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  • Abu-Dhabi Global Environmental Data Initiative (AGEDI)
  • Lead Partner: Government of United Arab Emirates - Environment Agency - Abu Dhabi (EAD)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The Main objectives of AGEDI are:
    Ø To achieve more cost-effective and relevant environmental data collection and assessment,
    Ø To strengthen and enhance environmental capacity to collect, analyze, use and update multi-sectoral environmental data and information in the decision making process,
    Ø To develop and strengthen means of ensuring that planning for sustainable development in all sectors is based on, inter alia, quality, timely, reliable, and usable environmental data and information,
    Ø To make relevant environmental data and information accessible to all stakeholders in the form, and at the time, required to facilitate its use,
    Ø To strengthen existing national and international mechanisms of information collection, exchange and processing,
    Ø To strengthen mechanisms for incorporating environmental information in decision making,
    Ø To strengthen national capacities, including capacities within governments, NGOs and private sector, in data/information collection, handling and communication, particularly in developing countries, and
    Ø To ensure full participation of developing countries in the collection, analysis, assessment, use and update of environmental data and information.

    [more]
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  • Biodiversity Protection and Commercialization in the Caribbean
  • Lead Partner: Caribbean Community Secretariat (CARICOM)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Caribbean
    Summary:
    The main objective of this partnership is the effective protection of the natural heritage of the Caribbean region through the conservation and sustainable management of their natural biodiversity. This will be done through partnerships - a priority component of this initiative is the partnerships between regional organisations, national government agencies, international and national NGOs, local communities and wider civil society with interest in strengthening and upscaling initiatives that have shown to be successful. Objectives for the partnership include:
    * Building capacity to provide support for the recording, compilation, and dissemination of traditional knowledge in order to maximising the benefits accruing to the countries and communities that own this knowledge, as well as focus on the application of this knowledge for the conservation and sustainable use of biological resources.
    * Significantly increasing regional population awareness of the importance of biological resources, and what is required for protection of this vital resource. Public education and outreach is necessary to help increase public awareness and lay the foundation for community level participation. Awareness programmes will also be directed to traditional owners and potential users of traditional knowledge.
    * Assist in the development of capacity at different levels for the identification, conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity.
    * Protecting traditional knowledge and IPR, enhancing income, and increasing the value of biological resources and local communities' traditional knowledge.
    * Build capacity for the management of protected areas.
    * Re-institutionalisation of traditional knowledge systems and traditional use of biological resources in the science, history and social components of formal and informal education curricula in the region. [more]
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  • CGIAR Challenge Program: Biofortified Crops for Improved Human Nutrition
  • Lead Partner: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The goal of the 'Biofortified Crops for Improved Human Nutrition' Challenge Program is to improve the health of poor people by breeding staple food crops that are rich in micronutrients, a process referred to here as "biofortification." The Biofortification Challenge Program seeks to bring the full potential of agricultural and nutrition science to bear on the persistent problem of micronutrient malnutrition. Micronutrient malnutrition, primarily the result of diets poor in bioavailable vitamins and minerals, affects more than half of the world's population, especially women and preschool children. The costs of these deficiencies in terms of lives lost, forgone economic growth, and poor quality of life are staggering. To reach the Millennium Development Goal's target of halving the proportion of undernourished people by 2015, new technologies and approaches are needed to help address the problem.

