22 March 2019

IIASA and World Water Day 2019

World Water Day is held annually on 22 March and is about taking actions to tackle global water challenges. IIASA is involved in a number of regional and global activities and initiatives focused on how to raise awareness and find solutions that will ensure sustainable water futures. 

 

 © Piter Ivanov | Dreamstime.com

© Piter Ivanov | Dreamstime.com

The theme of this year’s World Water Day is “Leaving no one behind”. The aim is to tackle the water crisis by addressing the reasons why billions of people (women, children, refugees, indigenous peoples, disabled people, etc.) are being left behind.  World Water Day fact sheet.

UN Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG6) is crystal clear: Water for all by 2030. The IIASA Water Program has continually been active in water science since the institute's inception in 1972. The program develops models and uses scenario based approaches to support policymakers with sound scientific data and tools for responding to current and future global water challenges.



Highlights of Water Program research and activities

1.  Advancing collaboration in the Indus Basin

The Third Indus Basin Knowledge Forum Workshop was held at IIASA in Laxenburg, Austria in June 2018 and brought together researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders from the four basin countries (Afghanistan, China, India, and Pakistan) and beyond to share knowledge and advance collaborative efforts for sustainable resource management. The event was hosted by the institute and co-convened by IIASA, the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), the International Water Management Institute (IWMI), and the World Bank.


2. Engagement in East Africa

@ IIASA - Entebbe 2018

The East Africa Future Water Scenarios to 2050 workshop focused on future water resources options and challenges in East Africa and brought together practitioners and policymakers engaged in government, academia, business, and civil society from Uganda and the other member countries of the Lake Victoria Basin Commission (Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania). Participants explored results from the model runs of the Community Water Model (CWATM) and the Hydro-Economic Model (ECHO) on mid to long-term water resources management trends for East Africa. This workshop was held as part of the Water Futures and Solutions Initiative funded by the Austrian Development Agency.

3. Modeling activities

The Community Water Mode (CWATM) is an open source model that examines how future water demand will evolve in response to socioeconomic change and how water availability will change in response to climate. The model enables the assessment of water supply and human and environmental water demands at both global and regional levels and is the first step towards developing an integrated modeling framework that will be able to provide vital information to decision and policymakers.


Global Hydro-economic Model (ECHO) is a bottom-up system analysis framework that can be used to develop integrated, long-term planning strategies for the water system. It can be used to inform the design of cost-effective and sustainable water policy decisions and to address the impacts of future changing socioeconomic and climatic conditions on water systems.

@ IIASA - East Africa Future Water Scenarios to 2050 - Consultation and Joint Learning Workshop - Entebbe 2018












Water quality modeling

The IIASA Water Program conducts water quality modeling for water availability- and scarcity assessment, water-energy-land-environment nexus analysis, and identification of cost-effective solutions under long-term changes. 

@ IIASA - Tang















The MARINA model is soft-linked to CWATM and ECHO at IIASA’s Water Program. The MARINA model is used to quantify current and future nutrient export to coastal waters for selected large river basins under different socio-economic development and climate change pathways.


Water Games: A joint initiative by IIASA and the Centre for Systems Solutions

With growing population and environmental degradation, we are at a point where around 60% of people do not have access to sufficient and stable freshwater resources. We are heading towards a global water crisis.

How do we address different water challenges, including those related to nature-based solutions?

Gaming has become a part of daily life for many people and new ways to apply games to solve complex real-life problems are being invented. These so-called serious games or social simulations, are not meant to offer ways to escape from reality, but rather to improve it. Games and Simulations can now provide exciting and insightful ways to raise awareness, develop empathy, and explore the opportunities and limitations of achieving clean and accessible water for all. IIASA and the Centre for Systems Solutions have been collecting and describing such water-related games and their applications on the Water Games website for several years. 

Join us to celebrate World Water Day and Sustainable Development Goal 6 to ensure clean water and sanitation for all. Visit the Water Games page on the Games4Sustainability website to find new tools to promote change towards sustainable behaviors.

© Piotr Magnuszewski | IIASA




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Last edited: 09 October 2019

CONTACT DETAILS

Yoshihide Wada

Principal Research Scholar Water Security Research Group - Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program

CONTACT DETAILS

Paula Abarca del Rio

Program and Project Officer Water Security Research Group - Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program

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WATER PROGRAM

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Schlossplatz 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria
Phone: (+43 2236) 807 0 Fax:(+43 2236) 71 313