FPCD Supports UN on World Water Day
THE FOUNDATION FOR POST CONFLICT DEVELOPMENT SUPPORTS THE UNITED NATIONS EFFORTS ON WORLD WATER DAY.
U N I T E D N
A T I O N S N A T I O N S U N I E S
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
--
MESSAGE ON WORLD WATER DAY
22 March 2012
Over the coming
decades, feeding a growing global population and ensuring food and nutrition
security for all will depend on increasing food production. This, in turn, means ensuring the sustainable
use of our most critical finite resource – water.
The theme of this
year’s World Water Day is water and food security. Agriculture is by far the main user of
freshwater. Unless we increase our
capacity to use water wisely in agriculture, we will fail to end hunger and we will
open the door to a range of other ills, including drought, famine and political
instability.
In many parts of
the world, water scarcity is increasing and rates of growth in agricultural
production have been slowing. At the
same time, climate change is exacerbating risk and unpredictability for farmers,
especially for poor farmers in low-income countries who are the most vulnerable
and the least able to adapt.
These interlinked
challenges are increasing competition between communities and countries for
scarce water resources, aggravating old security dilemmas, creating new ones
and hampering the achievement of the fundamental human rights to food, water
and sanitation. With nearly 1 billion people
hungry and some 800 million still lacking a safe supply of freshwater, there is
much we must do to strengthen the foundations of local, national, and global
stability.
Guaranteeing sustainable
food and water security for all will require the full engagement of all sectors
and actors. It will entail transferring
appropriate water technologies, empowering small food producers and conserving
essential ecosystem services. It will
require policies that promote water rights for all, stronger regulatory
capacity and gender equality. Investments
in water infrastructure, rural development and water resource management will
be essential.
We
should all be encouraged by the renewed political interest in food security, as
evidenced by the high
priority given to this issue by the agendas of the G8 and G20, the emphasis on
the nexus of food, water and energy in the report of my Global Sustainability
Panel, and the growing number of countries pledging to Scale Up Nutrition.
On
this World Water Day, I urge all partners to fully use the opportunity provided
by the Rio+20 UN Conference on Sustainable Development. In Rio, we need to connect the dots between water
security and food and nutrition security in the context of a green economy. Water will play a central role in creating
the future we want.
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