EMWIS Flash N°105, November 2012
Released | 06/12/2012 |
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EMWIS Flash -
November 2012 Mediterranean Water Information Mechanism / Geo-Catalogue / UfM-Water |
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IN BRIEF
14- Most MENA countries are using their
precious water resources excessively
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1- The
Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) Secretariat held in early November a two-day
seminar to discuss the next steps towards the planning and development of a
proposed project which aims at strengthening the management, sharing and
monitoring of reliable data on water resources in the Mediterranean. The project
was proposed by a consortium composed of the Ministry of Energy & Water of
Lebanon (MEW), the Centre of Water Studies and Arab Water Security (COWFS) of
the League of Arab States and the Euro-Mediterranean Water Information System
network (EMWIS). The countries who agreed to participate in a first pilot phase
of this overall project are Morocco, Jordan, Lebanon and Tunisia. Discussions
during the seminar, which brought together promoters and water experts form the
initial pilot countries, focused on setting the final objectives of the project,
communication and management issues and the fund-raising strategy. Both promoters
and pilot countries analysed the synergies and coordination among the national
components related to the creation of shared water information systems in each pilot country, and
the regional components including methodology, capacity building and data
reporting. Pilot countries’ representatives presented their specific objectives
and foreseen developments including the state of play, difficulties and the
actors involved. All parties agreed that professional training
was necessary in order to improve the production and exploitation of
water data in the Arab countries. “We need to train our engineers to
provide accurate information for the water information system,” said Chahra Ksia
from the Arab Water Security Centre. As next steps to be taken, the UfM foresees
the organisation of national Ministerial meetings, and meetings with potential donors. As Walter Mazzitti, President of EMWIS
Steering Committee,
stated: “This project may become the hat for others projects.” Further
information on EMWIS
website.
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2- The Union for the Mediterranean (UfM)
Secretariat, the Palestinian Water Authority and the Government of Turkey
recently held talks on the technical and financial aspects of the Gaza
Desalination Facility project which will require an investment of €310 Million.
Turkey expressed its strong interest to support the project and a financial
commitment will be discussed at the Prime Ministerial level in the coming weeks. UfM
Deputy Secretary General, Rafiq Husseini, and the Minister of Water of the
Palestinian Authority, Dr. Shaddad Attili met with the Minister for Forestry and
Water Affairs of Turkey, Prof. Dr. Veysel Eroglu and other Turkish high
officials. Discussions
focused on the water crisis in the Gaza Strip and the recent UN report “Gaza, A
liveable place by 2020” which highlights the disastrous implications of the
current situation affecting the Gaza Strip. The
Turkish authorities expressed their full support to the UfM project. On 22 June
2011, the Union for the Mediterranean “labelled” its very first project which
consists in the construction of a 100 million cubic meters desalination facility
and distribution system in the Gaza Strip which will help to address the major
water deficit for a population of 1.6 million. The urgency for the Desalination
Facility for Gaza has increased with the rising level of Humanitarian crisis in
Gaza related to inadequate water resources with related impacts on human health.
This humanitarian project will contribute to job creation and future economic
and sustainable development in that highly populated region of the
Mediterranean. The Arab states and France have already committed financially,
and the European Investment Bank is financing the technical assistance towards
the implementation of the project. Further information on EMWIS
website
3- On November 9th, the 3rd co-ordination
meeting of the 2011 Halting Desertification in Europe Pilot projects was
organised by the EC (DG Environment) in Brussels, with the participation
of the three projects of this action: 1. Assessment of water balances and
optimization based target setting across EU River Basins (ABOT), 2. System of
Economic and Environmental Accounts for Water in Guadiana River Basin (GuaSEEAW)
and 3. Halting desertification in the Jucar River Basin (Halt-Jucar-Des). It was
the occasion to present the stat of progress of those projects and their
preliminary results. Halt-Jucar-Des is coordinated by the Spanish Consulting firm Evaluación de Recursos
Naturales, S.A. (EVREN), and the main partner is the Euro-Mediterranean
Information System on know-how in the Water sector (EMWIS/SEMIDE). A strong
collaboration has been established with the Júcar River Basin Authority (CHJ) to ensure
the coherence of data compilation, assessment and stakeholders involvement. The
project started in January 2012 and will end with a final conference early 2013
to discuss results with stakeholders in the river basin and with water
authorities from South Med countries. This action aims to contribute to halting
water scarcity, drought and desertification in the pilot basins by supporting
the development of drought management plans and in particular the optimisation
of measures based on updated water balances (water availability vs. existing
demands) using the European Catchment and Rivers Network System (ECRINS)
developed by the EEA as geographical reference and the UN System of
Environmental-Economic Accounting for Water (SEEA-W) at a monthly time scale. Further information on EMWIS
website.
4- Water pollution and physical
modifications are still affecting the ecology of many of Europe’s lakes, rivers,
transitional water bodies and coastal waters. These problems are likely to
prevent the water bodies reaching ‘good’ status by 2015, a target set by the
EU’s Water Framework Directive (WFD). The report, ‘European waters - assessment
of status and pressures’, published this month by the European Environment
Agency (EEA), considers the status of 104 000 rivers, 19 000 lakes, and 4000
transitional and coastal water bodies reported by EU Member States according to
the WFD and their river basin management plans (RBMPs). Water bodies are generally improving, but not quickly enough to meet the targets
set by the WFD – in fact only 52 % of water bodies are predicted to achieve good
ecological status by 2015, according to Member States own plans. Many European water bodies remain
polluted by excess nutrients, mainly from fertiliser, the report notes. When
fertilisers run off from croplands into a water body, it can create eutrophication, a process characterised by increased plant growth and harmful
algal blooms, depletion of oxygen and subsequent loss of life in bottom water.