    The Biofortification Challenge Program will focus on three micronutrients that are widely recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) as limiting: iron, zinc, and vitamin A (beta-carotene). Full-time breeding programs are proposed for six staple foods for which feasibility studies have already been completed and which are consumed by the majority of the world's poor in Africa, Asia, and Latin America: rice, wheat, maize, cassava, sweet potatoes, and common beans. Pre-breeding feasibility studies are proposed for eleven additional staples: bananas, barley, cowpeas, groundnuts, lentils, millet, pigeon peas, plantains, potatoes, sorghum, and yams. [more]
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  • Caribbean Adaptation to Climate Change and Sea Level Rise
  • Lead Partner: Caribbean Community Secretariat (CARICOM) - Caribbean Community Secretariat (CARICOM)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Caribbean
    Summary:
    Overall goal of the initiative is "to catalyse action and strengthen partnerships at all levels to enable increased understanding and capacity by the region's population to respond to climate change, climate variability and sea level rise".
    Primary objectives for this initiative are:
    * Strengthening or developing, in partnership with the wide array of stakeholders in each country, national capacity to provide oversight of adaptation initiatives proposed in response to climate change and sea level rise in support of sustainable development and vulnerability reduction.
    * Support the introduction of graduate scholarship and research, specialised diploma and certificate training by the tertiary institutions across the region.
    * Mainstreaming climate change and adaptation into planning at all levels.
    * Mobilisation of resources for national and local level adaptation measures, including the transfer of technology. [more]
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  • Certification for Sustainable Tourism (CST)
  • Lead Partner: Government of Costa Rica - Costa Rican Tourist Board (ICT)
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Latin America and the Caribbean
    Summary:
    The Certification for Sustainable Tourism (CST), is one of the first systems, if not the first, to achieve the integration of the principle elements of sustainable tourism, analyzing good management practices, the environmental and social impacts of services, as well as the client's perception of image and the congruence between the service offered and the product's promotion. In its four years of operation in Costa Rica, CST has been able to objectively measure sustainability of operating businesses, improve business environmental and social practices, and motivate businesses to improve practices and clients to choose sustainable tourist businesses.
    The main objective of this proposal is to transfer CST and make it fully applicable in other countries, in such a way that these countries can share a common foundation for promoting sustainability in tourism. This will achieve a number of goals: economies of scale, greater market recognition of the standard, increasing consumer awareness, and substantial improvement in the environmental and social impacts of tourism.
    The widespread implementation of CST will produce direct individual benefits to businesses (reduced costs, increased occupancy, and better image) while offering substantial environmental and social guarantees to the local population. At a regional level, it serves as a unifier and a common basis for the promotion of sustainable tourism. [more]
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  • Cities for Climate Protection Campaign
  • Lead Partner: Local Government of Cities of Buenos Aires and Avellameda - Local Government of City of Graz - 7 Brazilian Local Governments - 133 Canadian Local Governments - Local Government of City of Tome - Local Government of City of Krnov - Local Government of City of Copenhagen - 46 Finnish Local Governments - 8 German Local Governments - Local Government of City of Kallithea - Local Government of Cities of Budapest and Miskolc - 17 Indian Local Governments - 10 Indonesian Local Governments - 7 Italian Local Governments - 4 Japanese Local Governments - 8 Mexican Local Governments - Local Government of Cities of Amsterdam and Rotterdam - 17 New Zealand Local Governments - 14 Philippines' Local Governments - Local Government of City of Gdansk - Local Government of Cities of Almeda and Lisbon - 12 South African Local Governments - Local Government of City of Barcelona - Local Government of Cities of Goteborg, Stockholm and Vaxjo - 6 Thai Local Governments - 55 U.K. Local Governments - 159 U.S. Local Governments
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The Cities for Climate ProtectionTM (CCP) Campaign enlists cities to adopt policies and implement measures to achieve quantifiable reductions in local greenhouse gas emissions, improve air quality, and enhance urban livability and sustainability. More than 650 local governments participate in the CCP, integrating climate change mitigation into their decision-making processes. ICLEI runs this highly successful and widely recognized campaign either regionally or nationally in Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan, Latin America, Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the United States.
    Local governments join the Cities for Climate Protection (CCP) campaign by passing a resolution pledging to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from their local government operations and throughout their communities. To help cities achieve their goals, ICLEI then assists the cities undertake the CCP's five milestones.
    Communities that participate in the CCP benefit from the actions that they take to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through:
    - Financial savings in reduced utility and fuel costs to the local government, households, and businesses.
    - Improved local air quality, contributing to the general health and well being of the community.
    - Economic development and new local jobs as investments in locally produced energy products and services keep money circulating in the local economy.
    In addition, ICLEI provides regionally specific tools and technical assistance to assist local governments in reducing their greenhouse gas emissions. [more]
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  • Community Development for Sustainable Water and Environmental Management in Coastal Populations of the Caribbean Sea (White Water to Blue Water)
  • Lead Partner: The Water Center for the Humid Tropics of Latin America and the Caribbean (CATHALAC) - The White Water to Blue Water Initiative (WW2BW)
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Latin America and the Caribbean
    Summary:
    The development objective of this project is to promote sustainable water and environmental management and human sustainable development. This will be achieved through capacity building, organizational strengthening, direct public participation, decentralized local governance, and small business development. Thus, the project proposes a participatory and bottom-up methodological framework to jointly address the water and environmental management issues, find feasible solutions and suggest new environmentally sound economic activities. Furthermore it is conceived as a project belonging to the local governments with which a protocol of cooperation has been established with CATHALAC. The application of participative strategies is expected to contribute to the strengthening of democracy and give a prominent role to achieving sustainable development, improving the quality of life of the population as a whole and especially the weaker strata including the indigenous Emberá tribe and women, and empowering them as stakeholders of their own destiny. [more]
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  • Competence Platform on Energy Crop and Agroforestry Systems for Arid and Semi-arid Ecosystems - Africa (COMPETE)
  • Lead Partner: WIP Renewable Energies
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Summary:
    The objective of the Competence Platform on Energy Crop and Agroforestry Systems - Africa (COMPETE) is to stimulate bioenergy implementation in Africa. COMPETE will establish a platform for policy dialogue and capacity building in the major multi- and bi-lateral funding organisations and key stakeholders throughout the bioenergy provision and supply chains.

    As global fossil energy resources become constrained, bioenergy is emerging as a major potential resource to supply the energy services currently provided by these fossil fuels. Africa and Latin America have, in theory, very large areas of land resources ‘available’ for bioenergy production. However, the production of biomass for energy on the scales necessary to supply significant shares of national and global energy provision, will result in very substantial impacts (positive and negative) on the ecosystems and cultures of these target regions. The protection of biodiversity, rural livelihoods and management of scarce water resources are critical considerations in any analysis of the potential for sustainable bioenergy provision.

