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This map shows the locations
where IUCN-The World Conservation Union and the International Water
Management Institute (IWMI) are leading basin-level projects under
three initiatives. These initiatives are: the Water and Nature Initiative
(WANI), the Challenge Program for Water and Food (CP), and the Comprehensive
Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture (CA).
The IUCN
Water and Nature Initiative (WANI) is a 5-year action plan to
develop practical solutions to polluted waterways, dried-up rivers,
and drained wetlands. The Initiative finds and tests these solutions
in river basins around the world with the aim to demonstrate that
ecosystem-based management and stakeholders participation will help
solve todays water dilemmabringing rivers back to life
and sustaining their capacity to produce the natural resources on
which so many people depend. The main goal of WANI is the mainstreaming
of an ecosystem approach into basin-level policies, planning and
management. The Initiative is organized into 6 components. The first
component aims to demonstrate ecosystem management in river basins.
In field projects, nature conservation and integrated management
of land and water resources is combined with establishing the required
institutional, legal and economic frameworks.Components 2-5 are
designed to support the demonstration projects and to develop 'stand-alone'
outputs that can be applied more widely. Tools will be developed
and capacities built at national, provincial and local levels to
empower local groups and government agencies in developing and implementing
an ecosystem approach to basin management. Finally, component 6
will focus on coordinating the Initiative and building a solid internal
and external communication system and outreach activities. Further
information is available on-line at:http://www.waterandnature.org.
The Challenge
Program on Water and Food is a new initiative of the CGIAR(Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research), launched in 2003.
The Challenge Program is governed by a Joint Venture Consortium
of 18 partners which includes five CGIAR centers, six National Agricultural
Research and Extension System centers, four Advanced Research Institutes,
and three non-governmental organizations. The International Water
Management Institute (IWMI) is the lead partner. The objective of
this Challenge Program is to maintain or reduce the current level
of global diversions of water to agriculture, while increasing food
production, to achieve internationally adopted targets for decreasing
malnourishment and rural poverty by the year 2015. The program is
being implemented over the next 5 years in 7 Challenge river basins,
with low average incomes and high physical, economic or environmental
water scarcity or water stress. The major research themes focus
upon improving crop water productivity, multiple uses of upper catchments,
aquatic ecosystems and fisheries, integrated river basin management,
and analysis of the global and national food and water system. Further
information is available on-line at: http://www.waterforfood.org/.
The Comprehensive
Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture (CA) is the first
international research and capacity building program to take stock
of the past 50 years of water management and developmentthe
costs and the benefits. The result will be better quality decisions
on water investments and management, and better targeting of development
funding to meet food and environmental security targets in the near
future and over the next 25 years. One of the components of the
CA is a river basin comparative study, which will look at the historical
development of 10 river basins. Each CA river basin assessment is
aimed at deriving an understanding of how societies manage water
resources under growing pressures, and to explore alternatives for
future water management and use. The Comprehensive Assessment of
Water Management is being carried out by a coalition of partners,
including 11 CGIAR centers, the Food and Agriculture Organization,
the World Resources Institutes, IUCN-The World Conservation Union,
and partners from some 40 research and development institutes globally.
Further information is available on-line at: http://www.iwmi.org/assessment.
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