Diffuse pollution from agriculture is a significant pressure for more than 40 %
of Europe’s water bodies in rivers and coastal waters, and in one third of lakes
and transitional waters. The challenges for river basin management are numerous
and diverse, the report says. The RBMPs submitted by Member States distinguish
between different types of pressures faced by river basins, however they include
less detail on how these pressures will be addressed and to what extent selected
measures will contribute to achieving environmental objectives in 2015. Further
information on EMWIS
website
5- The 1st pan-European Drought Dialogue
Forum was held on 30-31 October 2012, in Nicosia, under the auspices of the
Cyprus EU Presidency. The Forum was opened by H.E. Sofoclis Aletraris, Minister
of Agriculture, Natural Resources and Environment, Cyprus. The forum was
organized in close cooperation with the European Commission and the Cyprus Water
Development Department. The objective of the Drought Dialogue Forum, was to
create an exchange platform among policy-makers, stakeholders and the scientific
community on science-policy interactions. The Forum is an interactive drought
dialogue which aims at the reduction of future Europe’s vulnerability and risk
to drought by using results provided by the research community. Policy makers
and researchers were together in order to transfer the benefits from research to
address real-life drought problems. A lot of research findings are already
available on drought, but its impacts are still a major problem for water users
and policy makers. The pan-European Drought Dialogue Forum in Nicosia will have follow-ups
in Lille (2nd Water Framework Directive Conference, June 2013), Greece in 2014
during the Greek EU-Presidency, and Brussels in autumn 2014 (concluding).
Further information on EMWIS
website.
6- Water pollution and excessive water use
are still harming ecosystems, which are indispensable to Europe’s food, energy,
and water supplies. To maintain water ecosystems, farming, planning, energy and
transport sectors need to actively engage in managing water within sustainable
limits. The EEA report ‘European waters – current status and future challenges’ shows a mixed picture for
the status of Europe’s water bodies, while the findings are worrying when it
comes to ecosystems' ability to deliver essential services. Strong ecosystems
should be maintained, partly because they provide vital services which are often
overlooked, the report says. For example, restoring a wetland is not only good
for biodiversity but also water filtration, water retention and flood prevention.
Although essential, these services are not accounted for in current financial
and economic systems. Drought is increasing across Europe. The number of
countries affected by drought per decade increased from 15 in the period
1971–1980 to 28 in the period 2001–2011. Climate change is expected to
exacerbate this problem. Flooding is becoming more frequent, especially in
Northern Europe. More than 325 major river floods have been reported in Europe
since 1980, of which more than 200 have been reported since 2000.The river basin is the best
geographical scale for making accurate ’water accounts’– in effect asset
management to balance the incoming and outgoing resources, to evaluate pollution
emissions and to make economical assessments. Upcoming challenges
for water resource management can only be met when water managers have the right
information at their fingertips. Further information on EMWIS
website
7- The JRC published two new assessments on
the effectiveness of various measures to improve water availability and water
quality by 2030 in support of the European
Commission's "Blueprint to Safeguard Europe's Water Resources". As
part of these assessments, a modelling environment was developed to assess
optimum combinations of water retention measures, water savings measures, and
nutrient reduction measures for continental Europe to 2030. Economic costs and
benefits were also taken into account. The analyses outline several measures
that could lead to improvements in water availability and water quality. Simulations were carried out
to assess the effects of these measures on several hydro-chemical indicators,
such as the water exploitation index, environmental flow indicators, nitrate and
phosphate concentrations in rivers, and flood risk. Economic losses due to water
scarcity were also taken into account for the agricultural sector, the
manufacturing-industry sector, the energy-production sector and the domestic
sector. The study shows that this modelling software environment can technically
deliver optimum scenario combinations of measures that improve various water
quantity and quality indicators. However, additional work is needed before final
conclusions can be made about using the tool, especially in the areas of
economic loss estimations, water prices and price-elasticity, and the
implementation and maintenance costs of individual scenarios. The reports give a
unique analysis of the effects of several measures on future water availability
and quality in Europe and thus provide a solid foundation for potential measures
to be taken by national authorities. Further information on EMWIS
website.
8- In a recent survey of 315 companies on
the Global 500 Index, 59 per cent reported exposure to water-related risks (Carbon
Disclosure Project 2011). The most common cause is water scarcity, caused by a
growing supply-demand imbalance and exacerbated by climate change. The Water
Futures Partnership, founded in 2009 between SABMiller, WWF and GIZ, has taken a
range of innovative approaches to help the private sector tackle these risks
where they also affect society, known as shared water risks. The partnership
facilitates public-private-civil society collective action to improve water
management in selected watersheds across three continents. Activities include
river restoration, pollution control, wastewater treatment and eliminating
thirsty invasive plant species. Further information on EMWIS
website
9- The European Investment Bank (EIB) has
granted a EUR 50 million loan to the Cantabria Region to help finance its
investment in water and sanitation facilities. The project is designed to
increase the reliability and efficiency of the water supply in coastal areas and
improve wastewater management through the construction of four treatment plants
and various sewerage infrastructure schemes, enabling the Region to comply with
the wastewater quality aspects of the EU urban wastewater treatment directive.