    Therefore, a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary, assessment of current land use, energy demand and technology innovation focused on Africa, will be carried out to identify pathways for the sustainable provision of bioenergy, which will:

    • improve the quality of life and create alternative means of income for the rural population in Africa

    • aid the preservation of the critical functions of arid and semi-arid regions in Africa as intact ecosystems

    • enhance the equitable exchange of knowledge between EU and developing countries
    [more]
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  • ECOAGRICULTURE: Promoting Science, Practice and Policy for Land Use Systems that Jointly Increase Food Production, Reduce Rural Poverty, and Conserve Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
  • Lead Partner: Future Harvest Foundation - Future Harvest Foundation
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Goals: To promote Science, Practice and Policy for Land Use Systems that Jointly increase Food Production, Reduce Rural Poverty, and Conserve Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services by catalysing:
    * Research and land-use innovation with farmers and conservationists
    * Capacity building
    * Education and public awareness
    * Enabling policies
    * Resource mobilisation
    Expected Results:
    1. An international conference of ecoagriculture innovators
    2. Support for on-going ecoagriculture field projects or community based initiatives
    3. Identification and publicize communities managing successful ecoagriculture systems
    4. Promotion of ecoagriculture education, training and capacity building
    5. Promotion of information dissemination and thus public awareness of the potentials of ecoagriculture [more]
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  • Ecological activation of local communities
  • Lead Partner: Eco Idea
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Europe and North America
    Summary:
    The actual state of natural environment depends on everyday decisions taken at the local level (at household, institutions, business and trade). The importance of environmental protection is obvious for every citizen and local stakeholder. But at the same time sustainability in everyday life, decision making in industries, institutions shops etc. is not considered. Acting for environment is not attractive at the marketing level. When we want to achieve any ecological result we have to arrange project for various players of locality.

    There are three key areas:
    1) For sustainable consumption (focused on noncommercial informational system for consumers) addressed to trade - consumers - schools - local authority.
    2) For sustainable management (focused on reduction of paper, energy and heating use) addressed to business and institutions - local authority - media.
    3) For youth eco-activation (focused on out of school activity closely coordinated with local eco policy) addressed to schools - local authority - households. [more]
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  • Enterprise of Trust - Economic Welfare in Rural Areas through the use of Renewable Energies
  • Lead Partner: North South Initiative e.V. - SUDERETA
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Summary:
    Decentralised systems for the use of renewable energies can contribute to a sustainable development in rural areas in Africa. Photovoltaic systems provide electricity for lighting, medical systems, water pumping and communication systems for communities and institutions. Wind power can pump water and generate electricity. Fuel efficient cookers, biogas or solar cookers can relieve women and children from their daily work of collecting fire wood, or they can save expenses for wood or charcoal. Beyond cooking, biogas can feed lamps and engines.
    Together with the local partner SUDERETA in the 'South' the association NorthSouthInitiative, NSI e.V. in the 'North' has set up several small enterprises called 'Enterprises of Trust' in rural areas for the production and sale of systems based on renewable energies. The production of such devices can provide the momentum for self-sustaining local economic cycles. Capital will thus be accumulated step by step in rural areas. Employment in technical professions is created and technical skills will be taught. Technical equipment is installed serving multiple usage in the area. The money earned can will support directly or indirectly local social services, such as schools or health services, and help protect the environment. The living conditions become sustainable in their ethnic surroundings. [more]
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  • Euro-Mediterranean Water and Poverty Facility (EuroMed WPF): A Tripartite Programme of Action
  • Lead Partner: Global Water Partnership (GWP)- Mediterranean
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Mediterranean
    Summary:
    The majority of the population in the Mediterranean countries (particularly in the South and East) lives in rapidly expanding cities, with considerable proportions being at the lowest income brackets. In their everyday life, a large part of the urban population suffers from water quality and quantity inadequacies, serious sanitation problems and their dwellings are frequently endangered by natural disasters (e.g. floods). These problems are in turn responsible for improper livelihood conditions, serious deterioration of their health as well as the social and natural environment.
    However, at present, many major water programmes fail to consider the needs of the poor and their contribution to poverty alleviation is by far less than it could be if proper provisions are build in during the design phase.
    The Euro-Mediterranean Water and Poverty Facility (WPF) aims to:
    - Assist in improving the livelihoods of poor people in urban areas of the Mediterranean, particularly in relation to water and sanitation
    - Contribute in designing guidelines on social performance of water pricing
    - Develop guidelines and expertise in order to facilitate the integration of poverty reduction components in major water projects of the region
    - Develop functional tripartite initiatives to facilitate regional and national investment on water and poverty.
    Key dimensions to be addressed by the WPF are: improving livelihoods, improving health, mitigating vulnerability of the poor under extraordinary conditions and events such as disasters related to water (e.g. floods).
    The WPF will not handle or manage funding but it will elaborate, in collaboration with both donors and recipient partners and the competent authorities and bodies, common strategies and action plans and will support implementation mechanisms with the participation of a wide range of stakeholders. In addition, it will act as a multiplier for sustainable investment in the water sector securing, in parallel, to the extent possible, the introduction of poverty reduction components in water projects -particularly those financed by European sources. Finally, it may act as a match-maker between the supply and demand side in projects targeting water supply and sanitation for the urban poor. [more]
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  • Great Apes Survival Project (GRASP)
  • Lead Partner: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Great Apes Survival Project (GRASP)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Main objective of the Partnership is to lift the threat of imminent or medium term extinction faced by the four main kinds of great apes (bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans.

