of local communities in a meaningful way are key elements to providing solutions for both people and the environment that are inclusive, and sustainable long-term.
The panellists reflect on the successes, challenges and lessons learned of relevant initiatives that have integrated meaningful participation, and the practical steps required to embrace a human rights-based approach.
Session Description
Developing water infrastructure, whether natural or man-made, is likely to be more sustainable if those people affected by them are included and meaningfully engaged in project design, development and implementation.. It is becoming more evident that with limited water supplies and limited finance we have to be cleverer with our approach to investment, aiming to ensure that projects are designed to capture the needs of all marginalised people.
The human rights-based approach can achieve this through policy that supports non-discrimination, inclusive participation, data transparency, and accountability, but we need to find ways to integrate it into the systems we use, and not just the policy we write. As we know from experience, the principles are simple to understand but require extra effort to achieve.
The gains in sustainability are potentially huge, and especially important for reaching the more vulnerable members of our communities, such as women, elderly, children, people with disabilities, indigenous communities and those in homeless or nomadic situations. This extra layer of engagement is the most important aspect in designing solutions that provide more sustainable and long term outcomes for both the people that are being left behind and the environment.
The Talkshow will discuss some successful case examples from Lao PDR, Cambodia, and Viet Nam where meaningful participation and principles of human right-based approach have been demonstrated. This will be complemented by comparative initiatives from other regions.
Programme
The Talkshow host (Hajar Yagkoupi) will interview panellists Amanda Loeffen (HR2W), Tanya Huizer (ADB) and Alejandro Iza (IUCN) in this interactive discussion to explore the connection between the right to a healthy environment, and the human rights to water and sanitation in our search for sustainable solutions.
Amanda Loeffen, CEO, Human Right 2 Water
Tanya Huizer, Senior Water Resilience Specialist, Strategy and Partnerships Team, Water and Urban Development Sector Office Sectors Group, Asian Development Bank
Alejandro Iza, Director, Environmental Law Centre, IUCN
Files
Convenors
Human Right 2 Water
Asian Development Bank
IUCN
speaker


Moderator
Summary
Session Description
Change opens-up new opportunities. The world is in a different place talking about ‘global water dynamics’ then at the time SIWI started. We are halfway the Water Action Decade, we still feel the dynamics of the past UN 2023 Water Conference and are excited about the upcoming 2026 and 2028 UN conferences. The WWF in Senegal and Indonesia delivered a high bar for the upcoming WWF in Riyad. And with the One Water Summit, the Global Commission on the Economics of Water and its report, and water more and more prominent on global and local agendas at COP’s with a water pavilion, and in the trilogy of conventions: Biodiversity, Climate and Desertification.
Now, with all the upcoming changes in Stockholm, it is time to reset the focus, the ambition and with that the capacity – institutionally, individually, and informally. Stockholm and Sweden have choice to make, we have a choice to make: to keep Stockholm center-staged in the water world, with a legacy and a future for water action, inspiration and convening.
If you care for the future of water, of SIWI and the enabling environment it can empower, join us for one of these lunch dialogues and help us think through the future of a strong convening capacity in Stockholm.
Programme
Files
Convenors
Friends of Water,
Friends of Stockholm
session_host

speaker