The sanitation investments are partly included in the Operational Programme for
the Environment and will be cofinanced by ERDF funds. Against a background of
water shortages, these schemes will have clear environmental benefits,
contributing to the efforts to adapt to climate change and meet water demand.
The sanitation investments will also help to reduce pollution by improving the
quality of discharges into surface and coastal waters, thereby fostering the
reuse of domestic wastewater for non-domestic purposes and meeting the
objectives of the EU directives. The planned investments under this loan form
part of the Water Supply Master Plan and the Sanitation Master Plan for
Cantabria. The project is scheduled for completion in 2016. The schemes financed
by this loan meet the EU’s objectives for environmental protection, an area in
which support for projects in the water sector is a key sphere of EIB activity.
Further information on EMWIS
website
10- A US$6.4 million grant to improve and
expand coverage of water and sewage services in Gaza was approved by the World
Bank Group Board of Directors. The Gaza Water Supply and Sewage Systems
Improvement Project will finance the rehabilitation and expansion of existing
water and wastewater systems and enhance the capacity to provide and maintain
water and sewage services. Gaza citizens depend heavily on underground resources
for their water supply. Though the only significant available source,
groundwater is over utilized and badly contaminated. The over-drafting of the
sole aquifer is causing a decline of the groundwater table and a deterioration
of water quality. Moreover, most sewage is returned to lagoons, wadis and the
sea. The area is now choked with untreated sewage threatening Palestinian health
and life, as well as remaining water resources and the environment. The World
Bank has had a longstanding focus on water and sanitation in its program for
West Bank and Gaza and is stepping in now to help address the critical
deterioration of the Gaza water system. The project will fund the construction
of water tanks to collect and blend water from different sources in order
improve the quality and efficiency of Gaza water supply and wastewater services.
In addition, major well fields supplying the middle and southern governorates
will be connected. The project will also rehabilitate water distribution
networks and water wells. Along with helping the utility improve water
collection and reduce system losses, the project will also support more
efficient billing and enhanced customer services. A strategic partnership with
the Islamic Development Bank will allow a contribution of US$11.14 million in
parallel financing to the project. Further information on EMWIS
website.
11- Eighty-seven per cent of the Disi Water
Conveyance Project in Jordan has been completed and the mega-venture is progressing
according to schedule, a source involved in the implementation of the project
declared recently. Fifty-five per cent of the project’s production wells have
been drilled and 97 per cent of the pipes have been laid, added the source, who
requested anonymity. “Blueprints and procurement of materials have been
completed, as well as 88 per cent of construction work” the source noted. The Disi project, which started in 2007 and is scheduled to finish next year, entails drilling 64
wells, 55 of which will be used for the generation of water, while nine will
serve as piezometer wells to measure the elevation of water. The piezometer
wells and 30 production wells are ready, according to the source. The pipeline
starts at the ancient Disi aquifer in southern Jordan and ends in Amman, passing
through several water stations in Maan, Tafileh, Karak and Madaba. Being carried
out on a build-operate-transfer basis and implemented by Turkish company GAMA,
the Disi project seeks to provide the capital with 110 million cubic metres of
water annually. Experimental pumping from the aquifer is scheduled to start
later this year, according to officials at the Ministry of Water and Irrigation,
who expect 20-30 million cubic metres of Disi water to be pumped to Amman by
February next year. The project, which is viewed as the Kingdom’s first step
towards achieving water security, will be ready in July 2013. When it is
operational, water supply in Amman and Zarqa is expected to improve because
subscribers will start receiving water continuously instead of once a week,
according to the ministry. Further information on EMWIS
website.
12- According to a report prepared by the
High Commission for Water, Forests and the fight against
desertification, Morocco has taken a further step towards water scarcity, adding
that by 2020, the share of water for every
citizen will be reduced by 49%, which means that Moroccan citizens will have
less than 400 m3 per year. During the presentation of this
report, the High Commissioner for Water and Forests, Mr. El Abdeladhim Hafi,
highlighted
the serious deterioration of groundwater reserves, particularly in the Souss
region (southern of the kingdom). He also warned against the loss of tens of millions of
m3 of water due to sediments and mud in several dams.
It is
true that the demand for potable water mobilizes more than 700 million m3/year.
The coverage rate is 80% in urban areas and 30% in rural areas where 70% of the
population consumes less than 20 liters / day / capita, the sixth of the daily
consumption of a city. The annual rainfall volume estimated at 150 billion m3,
but only 30
billion m3 can be considered as national water resources. Due to lack of rainfall
in March, the Moroccan government had to develop a
program of support to the agricultural sector. For the implementation of this program, a budget
of 1.53 billion dirhams was allocated primarily to safeguard the livestock in
the affected areas. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
13- Last 9 and 10 October, a Forum on
decentralized solidarity mechanisms for Water and Sanitation in the
Mediterranean was held in Oujda, Morocco. The forum focused on solidarity
decentralized financing mechanisms for projects of access to drinking water and
sanitation in the Mediterranean. This event was attented by more than 150 experts,
organizations, elected officials and representatives of civil society in charge
of the management of drinking water, sanitation, land use planning and
international cooperation from several Mediterranean countries. They have
expressed their commitment to make every effort to design and develop solidarity
mechanisms and decentralized innovative financing dedicated to widespread access to
potable water. The recommendations emphasized the promotion of actions for the
benefit of the most vulnerable groups, including women and children, as well as
activities for rural areas, particularly those exposed to a degraded environment.