    The immediate objectives leading to the achievement of the Partnership's goal include;
    - To promote the Global Strategy for the Survival of Great Apes and Their Habitat;
    - To determine the potential of sites, monitor populations of great apes and establish a database of great ape population information;
    - To collate and analyse existing projects and initiatives at different levels, in order to identify gaps and set priorities in action and to encourage coordination and cooperation;
    - To encourage range States to prepare and implement national action plans for the survival of great ape populations and their habitat and ensure that they have the necessary resources to do so;
    - To prioritize the use of resources for optimum effectiveness and identify funding areas that are currently neglected and underfunded;
    - To promote and enforce a legal framework for the survival of great apes and their habitat in the countries concerned;
    - To identify and support income-generating initiatives for the benefit of communities living in and around great ape habitat and protected areas, with due consideration for indigenous communities and to ensure, where it becomes imperative to resettle indigenous people in conformity with United Nations guidelines, that compensation is paid with international support;
    - To educate and raise awareness among local populations;
    - To help generate new and additional funds for the survival of great apes and their habitat and to ensure that the international community in the widest sense (donor States, international organizations and institutions, non-governmental organizations and representatives of private business and industry) provides effective and coherent support to the efforts being made by the great ape range States.

    [more]
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  • Human Resource Development in Disaster Management
  • Lead Partner: National Disaster Management Institute (INGC)
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    The overall goal is to strengthen the institutional capacities in Mozambique in the field of Disaster Preparedness and management. The country's weak economic infrastructure is aggrevated by the frequent natural disasters such as floods, cyclones, droughts, bush fires, and various epidemics etc. and Mozambique has to deal with complex emergency situations.
    The primary aim of this partnership is a capacity-building program for prevention and management of natural disasters with the aim to strengthen the institutional capacity of INGC and its cooperating authorities by identifying the training needs of the different target groups and develop awareness-raising programs, knowledge transfer, and training skills for multiplicators. This regional pilot project is based on three pillars: strengthening the coordination and management capacities in terms of awareness, knowledge and skills of national institution; enhancing the existing cross-border cooperation and in the long-run reduce the obstacles and difficulties imposed by different political and administrative cultures ; lead to closer cooperation within the region and contribute to disaster management and prevention; support and strengthen regional assistance such as, information and communications systems with respect to early warning and alert; and mapping risk areas, raising awareness and organizing population, training multi-disciplinary rescue teams, technical assistance and logistical resources for preventing and fighting disaster as well as good network of database centres to analyse pertinent information and act as the source for disseminating information related to impending disasters. [more]
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  • Hydrogeology of Mediterranean wetlands (HYDROHUMED)
  • Lead Partner: Government of Spain - Ministry of Environment, Spanish Geological Survey (IGME)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Mediterranean
    Summary:
    -To genetically classify the wetlands located in the riparian countries of the
    Mediterranean sea.
    -To establish geological and hydrogeological models of these wetlands.
    -To characterize from a hydrochemical and isotopic point of views the wetlands.
    -To promote the knowledge of wetlands in order to increase awareness of population about
    the importance of wetlands.
    -To establish a working group at international level formed by experts in hydrogeological
    characterization of wetlands.
    -To disseminate the knowledge and results obtained in the project.
    -To elaborate handbooks for the correct management of groundwater in the surroundings of
    wetlands, focused on their preservation.
    -To raise the awareness of politicians and decision-makers of the importance of wetlands
    as ecosystems and the need for conservation the actual wetlands.
    -To publish the results of the project in one or more books. [more]
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  • International Partnership for Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions (Mountain Partnership)
  • Lead Partner: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The Mountain Partnership is a voluntary alliance of partners dedicated to improving the well-being, livelihoods and opportunities of mountain people and the protection and stewardship of mountain environments around the world. The Mountain Partnership taps the wealth and diversity of resources, knowledge, skills and expertise of its members to support positive change in mountain areas. The Partnership was launched as a type-2 outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in September 2002: the basic concept and guiding principles of the Mountain Partnership resulted from a consultative process that took place during the preparatory sessions of the WSSD with its core document (known as the Bali Document) finalized at the Fourth Session of the Preparatory Committee for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (Bali, Indonesia, 27 May - 7June 2002). Commitment to the