Action needed on water and disasters

Source(s): United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
From left: Ms. Mami Mizutori, head of UNISDR, Ms. Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, former President of Mauritius, and Dr. Han Seung-soo, Chair, High-level Experts and Leaders Panel on Water and Disasters (HELP)

From left: Ms. Mami Mizutori, head of UNISDR, Ms. Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, former President of Mauritius, and Dr. Han Seung-soo, Chair, High-level Experts and Leaders Panel on Water and Disasters (HELP)

GENEVA, 3 May, 2018 - Urgent action is needed to address water-related disasters which accounted for 90% of the 1,000 most severe disasters that have occurred since 1990, according to the final outcome document – Making Every Drop Count -  of the High Level Panel on Water, issued in March to kick off the International Decade for Action on Water for Sustainable Development.

“Tragedies will continue to be repeated if we do not squarely address water and disaster issues at all levels,” said Dr. Han Seung-soo, the founding chair, as he opened the 11th meeting of the High-Level Experts and Leaders’ Panel on Water and Disaster (HELP) at the World Meteorological Organization HQ in Geneva today.

Citing the report, Dr. Han said Special Thematic Sessions on water and disasters should continue to be organized biennially in the UN General Assembly, to raise political awareness.

“Water-related disaster risk reduction financing should be doubled globally with the next five years. Specific targets must be set, as an adequate fixed percentage of national GDP,” he said.

Dr. Han, a former Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea and UN Special Envoy on Disaster Risk Reduction and Water, also backed efforts to promote higher education on disaster risk reduction including policy studies, natural science and technology.

Other recommendations under consideration include the possibility of a UN Water Summit, the creation of a UN Scientific Panel on Water and strengthened support to UN Member States on coordination of water matters.

The UN Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, Ms. Mami Mizutori, said: “Reducing the size of drought vulnerable populations should be a global priority given our knowledge and understanding of the phenomenon and the fact that one billion people have been affected by drought over the last twenty years.”

She remarked that floods which now account for 50% of all weather-related disasters, highlight how disaster risk reduction is both a long-term development issue and a necessary strategy to prevent disasters and save lives in the short to medium term.

Ms. Mizutori said that the global plan for reducing disaster losses, the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, emphasizes the importance of risk-informed investment in critical infrastructure, including water facilities, to avoid the creation of new risk. She was pleased to accept her nomination to HELP proposed by Dr. Han.

Ms. Ameenah Gurib-Fakim, former President of Mauritius, urged that disaster risk reduction and prevention be integrated in long-term national planning and that education on disaster risk must be stepped up at all levels particularly given the impact of climate change.

The former Co-Chair of the High Level Panel on Water also remarked that “many of the 17 SDGs will fail if we do not address SDG6” in reference to the SDG on access to safe water and sanitation and sound management of fresh water ecosystems.

Ms. Gurib-Fakim also recommended that trans-boundary issues should be addressed as 40% of people live in river basins which cross national borders.

Making Every Drop Count: An Agenda for Water Action was released by a panel of 11 Heads of State and calls for a fundamental shift in the way the world manages water so that the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) can be achieved.

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