A motion to establish a multi-stakeholder platform Mediterranean fostering new
partnerships for projects access to water and the environment, inter alia was
adopted on this occasion. Further
information on EMWIS
website
14- The precipitation in the MENA region will
decrease between 5 percent and 30 percent. Thus, recharge of groundwater and
replenishment of surface waters in the region will decrease. The World Bank
(2012) reported that 2010 was the warmest year since the 1800s, with 5 of the 19
countries setting national high-temperature records being Arab countries.
Average global surface temperature are likely to rise between 0.6° to 4°C by
2100 (Barghouti 2009), leading to an increase in evaporation and
evapotranspiration. These projected trends, when combined, would indicate
increases in floods and droughts, which would negatively affect the populations
and economies of the region. An important observation was made by Gregoire
(2012), who reported an increase in the frequency of natural disasters in the
MENA region. He noted, through collation of data from FAO and CRED, that the
frequency of reported weather-related natural disasters more than doubled
between the two periods 1988–1997 and 1998–2007, where 50 occurrences of
droughts, floods, and extreme weather were reported in the former and 116 in the
latter. Gregoire noted that droughts have been associated with more intense
rainfall, resulting in soil erosion, land degradation, excessive runoff, and
flooding. What was observed between 1988 and 2007 in terms of natural disasters
serves as a small-scale preview of what might occur in the future should the
reaction to climate change remain “business as usual,” with little effort given
toward adaptation or mitigation and even less toward building resilient
communities able to survive the coming changes with a decent quality of life.
Further information on EMWIS
website
15- The Middle East and North Africa suffer
from water shortages and pump millions of liters a day from ancient aquifers.
But the water contains high levels of naturally-occurring radioactive
contamination. Experts fear this will increase the cancer risk for millions of
people. Millions of cubic meters of water are
now being pumped from such aquifers every day in the Middle East and North
Africa. The Disi aquifer project in Jordan will pump about 100 million cubic
meters a year from the aquifer to deliver it to the capital Amman through pipelines. But radiation experts
warn of an invisible danger. Tests have revealed that the water contains high
levels of naturally occurring radioactivity, with samples exhibiting radiation
levels well above World Health Organization (WHO) radiation guidelines. The
health risk doesn't just affect Jordan, but virtually all of the countries in
the Middle East and North Africa. Jordan is only a small part of the problem.
The same geological conditions that make the water from the Disi aquifer
radioactive prevail in large parts of the Middle East and North Africa. The
problem probably applies to all sandstone aquifers in the region, which means
that it affects hundreds of millions of people. Only 10 percent of the Disi
aquifer passes through Jordanian territory. The rest is in Saudi Arabia, where
it's called the Saq aquifer. In a
research published in 2008, the BRGM, the French national geological service, encountered a strange phenomenon: Contamination with
radionuclides appears to be especially high in places where the water level in
the aquifers is declining the most precipitously. While the reasons are unclear,
say the French scientists, the water threatens to become "unfit for both human
consumption and agricultural use. The problem of radioactive contamination of
the groundwater is complex and probably widespread," the French geologists
conclude. Further information on EMWIS
website.
16- EMWIS Technical Unit and the European
Space Agency (ESA) joint again their forces to organize a regional training
session targeting water managers and remote sensing centres representatives from
Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan. This event is a follow up of the
brainstorming workshop that took place in Frascati (Italy) in September 2010
as the training topics are targeting some key priorities identified in the
concept note produced as a result of the 2010 workshop for the use of earth
observation technologies for water management such as hydrology modelling, water
efficiency for irrigation, water consumption for agriculture, rainfall. Training
sessions are organised over two days (2-3 December) while the third day is
dedicated to a workshop to revise the concept note, integrate some capacity
building on earth observation into the project under preparation with the Union
for the Mediterranean on the creation of Shared National Water Data
Management Systems in Mediterranean countries and to discuss coordination with
the project recently launched by World Bank and Nasa aiming at improving local
and regional management of water and agriculture by means of remote sensing
technology. Further information on EMWIS
website
17- The International Conference on Food
Security in Dry Lands aimed to develop recommendations in areas related to
policy strategies and investments to boost agricultural production, enhance food
security and increase resilience to price shocks. Conference participants
focused on issues related to food security, water management and responsible
investment. The Conference, which took place from 14-15 November 2012, in Doha,
Qatar, brought together representatives from government, academia, development
agencies, civil society and the private sector. In his address to the Conference,
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon highlighted the particular vulnerability of
dryland inhabitants to climate change impacts and food insecurity. Noting that
drylands occupy 40% of the planet's land area. Ban called for action on
reducing land degradation and improving water security through reforming
agricultural practices and making food systems sustainable. He noted that such
an approach is at the center of the Zero Hunger Challenge that will promote
efficiency through the food chain, reduce impacts and waste and nurture soil. He
added that these efforts will manage risk by improving the ability to forecast
weather and develop climate-resilient crops. Further information on EMWIS
website.
