Category Archives: Water resources management

Water Week Latinoamérica (WWLA), Viña del Mar, Chile, 17-22 March 2013

Organised by: Fundación Chile and Diario Financiero, in collaboration with  AIDIS, DesalData, Global Water Intelligence, and The Nature Conservancy

This first Water Week Latinoamérica (WWLA) provides a platform for sharing water-related experiences and practices among the scientific, business, political, and civil society.

Topics include: 1) Water & Industry, 2) Water & Food Security, 3) Water Supply & Sanitation, 4) Water Governance, 5) New Water Supply, 6) Water & Conservation, 7) Water & Energy & Climate Change, and 8) Transboundary Basins.

Abstract deadline: 09 November 2012

Contact for further information and participation possibilities: hsorasahi@fundacionchile.cl

Websitewww.waterweekla.com

1st Regional Forum on Water Integrity, San Salvador, El Salvador, 16-18 February 2011

Organised by: Water Integrity Network (WIN), RRASCA (Regional Network for Water and Sanitation in Central America), FANCA (Fresh Water Action Network Central America), the Regional Committee of Alianza por el Agua and GWP (Global Water Partnership) Central America

Theme: Water Integrity (WI) in Central America.

During the forum, an analysis of the state of integrity in the water sector in the (Spanish speaking) Central American countries will be presented and discussed. Cases on good practices of anti-corruption, transparency and accountability work in the region (and other parts of the world) will also be presented.

Expected outcomes:

  • A “Regional Report on Water Integrity”, including the cases presented at the Regional Forum, to be published after the event
  • Launch of a (sub) regional WIN coalition for Central America

For more information (also in Spanish) and contact details go to the WIN web site

Honduras, Tegucigalpa: climate change fund approves water project

A project to improve water management in the capital Tegucigalpa is one of two first projects that the climate change Adaptation Fund has approved. The two projects (the other is in Senegal) together are worth US$ 14 million.

The proposal for the Tegucigalpa project was put forward by the Government of Honduras through the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

This project will reduce the vulnerability of at least 13,000 of the poorest households in the capital region of Tegucigalpa in Honduras by improving water management. The region already suffers from a constant water shortage in many of its poor neighborhoods and an inability to harness the occasional heavy rains that cause floods and landslides resulting from rising temperatures brought about by climate change.

The Adaptation Fund Besides receives direct contributions from developed countries, and through about 2 percent on credits generated by the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) set up under the Kyoto Protocol, which in turn operates under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Source: Adaption Fund, 17 Sep 2010 ; IRIN, 24 Sep 2010

Peru: wells sucked dry by British love of asparagus

A study, by the development charity Progressio, has found that industrial production of asparagus in Peru’s Ica valley is depleting the area’s water resources so fast that smaller farmers and local families are finding wells running dry. Water to the main city in the valley is also under threat, it says. It warns that the export of the luxury vegetable, much of it to British supermarkets, is unsustainable in its current form.

The Ica Valley is a desert area in the Andes and one of the driest places on earth. The asparagus beds developed in the last decade require constant irrigation, with the result that the local water table has plummeted since 2002 when extraction overtook replenishment. In some places it has fallen by eight metres each year, one of the fastest rates of aquifer depletion in the world.

Peru earns more than US$ 450 million a year from the trade that has created around 10,000 new jobs in a very poor area. Around 95% of Peru’s asparagus production comes from the Ica valley. The expansion of the asparagus production was made possible thanks to multimillion dollar investments by the World Bank from the late 1990s on. Nevertheless the trade has provoked conflict. When a World Bank executive went to investigate complaints about the water shortages in April 2010 he was shot at.

Progressio is not calling for an end to the asparagus export business, but is asking supermarkets and investors to take responsibility for finding a more balanced solution.

Read the full report by Progressio:
Hepworth, N.D. … [et al/] (2010). Drop by drop : understanding the impacts of the UK’s water footprint through a case study of Peruvian asparagus. London, UK, Progressio ; Lima, Peru, Centro Peruano de Estudios Sociales (CEPES) ; London, UK, Water Witness. ISBN 978-1-85287-335-6. Download [PDF file]

Read also the press release by Progressio, 15 Sep 2010

Source: Felicity Lawrence, Guardian, 15 Sep 2010

Trinidad and Tobago: Angostura needs to build own waste treatment plant

This is a schematic diagram of a rotating biol...