Mountain Partnership has increased rapidly at the country, regional and international levels and concrete action is now underway to improve the lives of mountain people and protect mountain environments around the world. By March 2009, 50 countries, 16 intergovernmental organizations and 96 major group organizations (e.g. civil society, NGOs, private sector) had already joined the Mountain Partnership. A Mountain Partnership Secretariat, with financial support from the governments of Italy and Switzerland, is hosted at the central level by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Decentralized hubs of the secretariat have also been established in Latin America (hosted by CONDESAN), Asia Pacific (hosted by ICIMOD) and North America (hosted by the Banff Centre) and an Environmental Reference Centre is hosted by UNEP to provide guidance and support on environmental issues related to the Mountain Partnership.
    The Mountain Partnership facilitates the effective and efficient implementation of Chapter 13, Agenda 21 and promotes, inter alia, joint initiatives based on paragraph 42 of the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation and other related instruments regarding mountains, by enhancing on-the-ground action and by working at the policy, programme and project levels. Specific partnership initiatives have been identified by members and are focussing on priority areas of action, such as biodiversity, education, gender, policy and law, research, sustainable livelihoods, sustainable agriculture and rural development in mountains (SARD-M) and watershed management. Additionally, geographically-focussed Initiatives have been launched and are operational in the Andes, Central Asia, Europe, the Hindu Kush Himalaya and other regions. New initiatives are developed as new priority areas are identified by members. Linkages between partnership initiatives are being encouraged at the local, national, regional and global levels, with members entering into specific initiatives according to their priorities, needs and capacities.
    [more]
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  • Kazakhstan Water Partnership (KWP)
  • Lead Partner: The Central Asia Consulting Company " ATASU " - Scientific-Information Centre of the Interstate Coordination Water Commission
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    The goal is to use the advantages of globalization process for the water sector of the country and region, the parties count expedient acceptance of the Water Partnership Frame Agreement in Republic of Kazakhstan as a way of cooperation uniting forces and knowledge, creating the new ethical responsibility of public water use by means of explanation, mutual information and education. [more]
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  • Multinational Andean Project: Geoscience for Andean Communities (MAP:GAC)
  • Lead Partner: Government of Canada - Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Andean region
    Summary:
    The current project was made possible as a result of the strong institutional bonds created by a previous four Andean country multi-national initiative (funded through CIDA and NRCan, 1996-2002). The Project goal is to improve the quality of life for peoples of the Andes by reducing the negative impact of natural hazards (volcanoes, earthquakes and landslides). Through the project, updated and integrated geoscience and geospatial information on natural hazards will be provided for: 1- land use planning and, 2- natural hazard mitigation.
    The Project will transfer technologies to the National Andean Geoscience Institutions of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela to enhance their capacity to efficiently and effectively provide on a continuous basis the required services:
    1. To provide to the governments, communities, and planners geoscientific information fundamental to good decision making with respect to the placement of public works (infrastructure), and human settlements;
    2. To contribute to mitigation of the effects of natural hazards on the local population and public works (infrastructure), to support sustainable development with more disaster resistant communities;
    3. To increase the capacities of the Geoscience Agencies in the evaluation of geological hazards; and
    4. To assist other government organizations such as Civil Protection agencies to incorporate geoscience information into emergency plans. [more]
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  • Northeastern Brazil Groundwater Project (PROASNE)
  • Lead Partner: Government of Canada - Natural Resources Canada (NRCan)
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    To transfer and adapt modern technologies that will improve the way the groundwater resources of the crystalline terranes of the semi-arid northeast of Brazil are developed and managed, which in turn will translate into more abundant and better quality water for the population. To enhance awareness in the population in regards to environmental protection and water conservation issues by providing appropriate education programs. Improve the plight of women in the community through gender equity programs aimed at enhancing their role in the decision-making process regarding management of the water resources. [more]
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  • Online Access to Research in the Environment (OARE)
  • Lead Partner: International Association of Scientific Technical and Medical Publishers - United Nations Environment Programme - Yale University
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Through Online Access to Research in the Environment (OARE), a new international public-private partnership, the world’s most prestigious scientific publishers, societies and associations are now offering one of the world’s largest collections of peer-reviewed natural and environmental science literature to more than 1500 national institutions in 106 least-developed nations of Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Eastern Europe.