18- A young Italian student has developed a
system that could greatly facilitate the lives of thousands of people with no
access to drinking water. Faced with the global crisis of water, Gabriele
Diamanti, graduate designer proposes a new solar furnace to transform salty
seawater into drinking water. He called his invention "Eliodomesticois". It is
very simple, but really effective. Specifically, the solar oven while working as
a ceramic coffee "upside down." It suffices to pour salt water in the black part
above water which is then heated by the sun. Once the evaporation process
started, the cumulative pressure will push the vapor through a pipe in the
middle, which will condense on the cover of the bowl bottom of the device to
finally flow into a cup receiving the valuable liquid desalinated . A total of 5
liters of drinking water each day can be collected through this system that
costs just 50 dollars (39 euros). And if the student has used the Alpine clay,
the concept can also be adapted to any material. Similarly, the invention is
completely royalty free which means that anyone can create a Eliodomestico at
home. Further information on EMWIS
website.
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19- Libya: Mr
Alhadi Suleiman Hinshir nominated Minister of Water Resources.
Mr. Alhadi Suleiman Hinshir has
been nominated Minister of Water Resources in the new government of Libya. Libya’s
General National Congress has approved last November 2nd, the new government
proposed by Prime Minister Ali Zeidan. A total of 105 members voted in favour,
with nine voting against, and 18 abstentions. Among the list also: Minister of
Agriculture: Mr Ahmed Ali Al-Orfi. Further information on EMWIS
website
20- "Vacancy Announcement: World Water
Council Executive Director": Every three years, the World Water Council organises the World Water
Forum with over 20,000 participants from around the world. The World Water
Council’s multi-cultural and dynamic headquarters in Marseille, France, employs
highly motivated individuals and is seeking to appoint its Executive Director.
Duty station: World Water Council, Headquarters (Marseille, France) Reporting
to: President. Availability: 01 January 2013. Further information on EMWIS
website.
21- Senior-level (P4)
Monitoring and Evaluation Position at the Water Supply and Sanitation
Collaborative Council (WSSCC)
based
in Geneva, Switzerland. The application deadline is 30 December. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
22- Innovation award bestowed on efforts to
promote household water treatment: The P&G Children’s Safe Drinking Water
Program has won the 2012 Social Innovation Award from the Economist. This P&G
programme is a member and strong supporter of the WHO/UNICEF Household Water
Treatment and Safe Storage Network. Further information on EMWIS
website.
23- Third Call of Mediterranean Office for
Youth (MOY): The
Mediterranean Office for Youth (MOY) finances the mobility of students and young
professionals in the Mediterranean area. The eligible countries of the
Mediterranean basin that can apply to this initiative are the following:
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Greece, Italy,
Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Montenegro, Slovenia, Spain, Tunisia and Turkey. Applications must be submitted both electronically and
by mail, no later than
January 31, 2013. Further information on EMWIS
website
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24- "Europe: Water
resources in the context of vulnerability":
This report published by
EEA (European Environment
Agency) describes how the natural cycle of water
availability is continuously coming under threat from a variety of different
pressures like droughts and water scarcity, pollution, and flood risks which all
increase the vulnerability of the freshwater ecosystems and societies.
Further information on EMWIS
website
25- "European waters: current status and
future challenges - a synthesis": This report
published by
EEA (European Environment Agency)
is a synthesis of the main messages from
nine EEA reports dealing directly or indirectly with water ecosystems or the
pressures acting upon them. Further information on EMWIS
website
26- "Using scenarios to improve
understanding of environment and security issues":
The Organization for Security Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) and the European Environment Agency (EEA) is running the joint
project 'Security implications of climate change in the OSCE regions' with the
aim of improving understanding of the links between global megatrends and
environment, and the security of food, fuel and water in different regions. This brochure provides a project overview, which
includes the results of workshops carried out so far. Further information on EMWIS
website
27- "National Capacities for the Management
of Shared Water Resources": This report provides a holistic view on shared water
resources in the ESCWA region that takes into account the current challenges
facing countries of the region and reflects them into the recent regional
institutional and legal development in order to identify the gaps and clarify
the prospects for sustained cooperation on shared water between countries of the
region.
Further information on EMWIS
website
28- "Removal and
relationships of microbial indicators in a water treatment and reclamation
facility": A wastewater
treatment and reclamation facility in north-east Spain was monitored over 1 year
to determine the occurrence and concentrations of different microbial indicators
(Escherichia coli, fecal enterococci, somatic bacteriophages and spores of
sulfite-reducing clostridia). Further information on EMWIS
website
29- "Water Challenges and
Cooperative Response In the Middle East and North Africa": The Stimson Center
announced the release of a new report, Water Challenges and Cooperative Response
in the Middle East and North Africa. Home to more than 7 percent of the world’s
population, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is endowed with less
than 1.5 percent of the world’s renewable freshwater.
Further information on EMWIS
website.
