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来源类型 | Speech |
规范类型 | 其他 |
Water and Climate Change in the MENA-Region | |
[unavailable] | |
发表日期 | 2011 |
出版年 | 2011 |
语种 | 英语 |
概述 | Read more about Water and Climate Change in the MENA-Region TimeLoc 29 April 2011 Berlin Germany Rodrigo Vidaurre Jennifer Möller-Gulland At the conference on "Water and Climate Change in the MENA-Region", organised by GIZ and BMZ, Rodrigo Vidaurre, Researcher at Ecologic Institute, held a presentation on policies that address the link between human security, water conflicts, and Climate Change. Jennifer Möller-Gulland, Researcher at Ecologic Institute, held a further presentation on innovative benefit assessment methodologies to assess quantitative and monetary benefits from improved water resources use. Read more |
摘要 | At the conference on "Water and Climate Change in the MENA-Region", organised by GIZ and BMZ, Rodrigo Vidaurre, Researcher at Ecologic Institute, held a presentation on policies that address the link between human security, water conflicts, and Climate Change. Jennifer Möller-Gulland, Researcher at Ecologic Institute, held a further presentation on innovative benefit assessment methodologies to assess quantitative and monetary benefits from improved water resources use.
The conference objectives included:
The Ecologic Institute was invited to share relevant insights from two currently ongoing projects, namely Social and economic benefits of enhanced environment protection in ENP countries (ENPI) and Climate Change, Hydro-conflicts and Human Security (CLICO). Based on the country study of Israel, Jennifer Möller-Gulland presented methodologies which were developed and applied to assess the quantitative and monetary benefits of improving water resource use and its adaptation to climate change within the ongoing ENPI project. Quantitative benefits of improved water resource use are assessed by means of an in-depth assessment of water footprints in the agricultural sector, including production and trade patterns. The analysis illustrated that Israel could decrease current agricultural water demand by around 50%, which equals 96% of potable water used annually in agriculture, by adjusting production and trade patterns based on water footprints. The monetary benefits of improved water resource use can be assessed by the application of the rationales of "costs of water supply uncertainty" in agriculture and of "costs avoided" from water produced by desalination. The resultant benefits to farmers due to decreased water supply uncertainty, by e.g. increased wastewater reuse, are estimated at EUR 136 million (NIS 712 million) annually. Improved water resource use may lead to a reduced demand of desalinated water, which can be monetized at 0.36€/m³. For the full assessment, including the assumptions and framing conditions, please consult the Presentation [pdf, 86 kB, English] and the Conference Paper [pdf, 255 kB, English]. Whereas Climate Change is often related to increased conflict and issues such as migration, there is little to no empirical research that addresses this link. The CLICO project analyses in a variety of approaches both historical and current data to ascertain the nature of this relationship, as well as that with related aspects such as vulnerability, adaptive capacity, and institutions. Rodrigo Vidaurre presented interim results of Ecologic Institute’s analysis of policies in the MENA region which are good-practice, in that they improve societal resilience to conflict due to hydro-climatic hazards. Two regional policies were highlighted. In Egypt, the establishment of Water User Associations, which are participatory in nature and which collectively organize water extraction, has helped reduce conflicts between the "upstream" and the "downstream" users of irrigation infrastructure; previously, it was often the case that upstream users used up the water allocated to downstream users. This change in water management approach increased the food security and the economic situation of downstream users, reduced their risk of crop failure, and increased water use efficiency. In Turkey, the introduction in 2005 of an agricultural insurance scheme which covers most climatic hazards (but excludes droughts) has improved the situation of small and middle farmers. This measure, which improves the farmers’ situation by distributing the risks associated with crop failure due to climatic hazards, will help farmers sustain their livelihoods. In Turkey, the problems of the rural population to sustain their livelihoods is one of the drivers of migration of rural population towards urban centres, which often results in poverty and conflict over resources in peri-urban areas. For further information, please consult the Presentation [pdf, 55 kB, English] and the Conference Paper [pdf, 91 kB, English]. |
标签 | Speech ; Climate ; Water ; Adaptation |
关键词 | water climate change adaptation mitigation best practices water footprint benefit assessment |
URL | https://www.ecologic.eu/4150 |
来源智库 | Ecologic Institute (Germany) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/37819 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | [unavailable]. Water and Climate Change in the MENA-Region. 2011. |
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