    Launched October 30, 2006 in New York, OARE has a mission to improve the quality and effectiveness of natural and environmental science research, education and training in low-income countries. In doing so, OARE will help achieve four primary development objectives:

    • Growth in the number of national scholars and experts who will, through their knowledge and reputation, integrate into and facilitate the development of more progressive science-driven policy development processes, regulatory frameworks, and governance structures.

    • Strengthen the intellectual foundation of universities and research institutions so as to enable faculty to perform research on a par with peers in industrialized countries, develop their own publishing record, and enable students to conduct research and seek education in new and emerging subjects.

    • Build the capacity of independent national organizations to gather, interpret, and disseminate and use global scientific research. Local rather than foreign organizations will engage/empower end-users of information.

    The average annual US institutional subscription fee of each title provided through OARE is approximately $1,500. Each institution enrolled in OARE will receive access to more than 1200 serial titles and search engines with a US annual retail subscription value of more than $1 million. The total US annual retail subscription value of scholarly literature and scientific search engines to be provided through OARE to all enrolled institutions is more than $200 million per year.

    Research is provided in a wide range of disciplines, including biotechnology, biology, botany, climate change, wildlife conservation, ecology, energy, environmental chemistry, environmental economics, environmental engineering and planning, environmental law and policy, environmental toxicology and pollution, forest and fisheries sciences, geography and population studies, geology, meteorology, natural disaster prevention, natural resource management, oceanography, urban planning, water and hydrology, zoology, and many others. In addition to obtaining direct access to vast quantities of scientific findings, developing countries will be provided access to the world’s most powerful scientific abstract and information databases and indexes, critical intellectual tools the scientific community uses to identify information located in tens of thousands of articles across thousands of international publications.
    [more]
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  • Pacific Umbrella Initiative: Planning for Sustainable Community Lifestyles in the Pacific Island Countries
  • Lead Partner: South Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) - University of South Pacific (USP)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Pacific Island Countries
    Summary:
    Main objective: Provide long-term community based capacity-building activities to fully integrate environmental and development needs, using people and customs as the central parameters for decision-making, management, fostering social cohesion and the promotion of sustainable community livelihoods.
    Principles:
    - People are at the core of the pursuit of sustainable development;
    - Sustainable community lifestyles for Pacific Island communities and nations are dependent on the sustainable use of terrestrial, freshwater and marine biodiversity and the protection and application of traditional knowledge of this biodiversity.
    - Traditional and local knowledge enhances scientific knowledge and can guide future directions to ensure pragmatic and mutually beneficial efforts;
    - Environmental and sustainable development are for the people and communities and therefore their aspirations and needs should dominate policies, plans, decision making, management and practice;
    - Sustainable development requires Environmental justice, and preservation of human rights.
    - Early community involvement and partnering with government in the development and project pipeline presents the best means to suit people¿s aspirations, values, issues and priorities to socio-economic progress.
    - Integrating environment and socio-economics in the development process provides the means for better decision making for sustainable development;
    - Ensuring equity in development processes and environmental management, with social justice and empowerment through community development frameworks - will assist poverty eradication and improve people¿s quality of life.
    Purpose: To develop local and national capacity to institute community development frameworks to assist with partnering, prudent anticipation and decisions regarding the planning for environmental change, as well as the pursuit of sustainable development to enhance the quality of life for all communities. [more]
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  • Pilot Project on Rapid Environmental and Health Risk Assessment (REHRA)in secondary rivers of the mean and lower Danube basin.
  • Lead Partner: Government of Italy - Ministry for the Environment and Territory
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Danube River Basin
    Summary:
    The main goal of the Pilot Project is to develop, implement and test an evidence-based methodology for rapid assessment of environment and health risks for selected area with high dangerous industrial activities.
    The main characteristic of the Project is to be repeatible and applied in different geographical areas and to different situation.
    In order to test the validity of the methodology, a Pilot phase was implemented on some industrial activities located in the area of Danube basin in Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary.
    The results reached in this Pilot Phase showed the great value of the project as method to be applied in the next future for the environmnetal and health risk assessement.
    Therefore, the Project will be further implemented in Bulgaria and Romania, but also in the Mediterranean area hot spots.
    In the implementation of the project, the following basic objectives will be sequentially achieved:
    * Identification, classification, inventory and ranking of hazardous industrial or abandoned sites in selected geographical areas.
    * Research, analysis and collection of available data about severe contamination events (incidents, releases, etc.), which have occurred in the past (starting from 1990).
    * Gathering of information and basic evaluation of existing environmental and health conditions, both outside as well as inside highly hazardous industrial sites.
    * Rapid assessment of the environment and health risks for the highly hazardous sites, by specific procedures and scenarios mapping.
    * Gathering of information about risk perception by the public.
    * Identification of local Institutions, Authorities, Industrial Associations, Trade Unions, Public Movements or Associations which could be sources of information or could be involved in the further planning and risk management.
    * Assessment of the health-related industry, particularly drinking water production, its vulnerability to industrial accidents and its level of preparedness.
    * Assessment of the preparedness of the most hazardous industrial sites to deal with environment and health emergencies, including staff training.
    * Assessment of the preparedness of local authorities to deal with industrial accident prevention and management.
    * Evaluation of the practical relevance of UN Conventions, particularly the technical guidance of the 1992 UN/ECE Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Waters and International Lakes and its Protocol on Water and Health, the Aarhus Convention and the UN/ECE Industrial Accidents Convention. [more]
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  • Population and Sustainability Network
  • Lead Partner: Stakeholder Forum for Our Common Future, ActionAid