30- "Water crisis:
Switzerland – part of the problem and part of the solution":
Water scarcity, climate change, food
insecurity, and migration are among the challenges that require concerted
solutions at the international level. Three times each year, the Global Brief
will look at the way the SDC addresses these issues and the results it achieves.
Further information on EMWIS
website
32- "Decentralization of drinking water &
sanitation services": by Frédéric Naulet, Stephanie Oudot & Janique
Etienne. In the 1990s, the issue of decentralization has emerged in many
countries. States face a crisis of legitimacy, greatly weakened by structural
adjustment policies, decentralization reforms have emerged as a way of bringing
the "low" local companies government, and initiate development dynamics local.
In drinking water and sanitation, decentralization policies have often resulted
in the transfer of project management skills to local authorities from these
reforms. What are the effects of
decentralization policies on governance of water and sanitation services? Under
which conditions these reforms can contribute to improving services? How
sustainable capacity of local governments? & other questions are addressed in
this book that transcribes the proceedings of a workshop held in August 2011 at
the initiative of AFD and Gret.
Further information on EMWIS
website (Only in French)
33- "New publication: a global survey of
urban water tariffs": This paper, A global survey of urban water tariffs: are
they sustainable, efficient and fair? (with Christopher Gasson), was just
published. Further information on EMWIS
website
34- TourMedEau is a
project funded by the European Union under the program Ciudad - Cooperation In
Urban Development And Dialogue - which aims to develop a system of sustainable
water management in tourist areas of the Mediterranean. TourMedEau has published
its newsletter n°5. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
35- Water Resources Management, Vol. 26,
Issue 15 is available. Further information on EMWIS
website
36- Water Policy Volume 14 Number 6 is
available. Further information on EMWIS
website
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37- Designing the 2015
Global Climate Change Agreement: "EuropeAid/133686/C/ACT/Multi". The European
Commission (EC) has issued a call for proposals for ‘Designing the 2015 Global
Climate Change Agreement’ under the Thematic Programme for Environment and
Sustainable Management of Natural Resources including Energy (ENRTP). The
programme helps developing countries and partner organisations to address
environmental and natural resource management issues. The global objective of
this call for proposals is to support the negotiations under the ADP (Durban
Platform for Enhanced Action). This is a restricted Call for Proposals. In
the first instance, only Concept Notes must be submitted for evaluation.
Thereafter, applicants whose Concept Notes have been pre-selected will be
invited to submit a Full Application Form.
The deadline to submit applications
is 22 December 2012 at 13:00 hrs (
38- The European Commission has published a
contract forecast notice for the second phase of the Euromed programme for the
Prevention, Preparedness and Response to natural and man-made Disasters (PPRD)
South with a budget of €5 million. The reference is EuropeAid/133524/C/SER/Multi. The
overall objective of this technical assistance contract is to reduce
vulnerability to, and the social, economicand environmental costs of, natural
and man-made disasters in the ENP South region (Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan,
Lebanon,Libya, Morocco, Occupied Palestinian Territory, Syrian Arab Republic,
Tunisia), thereby enhancingregional and national sustainable development and
climate adaptation. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
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39- CIGR (International
Commission of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering) and CIHEAM –
Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Bari are organizing 1st Inter-regional
Conference on Land and Water Challenges entitled “Water, environment and
agriculture: challenges for sustainable development”. The Conference will be
held in Bari (Italy), from 10 to 14 September 2013. The deadline for the submission of
abstracts is March 31, 2013.
Further information on EMWIS
website.
40- EIST Special Issue - Transitions Through
a Lens of Urban Water - Call for Papers: The Call for Papers below, for a
Special Issue in preparation for the journal Environmental Innovation and
Societal Transitions. December 10th, 2012:
deadline for submission of abstracts. Further information on EMWIS
website.
41- The XIth International
Symposium on Environment, Catalysis and Process Engineering (ECGP’11), 26-28
June, 2013, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France calls for abstracts submission up to
31th of January, 2013. Further information on EMWIS
website.
43- Call for abstracts for the 12th International Conference CCWI 2013: Computing and Control for the Water Industry: “Informatics
for Water Systems and Smart Cities”. The main
focus of the conference is on water supply/distribution and urban drainage/sewerage systems.
Submission of abstracts: 1 February 2013.
Further information on EMWIS
website.
44- The "International Symposium on Materials and
Sustainable Development" will be held from 6 to 9 May 2013 in Boumerdes
(Algeria). The CIMDD'2013 wants to be a global forum for researchers and PhD
students of various branches and specialties to present and discuss recent
innovations and new techniques in materials science and sustainable development.
December 31, 2012 is the deadline for registration and papers submission. Further information on EMWIS
website
45- Call for abstracts for the CMTDE 2013: The 4th
Maghreb Conference on Desalination and Water Treatment to be held in Hammamet (Tunisia)
from 15 to 18 December 2013. Deadline for abstracts: 30 June 2013. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
46- SHF - Call for papers
for "Extreme hydrological events in 2013: Extreme events of floods: from the
study to the hazard risk management for hydraulic structures", Lyon, November or
December 2013. The deadline for
abstracts submission is: January 15, 2013.
