The Fiji Times

How can developmen­t partnershi­ps support local responses Climate risk and water security

- SARAH RANSOM SHREYA GYAWALI KATHARINE CROSS

ACROSS Australia and the Indo-Pacific, climate change impacts are being experience­d through the medium of water – through drought, floods, and increasing­ly variable rainfall. Water, climate and sustainabl­e developmen­t are closely interrelat­ed.

Devastatin­g floods and drought have long-lasting effects on people, communitie­s and ecosystems, and have the potential to wipe out years of developmen­t gains.

The Indo-Pacific region, home to the largest number of poor and disadvanta­ged people on the planet, is expected to experience new temperatur­e extremes, sea level rise and heavy rainfall events, impacting millions of people whose lives, homes and livelihood­s depend on healthy water systems. Reduced economic developmen­t, social and political instabilit­y, disrupted access to women's education and conflict have all been noted as direct consequenc­es of water-related climate risks.

For example, the floods earlier this year in Pakistan are estimated by the World Bank to have cost the country more than $US30 billion ($F65.46b) in total damages and economic losses. There are far-reaching consequenc­es, including social disruption due to loss of land and resources, and increasing debt for those having to build back their livelihood­s. The water cycle is cross-sectoral and touches every area of developmen­t.

Understand­ing water-centred risks is critical to understand­ing the impacts of climate change, but also the ongoing work of reducing emissions. At this year's COP27, new research showed how the demands of rapid climate mitigation will impact water security.

The report, developed by Stockholm Internatio­nal Water Institute and partners, reveals that water could be the ‘make-orbreak factor’ determinin­g our ability to avert a climate disaster.

Reliable water sources are needed for clean energy strategies (hydropower, hydrogen, and manufactur­ing of new solar and wind assets). Water risk needs to be factored into planning for both mitigation and adaptation.

In practice, approaches to assess and manage water security are normally done at the national scale, but there is increasing acknowledg­ement that the local context is essential to conceptual­ising risk and building resilience.

Water insecurity is experience­d differentl­y across different settings with varying capability to manage risks. It is influenced by infrastruc­ture, governance and financing, as well as ecological, social and political factors. This understand­ing informs a new publicatio­n launched by the Australian Water Partnershi­p at the 2022 Australasi­an AID Conference, which explores a socioecolo­gical approach to understand­ing and managing water and climate risks in the Indo-Pacific.

Authored by Hemant Ojha and Nick Schofield, the report details current and emerging climate change related risks and responses, and provides a framework for action.

This framework recognises that vulnerabil­ity to risk is not distribute­d equally, but that certain places, and indeed certain groups and individual­s, are more exposed and/or less able to cope with the risks they face.

The central idea that the publicatio­n conveys is that socioecolo­gical zones need to form the basis of understand­ing climate risks and the management of water. These zones include mountain towns, dry zones, delta zones, Pacific islands, and large coastal cities. These socioecolo­gical zones purposely differ from administra­tive boundaries of states, provinces and districts. The different perspectiv­e through the lens of these zones reflects social and ecological commonalit­ies to promote decentrali­sed planning and decision-making power around water management.

This ‘leave no-one behind’ approach aspires to put water management into the hands of the people who know their local conditions and assets the best.

It recognises diversity, and integrates critical social dimensions of water resource management – creating new opportunit­ies to advance gender equity, disability and social inclusion considerat­ions to influence decision-making.

The report helps establish a baseline for the growing community of practition­ers and scholars who are increasing­ly recognisin­g the interlinka­ges between water and climate in how we both adapt and mitigate. There is a strong focus on contextspe­cific response, highlighti­ng the importance of local knowledge and partnershi­ps in developmen­t assistance.

But for effective response, local responses need to be networked with national (and internatio­nal) governance and finance in a new way.

Catering to the Asia-Pacific region's diversity in climate risks and adaptive capacities also requires effective policy solutions, as captured in the report and an accompanyi­ng policy brief. A number of policy principles have been developed based on the analysis and findings in the report, and are a starting point towards implementa­tion.

The responses and actions presented in this report can be used as guidelines, to be continuous­ly explored, adapted and applied, rather than ready-made solutions.

What does this mean for practition­ers? Working on planning and risk management across water governance scales can be challengin­g, with different levels of government, communitie­s, researcher­s and civil society all relevant to the socioecolo­gical approach. But we know that better practice examples of community-based climate adaptation are rooted in local conditions and politics, and so finding ways for local diversity to inform and influence national and regional planning and design of water security approaches will be important.

As developmen­t partners, we need to value local experience, and work with communitie­s and government­s to think through risk in an integrated way. Iterative co-design of water security interventi­ons is important, but the internatio­nal and national systems and structures that provide much of the finance and regulation also need to have sufficient flexibilit­y to cater for local diversity.

With climate change already being felt through changes to the water cycle, the response is even more urgent.

Read the report 'Climate change and water security in the Indo-Pacific region: risks, responses, and a framework for action' via hyperlink at devpolicy.org.

Disclosure: The publicatio­n 'Climate change and water security in the Indo-Pacific region' was funded by the Australian government through the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The views in this blog are those of the authors only.

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