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The Population and Sustainability Network is an advocacy group which aims to bring together development, environment and reproductive health NGOs, government departments, academics and others, to increase leverage on population issues. Network Objectives:· To highlight the negative impact of unsustainable population increase on economic development, poverty alleviation and the natural environment (with particular reference to MDG 7: ¿Ensure environmental sustainability¿).· To support others in the campaign for the provision of adequate reproductive healthcare facilities for the 200 million couples who would use them ¿ but are presently denied rights of access because of funding shortfalls or other reasons· To raise awareness of the need for a rights-based approach to reproductive healthcare.· To ensure better opportunity for investment in healthcare and education, especially in respect of women¿s rights and the need for more effective programmes against HIV/AIDS.· To promote better understanding of the problems caused by unsustainable consumption (particularly in the rich minority world) ¿ including pollution and pressure on finite resources.· To provide a constructive forum in which the issues outlined above can be addressed and to increase stakeholder participation in and ownership of the key issues. [more]
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  • Promote Tourism Towards Sustainable Development
  • Lead Partner: Government of Indonesia - Ministry of the Environment
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Asia and the Pacific
    Summary:
    Main objective of the partnership/initiative:
    1. Increase the benefit from sustainable tourism resources for the population in the host communities.
    2. Enhancing the protection of conservation area by environmental education.
    3. Explore and utilize of depth environmental friendly technologies.
    4. Develop technology of cleaner production for supporting sustainable tourism activities. [more]
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  • Recovery of the Circuit of Four Lakes
  • Lead Partner: Yachay Wasi - Yachay Wasi
    Geographical Scope: Local
    Summary:
    Surging from a pressing environmental need, this Partnership was implemented by the Indigenous NGO Yachay Wasi (based in New York City, USA and in Cuzco, Peru) to assess and stop the growing chemical contamination of 4 Andean mountain lakes, one of them affecting the village of Acopia in Peru, birthplace of Luis Delgado Hurtado, Yachay Wasi co-founder and president, who now resides in Cuzco, Peru.
    This environmental and educational project is geared to the recovery of the circuit of 4 lakes located in the provinces of Acomayo and Canas, Dept of Cuzco, in the Peruvian Andes (altitude: 3,600 meters (11,811 feet)). There are several Indigenous communities living near these lakes with a 2002 estimated population of 25,518 inhabitants.
    Lakes are: Laguna Acopia near the village of Acopia, Lagunas Pampamarca and Asnacocha (Mosoqllaqta) near the village of Mosoqllaqta, Laguna Pomacanchi near the village of Pomacanchi.
    The inhabitants of these respective Indigenous villages and many other smaller Indigenous communities rely on these waters. The contamination of these lakes has been a growing problem over the past few years. The lakes waters are not used for drinking, but the fish, a daily staple from these lakes, can become a potential health hazard.
    The Project has the goal to clean the waters and banks of these four lakes and to recover the biological diversity, flora and fauna representative of this important site; to educate and assist the communities on ways to prevent future contamination, which will include recycling of solid waste, building/upgrading septic tanks and laundry facilities in some villages.
    One way of recovering the biological diversity of this area was initiated in May 2008: planting Native Trees around lakes and communities.
    [more]
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  • Safe Water System
  • Lead Partner: Government of United States of America - Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) - Population Services International (PSI)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The main objective of this partnership is to reduce diarrheal diseases in children under 5 years old and other vulnerable populations through provision of locally-produced water disinfectant, safe water storage containers, and behavior change techniques directed towards improved hygiene.
    The goal of providing piped, treated water for all is desirable, but will take considerable resources and time to achieve. While this goal is being pursued, innovative, practical, interim solutions are needed to provide underserved populations with safe water in a more timely fashion. To address this need, the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization (PAHO/WHO) developed a household-based water quality intervention that employs simple, easily disseminated technology. The basis of the intervention, which is called the Safe Water System (SWS), is:
     treatment of contaminated water with locally-produced sodium hypochlorite solution;
     safe water storage in plastic containers with a narrow mouth to reduce the risk of water being touched and contaminated;
     behavior change techniques, including social marketing and community mobilization. [more]
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  • Strengthening Science-Based Decision-Making in Developing Countries
  • Lead Partner: The National Academies
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The overarching objective of the partnership is to facilitate better communication among scientists, policymakers, and other decision-makers so that scientific knowledge can more effectively inform public policy and private sector decisions relating to sustainability in developing countries. To achieve this objective, the partners are organizing a series of "science in decision-making workshops" in developing countries on key issues of particular concern to the host country such as water and sanitation, persistent organic pollutants, and biodiversity. The workshops convene representatives from the host country and U.S. scientific institutions, government, industry, non-governmental organizations, academic institutions, and other relevant organizations. Crosscutting themes include monitoring and evaluation; elements of good science advice; facilitating the flow of scientific information; and the roles of institutions that link scientists and decision-makers. [more]
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  • Subregional Initiative for the Promotion and Implementation of the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR)
  • Lead Partner: Government of El Salvador - El Salvador National Territorial Studies Bureau
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Central America
    Summary:
    The main objective is to contribute to risk reduction in Central America through the effective implementation of the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) and the action points of Agenda 21.
    Given the frequency, variety and magnitude of the adverse natural phenomena that affect the Central American isthmus, and the vulnerability of its inhabitants, risk reduction is a key prerequisite to achieving sustainable development in the subregion.
    Agenda 21 contains significant action points for hazard and risk reduction, particularly in the chapters on Sustainable Human Settlements, Environment and Development, the Planning and Management of Land Resources, Drought, and Protection of the Quality and Supply of Freshwater. The International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (ISDR) can help to systematize the activities underway to meet these challenges and consolidate the many efforts aimed at risk reduction and environmental protection in Central America. [more]
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  • Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development (SARD) Initiative: People Shaping their Sustainable Futures
  • Lead Partner: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    This is a civil society led, government supported, FAO facilitated undertaking.The preliminary focus of the SARD Initiative has currently been focusing on three themes, which were discussed in the International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development in Mountain Regions (Adelboden, Switzerland, 6/2002), in the SARD Electronic Forum (6/2002-present) and in a number of local consultations in different regions of the developing world and among some of the NGOs/CSOs attending the World Food Summit: five years later (6/2002). Sub-Initiatives can be organized around the following or other thematic areas of action, based on the interests, priorities, commitment and resources of specific partners involved:
    * Access to resources
    * Fair conditions of employment
    * Good Agricultural Practices for SARD