Further information on EMWIS
website
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47- Water Security for Policy Makers and
Practitioners Short Course 10–14 June 2013: The course is designed for entry and
mid-level water and development policy-makers and professionals in government,
donor, NGO or implementing agencies, environmental journalists, consultants and
activists wishing to take their knowledge of water resources further. This course will
be held at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK from the 10–14 June 2013
for a fee of £1,500 (inc. of accommodation). Further information on EMWIS
website.
48- Call for Applications for the e-Learning
Course on International Water Law: The United Nations Institute for Training and
Research (UNITAR) and the University of Geneva have the pleasure to invite you
to apply for their e-Learning Course on International Water Law that will take
place from 1 February to 4 March 2013.
Applicants must be between 25 and 45 years old and have a background in law,
political science, economics or international relations, or have work experience
in freshwater issues. The deadline for applications is 17 December 2012.
Further information on EMWIS
website.
49- Call for applications for the
International training course: "Integrated Sustainable Coastal Development –
MENA region": September 9–27, 2013 in Sweden & February 2–13, 2014 in Jordan.
Closing date for application is: February 15, 2013. This course
will be organized next year for participants from Tunisia, Egypt, Palestine,
Jordan and Lebanon. The participants would only have to pay their international
travel to Sweden; all other costs are covered. Further information on EMWIS
website.
50- The European Association of
Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE), Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM)
and Venice International University(VIU) announced their annual European Summer
School in Resource and Environmental Economics for postgraduate students. The
2013 Summer School will take place from June 30th to July 6th, at the VIU campus
on the Island of San Servolo, in Venice, located just in front of St. Mark’s
Square. The theme of this Summer School is Uncertainty, Innovation and Climate
Change. Deadline for applications: February 1st, 2013. Further information on EMWIS
website
51- The Erasmus Mundus Programme in Flood
Risk Management: Global Change, Hydroinformatics and Planning (FLOODRisk)
focuses on integrated flood risk management. Start date: Annually in September.
Duration: 24 Months.
Locations: Delft (the Netherlands), Dresden (Germany), Barcelona (Spain) and
Ljubljana (Slovenia). Degree: Successful candidates receive MSc degrees from TU
Dresden, UNESCO-IHE and UPC, Barcelona. Apply for the 2013/2015 Programme now. For
applicants who wish to receive an Erasmus Mundus Scholarship: for applicants
from non-European countries: 6 January 2013 and for applicants
from European countries: 13 January 2013. For those who intend
to finance the study by private means: 1 August 2013. Further
information on EMWIS
website.
52- "eLearning on Floods from WISE-RTD":
These elearning modules help visitors to explore the WISE-RTD water knowledge
portal in an interactive and entertaining way. It focuses on resolving important
water issues with the help of advisors by combining policy, science and industry
perspectives. The 1st module was related to "Dealing with Floods". The second elearning
module is dedicated to "Preventing Future Floods". After completing the course you will understand: 1.
how policy-implementers, researchers and consultants think and act to prevent
future floods by using the WISE-RTD Water Knowledge Portal to find and use
information; 2. why it is so challenging to achieve good communication links
between policy, science and industry. Further information on EMWIS
website.
53-
Global Campus for Water & Development
receives green light: The
UNESCO-IHE Governing Board approved the plans to start preparation activities
for the UNESCO-IHE Global Campus for Water & Development. The Global Campus will close the gap in the broad field of specialist capacity
needed in the field of water worldwide by providing more education at a regional
level to young talented people via partners and in the future also in
collaboration with regional UNESCO-IHE institutes. Further information on EMWIS
website.
Further information on EMWIS
website.
[2012/12/09 - 2012/12/13] Training tools for Remote Sensing Image
Processing Application and Realization: FITRA'2012, Algiers, Algeria.
Further information on EMWIS
website
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Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
[2012/12/17 - 2012/12/17]
3rd STREAM Policy
Seminar: "The climate change
challenges and managing
flood risks", Brussels,
Belgium.
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
Further information on EMWIS
website
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WATER PROJECTS DATABASE
(MEDA-NIPs, MEDA-Water, LIFE, SMAP, INCO-MED,
FP4-FP7, INTERREG, etc.)
===============================================
In this issue N°105 (www.emwis.net/thematicdirs/eflash/flash105)
========================
HEADLINE
1- UfM supports development of the water data management systems in the
Mediterranean
2- UfM and Turkey discuss concrete ways to support the Gaza Desalination
Facility project
3- Halting Desertification in the
Jucar River Basin (HALT-JÚCAR-DES) project
4- More than half of EU
surface waters below ‘good’ ecological status
5- First pan-European Drought Dialogue Forum, Nicosia (Cyprus)
6- EU: Water management in Europe faces rising challenges as ecosystems weaken
7- JRC: Contributing to EU water protection efforts
8- GIZ: Addressing shared water risks with the private sector
9- Spain: EUR 50 million for water sector investments in Cantabria
10- Palestine: World Bank Invests in Expanded Water and Sewage Services for Gaza
11- Jordan: Disi project to start supplying Amman by July 2013
12- Morocco is threatened by water scarcity
13- Morocco: Launching a platform for implementing projects on access to water
15- Radioactive Water Threatens Middle East
16- ESA - EMWIS collaboration on Earth Observation for better water management
17- Dry Lands Conference: Climate Change, Food Security
and Water Management
18- A new invention facilitating access to drinking water
NOMINATIONS and VACANCIES
PUBLICATIONS
CALL FOR TENDERS
and PROPOSALS
CALL FOR PAPERS
TRAINING
EVENTS
PROJECTS
BRIEF EMWIS SITE MAP
CONTACT US / COMMENTS
HEADLINE
=================================================
IN BRIEF (Full
news)
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NOMINATIONS and
VACANCIES
=================================================
PUBLICATIONS
=================================================
31- "Water Trading and Global Water Scarcity: International Experiences":
The book studies the institutional
framework and how transactions have been undertaken, drawing some lessons on how
trading can improve. Further information on EMWIS
website.