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The Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) has taken a hands off approach into the treating of effluent discharges of Angostura Ltd. In fact, Sunday Guardian has learnt that Angostura Ltd is set to commence discussions with a
contractor in relation to the construction of a plant to treat its own discharges.

Continue reading

Safe use of wastewater in agriculture offers multiple benefits

Hose irrigation

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Recycling urban wastewater and using it to grow food crops can help mitigate water scarcity problems and reduce water pollution, but the practice is not being as widely implemented as it should, according to a new UN food and agriculture organization (FAO) report [1]. The FAO has called for governments to increase the amount of treated wastewater being used for irrigation purposes as this will reduce costs for farmers and cities and improved water quality.

FAO report coverThe FAO report used case studies from Spain and Mexico to test methodologies for cost-benefit and cost-effective analyses of wastewater reuse projects. The Mexico case studies were drawn from three regions:

  • Mexico City & Tula Valley
  • Guanajuato City & La Purísima irrigation module
  • Durango City & Guadalupe Victoria irrigation module

“The case studies in this report show that safely harnessing wastewater for food production can offer a way to mitigate competition between cities and agriculture for water in regions of growing water scarcity,” said Pasquale Steduto, Deputy Director of FAO’s Land and Water Division. “In the right settings, it can also help to deal with urban wastewater effluent and downstream pollution.”

[1] Winpenny, J. … [et al.] (2010). The wealth of waste : the economics of wastewater use in agriculture. (FAO water reports ; 35). Rome, Italy, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). xv, 129 p. Download full report

Related news:

Source: FAO, 06 Sep 2010

Representatives from all over the world meet at St. Lucia to discuss Integrated Water Resource Management

Water, land and other resources in Small Island Developing States (SIDS) worldwide are under increasing pressure from development and natural disasters. Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM), an approach which calls for all stakeholders and various sectors to come together to make decisions and plan, is being adopted by more and more Caribbean countries.

A Workshop to review draft Global Guidelines for Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) Planning for SIDS will take place from 24 to 26 August, 2010 at the Bay Gardens Hotel in Rodney Bay, St. Lucia. Continue reading

Colombia: DNP taking steps to prevent municipal water shortage by 2025

Colombia’s national planning department (DNP) will work with municipal governments to draw up a contingency plan to prevent a severe municipal water shortage by 2025, according to the government’s 2019 development vision.

Read full article one: BNamericas, [subscription site], 26 July 2010

Who cares? WASA’s empty promises.

Almost one year after completion, in the middle of a severe drought a $25 million Water Treatment Plant installed at Cumuto remains empty.

The two massive tanks were installed to treat and distribute four million gallons of water per day—to users in Cumuto and environs—with supplies from wells. However, a Sunday Guardian investigation reveals that to date, sinking of the wells, which was supposed to supply the tanks with water, has come to a halt. The project, which began in June of 2006 and was expected to take 15 months to be done, is yet to be completed. The treatment plant was built by Uem Gem Ltd, while another company was responsible for sinking the wells.

Asked if the plant was operative, one worker who requested anonymity replied: “There is no water so obviously the plant cannot operate. If there is no water the plant cannot work.” The handful of residents in the community believe their complaints for water have fallen on deaf ears.

Source: The Guardian, Trinidad & Tobago, 12 July 2010

Ecuador: Interagua will launch consultancy tender for US$120mn wastewater project

Ecuadorian city Guayaquil’s private water utility Interagua will launch an international tender to carry out feasibility studies for a US$120mn wastewater treatment project, the head of Interagua’s treatment division, Angela Castaño, told BNamericas.

Contact: Interagua
Tel: 593 4 2874030
Contact: oficinacentral@interagua.com.ec
Site Interagua: http://www.interagua.com.ec/

Read full article on: BNamericas, [subscription site],  July 1, 2010