Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.

The last several years have seen a discernible shift in global priorities towards advancing the concept of sustainable development. In particular, the establishment of the post-2015 development agenda and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the UN General Assembly points towards an integrated plan towards tackling global challenges. The goals seek to protect and improve five key areas of the world including people, planet, prosperity, peace and partnership. The intent of this paper is to emphasize the vital role that transboundary water cooperation plays in global development, and to map out the relationship that this cooperation has with the other goals. Existing and emerging rules and institutions have been developed in international law to minimise, and where possible halt, negative consequences stemming from poor management of transboundary waters. SDG 6 provides for an important spotlight on improving water and sanitation, however for the context of global development it is crucial for water management to be interpreted and actionably combined with the other relevant SDGs, rather than curtailed as an individual entity. From direct linkages to indirect references, transboundary water cooperation is intrinsically connected to several other principles of sustainable development reflected in the goals and targets, including environment, energy, and food amongst others, and therefore must be viewed as an integral piece of global water management. Furthermore, Target 6.5 requires a set of two indicators in order to fully capture the importance of both integrated water resources management (IWRM) and transboundary water cooperation in the implementation of the SDGs. It is paramount that an indicator is retained solely for the transboundary water cooperation element embedded in Target 6.5. This paper advocates for an indicator that should be broad enough to reward also cooperative frameworks aimed at developing a sound system of exchange of information, and not only fully fledged IWRM systems. This is particularly important in the context of transboundary aquifers governance, where many of the cooperative frameworks being discussed are at a very initial stage. The indicator can be reviewed throughout the implementation of the SDGs, especially in relation to the quantity and quality of the information that needs to be exchanged in order to meet the indicator. UNESCO-IHP and UNECE can play an important role, together with other members of UN Water, in monitoring this much needed indicator.

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Main Author: Sindico, Francesco
Other Authors: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: UNESCO 2016
Subjects:Sustainable Development, Transboundary Waters, Sanitation, SDG indicator 6.5.2.,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/42281
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-422812022-09-30T02:23:17Z Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development. Sindico, Francesco United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) International Hydrological Programme Sustainable Development Transboundary Waters Sanitation SDG indicator 6.5.2. The last several years have seen a discernible shift in global priorities towards advancing the concept of sustainable development. In particular, the establishment of the post-2015 development agenda and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the UN General Assembly points towards an integrated plan towards tackling global challenges. The goals seek to protect and improve five key areas of the world including people, planet, prosperity, peace and partnership. The intent of this paper is to emphasize the vital role that transboundary water cooperation plays in global development, and to map out the relationship that this cooperation has with the other goals. Existing and emerging rules and institutions have been developed in international law to minimise, and where possible halt, negative consequences stemming from poor management of transboundary waters. SDG 6 provides for an important spotlight on improving water and sanitation, however for the context of global development it is crucial for water management to be interpreted and actionably combined with the other relevant SDGs, rather than curtailed as an individual entity. From direct linkages to indirect references, transboundary water cooperation is intrinsically connected to several other principles of sustainable development reflected in the goals and targets, including environment, energy, and food amongst others, and therefore must be viewed as an integral piece of global water management. Furthermore, Target 6.5 requires a set of two indicators in order to fully capture the importance of both integrated water resources management (IWRM) and transboundary water cooperation in the implementation of the SDGs. It is paramount that an indicator is retained solely for the transboundary water cooperation element embedded in Target 6.5. This paper advocates for an indicator that should be broad enough to reward also cooperative frameworks aimed at developing a sound system of exchange of information, and not only fully fledged IWRM systems. This is particularly important in the context of transboundary aquifers governance, where many of the cooperative frameworks being discussed are at a very initial stage. The indicator can be reviewed throughout the implementation of the SDGs, especially in relation to the quantity and quality of the information that needs to be exchanged in order to meet the indicator. UNESCO-IHP and UNECE can play an important role, together with other members of UN Water, in monitoring this much needed indicator. OPENASFA INPUT Published Not Known 2022-09-29T13:20:58Z 2022-09-29T13:20:58Z 2016 Report 2016/SC/HYD/SDGs-1 REV. http://hdl.handle.net/1834/42281 en https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000244045?posInSet=7&queryId=N-2ba4c09a-e290-4e3d-9035-53ef4e705004 CC-BY-SA 3.0 IGO Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ 45pp. UNESCO Paris, France
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Sustainable Development
Transboundary Waters
Sanitation
SDG indicator 6.5.2.
Sustainable Development
Transboundary Waters
Sanitation
SDG indicator 6.5.2.
spellingShingle Sustainable Development
Transboundary Waters
Sanitation
SDG indicator 6.5.2.
Sustainable Development
Transboundary Waters
Sanitation
SDG indicator 6.5.2.
Sindico, Francesco
Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
description The last several years have seen a discernible shift in global priorities towards advancing the concept of sustainable development. In particular, the establishment of the post-2015 development agenda and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the UN General Assembly points towards an integrated plan towards tackling global challenges. The goals seek to protect and improve five key areas of the world including people, planet, prosperity, peace and partnership. The intent of this paper is to emphasize the vital role that transboundary water cooperation plays in global development, and to map out the relationship that this cooperation has with the other goals. Existing and emerging rules and institutions have been developed in international law to minimise, and where possible halt, negative consequences stemming from poor management of transboundary waters. SDG 6 provides for an important spotlight on improving water and sanitation, however for the context of global development it is crucial for water management to be interpreted and actionably combined with the other relevant SDGs, rather than curtailed as an individual entity. From direct linkages to indirect references, transboundary water cooperation is intrinsically connected to several other principles of sustainable development reflected in the goals and targets, including environment, energy, and food amongst others, and therefore must be viewed as an integral piece of global water management. Furthermore, Target 6.5 requires a set of two indicators in order to fully capture the importance of both integrated water resources management (IWRM) and transboundary water cooperation in the implementation of the SDGs. It is paramount that an indicator is retained solely for the transboundary water cooperation element embedded in Target 6.5. This paper advocates for an indicator that should be broad enough to reward also cooperative frameworks aimed at developing a sound system of exchange of information, and not only fully fledged IWRM systems. This is particularly important in the context of transboundary aquifers governance, where many of the cooperative frameworks being discussed are at a very initial stage. The indicator can be reviewed throughout the implementation of the SDGs, especially in relation to the quantity and quality of the information that needs to be exchanged in order to meet the indicator. UNESCO-IHP and UNECE can play an important role, together with other members of UN Water, in monitoring this much needed indicator.
author2 United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
author_facet United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
Sindico, Francesco
format Report
topic_facet Sustainable Development
Transboundary Waters
Sanitation
SDG indicator 6.5.2.
author Sindico, Francesco
author_sort Sindico, Francesco
title Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
title_short Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
title_full Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
title_fullStr Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
title_full_unstemmed Transboundary Water Cooperation and the Sustainable Development.
title_sort transboundary water cooperation and the sustainable development.
publisher UNESCO
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/42281
work_keys_str_mv AT sindicofrancesco transboundarywatercooperationandthesustainabledevelopment
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