CALL FOR TENDERS and PROPOSALS
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CALL FOR PAPERS
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42-
Call for abstracts for the 5th Delft
Symposium on Water Sector Capacity Development to be held in Delft (Netherlands)
on 29- 31/05/2013. Abstract deadline: 15 December 2012.
Further information on EMWIS
website
TRAINING
=================================================
[2012/12/23 - 2012/12/27] Training Course:
Operations & Maintenance of Water Treatment Plants Level - General
Procedures,
Further information on EMWIS
website
[2012/12/03 - 2012/12/05] ESA - EMWIS
Workshop: "Exploitation of Earth Observation for water management in the
Mediterranean", Frascati, Italy.
EVENTS (Full
Agenda)
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[2012/12/30 - 2012/12/31]
TWAS-ARO 8th Annual Meeting,
Alexandria, Egypt.
[2012/12/17 - 2012/12/18]
The Securitization of Water
Discourse: An International
Workshop and a Public Event,
Jerusalem
[2012/12/17 - 2012/12/18]
Workshop: Exploring Research
Opportunities within the
Earth System Governance
Project, Stockholm
Further information on EMWIS
website
[2012/12/13 - 2012/12/13]
CIWEM & WSKEP Water &
Innovation Conference:
Innovation for Water
Practitioners, London, UK
[2012/12/10 - 2012/12/12]
Energy, Water and Climate
Change: Building Bridges
between Europe and MENA,
Cyprus, Nicosia.
[2012/12/05 - 2012/12/07]
International Conference «
Innovation in service of
Environment », Tunis,
Tunisia
[2012/12/03 - 2012/12/05]
2nd WHO/UNICEF Consultation
on post-2015 Monitoring, The
Hague, Netherlands.
[2012/12/03 - 2012/12/04]
STREAM and STEP-WISE Final
Conference: Facilitating
Water Information Exchange
between Science, Policy and
Industry, Brussels, Belgium.
[2012/12/03 - 2012/12/05]
United Nations International
Expert Meeting on
Crowdsource Mapping for
Disaster Risk Management and
Emergency Response, Vienna,
Austria
[2012/12/03 - 2012/12/05]
ESA - EMWIS Workshop:
"Exploitation of Earth
Observation for water
management in the
Mediterranean", Frascati,
Italy.
[2012/12/02 - 2012/12/04]
Saudi Water & Power Forum -
SWPF2012, Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia.
[2012/11/30 -
2012/11/30] 9th Meeting of ARLEM
Bureau, Brussels, Belgium.
[2012/11/30 -
2012/12/01] 10th Arab Academy of
Sciences International
Conference on Energy and Water
Sustainability, Beirut, Lebanon.
PROJECTS (Projects
database)
=================================================
BRIEF EMWIS SITE MAP
===============================================
ABOUT EMWIS (Priorities,
Activities,
Objectives,
Structure,
Funding,
Team)
WATER in the EURO-MED PARTNERSHIP (MEDA
programme,
Key dates,
European
Neighbourhood Policy)
EMWIS NATIONAL WEBSITES:
Algeria,
Egypt,
Israel,
Jordan,
Lebanon,
Morocco,
Palestine,
Syria,
Tunisia,
Turkey,
Cyprus,
Malta,
Spain,
France,
Italy,
Portugal,
Austria,
Greece,
Belgium,
Luxembourg
EMWIS WATER MULTILINGUAL THESAURUS (Available in English, French,
Arabic, Spanish & Italian)-
Water glossaries
DOCUMENTATION (EMWIS
meetings,
Documentary database,
Funding for water,
Key emwis-flash-ndeg100-may-2012-1uments,
Water Legislation)
WHO DOES WHAT IN THE WATER SECTOR (By
contacts, organisations & information sources)
PARTNERS &
SPONSORS (OIEau,
CEDEX, SOGESID, EC,
INBO,
IME,
GWP-Med,
MED-EUWI,
SMAP-RMSU)
MEDA-WATER PROJECTS (ADIRA,
EMPOWERS,
EMWater,
IrWA,
ISIIMM,
MEDAWARE,
MEDROPLAN,
MEDWA,
Zer0-M)
WATER INITIATIVES (MED-EUWI,
WFD,
INCO-MED,
LIFE,
MEDSTAT,
SMAP,
EXACT,
UNEP-MAP,
MSSD,
HORIZON 2020,
Union for the Mediterranean) &
Mediterranean Water
Information Mechanism
FORUM ;
FAQ ;
TOPICS (MedWIP,
Water scarcity,
groundwater,
wastewater reuse,
desalination,
satellite data, etc)
SEARCH EMWIS WEBSITE
EMWIS SITEMAP
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CONTACT US
=================================================
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