    Given the critical mass of Mountain Governments supporting the SARD Initiative in the Adelboden Declaration, the relevant sub-Initiatives outlined in the Adelboden Plan of Action, and that 2002 is the International Year of the Mountains, it has been proposed that the Initiative should begin with a mountain focus, subject to the interest and resources of concerned stakeholders. The Initiative may capitalize on other key conferences and International Years, for instance, 2003 is the International Year of Fresh Water. [more]
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  • Sustainable Development and Management of the Caribbean Sea
  • Lead Partner: Caribbean Community Secretariat (CARICOM)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Caribbean
    Summary:
    The overall goal of this initiative is to develop capacity to address the current threats to the environmental quality of the Caribbean Sea. This growing threat endangers the sustainable provision of goods and services that is the basis of the economy of the majority of countries across the region. A healthy Caribbean Sea is essential to the livelihood and aspirations of Caribbean people.
    The special initiative is intended to assist with the implementation of the Plan of Action for sustainable development of the Caribbean Sea. The initiative will help harmonize and build upon ongoing programs being implemented within the region, and to implement priorities identified at the first ever meeting between leading environment and sustainable development actors from government, academia, NGOs and donors from Central America and the Caribbean, at which sustainable development of the Caribbean Sea was identified as the priority for collaboration and partnerships. [more]
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  • System planning and management of transboundary ecosystem resources in the south-western Amazon toward the sustainable development of local communities and regional stability
  • Lead Partner: Government of Italy - Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Directorate General for Development Cooperation (DGCS)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional MAP area ( bordering regions of Madre de Dios (Perù), Acre (Brasil), Pando (Bolivia)
    Summary:
    The general objective of the programme is to improve the living conditions of the local communities while ensuring the conservation of biological diversity and other ecosystem resources and services of the Amazon forest. This will be achieved by improving the relationships among the different administrative, scientific, conservation and social groups present in the area toward the sustainable and harmonious development of the three neighbouring countries sharing the same ecosystems and, hence, planning and management problems and development opportunities.
    More specifically, this objective will be achieved by jointly designing and carrying out a strategy, commonly agreed upon by, and with the contributions of public and private organizations, and the key groups of the three countries, toward the conservation and the sustainable use of the natural resources and of the biodiversity in the south-western Amazonian forest ecosystems.
    The above target will be pursued by establishing a systemic transnational framework in support of the integration of existing relevant inter-institutional and information networks and attracting the involvement also of the international donors focussing on other sectors indirectly related to sustainable development and preservation of the biodiversity, such as the fight against drug production, poverty alleviation and food security, access to basic services like health and education, and the strengthening of equitable systems and processes and of social participation. [more]
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  • The Global Rain Water Harvesting Collective
  • Lead Partner: The Barefoot College
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    The Global Rain Harvesting Collective (GRWHC) has been established is to provide drinking water to schools facing an acute shortage all over the world, through roof top rain water harvesting in schools.
    Rural communities all over the world have been collecting rainwater where it falls from time immemorial. In their fields, in open tanks and in traditional open wells. It was a technology that was accepted and applied on a large scale in the deserts, tribal regions and in the mountains.
    This age old method is suggested as an alternative to the wasteful and costly use of hand pumps and piped water supply systems. Rural communities have the technical competence to collect rainwater where it falls. It also wants to provide this facility to community service centers.
    The aim is to deliver tangible and sustainable results through a large number of small projects in many different countries at minimal operational and management cost. The `Demonstration Effect¿ of these projects may induce other stakeholders to replicate the process.
    Collecting rain water in public places also has considerable social benefits. It provides water to poor children who otherwise have to walk for miles to fetch water.
    Collected water is managed by local community hence they are less dependent on outside source.
    Schools become more attractive because of the availability of drinking water. Mothers are prepared to send their children to school for sweet drinking water in non potable areas where water is brackish
    It makes it more attractive for women to attend meetings at village centers such as about child care, health, education, literacy, and income generation activities.
    Linking clean rooftop water to sanitation has reduced the incidence of water borne diseases. With the water comes sanitation(hand flushed latrines).
    Education, poverty alleviation, gender equity objectives, implementation of environmental plans and community development programs can be achieved through rain water harvesting.
    Likewise, low technology approaches such as water recharge through slowing down of run-off and also diverting surface run-off water into unused and abandoned open wells in villages, and installing large rainwater storage tanks carved into hillside, in fact a variation on terracing, provides similar benefits.
    The Global Rainwater Harvesting Collective Programme[GRWHC] has two objectives
    a)To collect rainwater from roof tops in community places like schools, dispensaries, family planning clinics, training centers, and women¿s hostels in desert and mountain rural and semi-urban areas:
    b) To collect as much surface water in unused open wells in villages as possible so that the dry hand pumps in the thousands could be revitalized and these assets can be productive again.
    The Basic Aim is to campaign for roof top rain water harvesting in schools as a Global Movement. [more]
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  • The Intersect HIV/Violence Against Women & Children Project
  • Lead Partner: INTERSECT
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    At no time in history has the threat to our human and natural resources been so acute. Also, at no other time has there been such a high level of the awareness, capacity, connectivity and commitment required to shift the social environment to one in which sustainability is possible. INTERSECT sees that as the co-epidemics of HIV and Violence Against Women & Girls rage rampantly out of control across the global landscape, not only are women at critical risk and girls, even baby girls, left to face unimaginable dangers, the impact on all aspects of society and the sustainability of the earth are under threat from these, and a vast array of inseparably related issues. Clearly, innovative, far-reaching and never-before-tried collaborative approaches on a massive scale are called for.

    INTERSECT envisions and will provide the catalyst for the creation of Intersect Coalitions across nations worldwide to confront the results of HIV, Violence Against Women and Girls and the blowback into other movements caused in their wake. These multi-disciplined, diverse, broad-based Coalitions will inspire and work towards sweeping changes brought about through a shift in our approach to collaboration. The time has come to harness the existing creative energy of all related movements, coalitions, networks, appropriate governmental and intergovernmental institutions, major groups, NGO's, CBO's, grassroots organisations and individuals on an on-going basis, so that commonalities and intersecting points of vision and concern lead the way while bridging existing divides.
    INTERSECT will:
    * Bring together the Coalitions Networks, NGOs, CBOs, and individuals working in HIV, Violence Against Women and Girls, and all related fields.
    * Facilitate Coalition Building Sessions at which Coalition members will make agreements, set aside differences, plan strategies and outreach, and begin to determine their course.
    * Help to translate the outcomes of these dialogues into action
    * Connect Intersect Coalitions within a given country so that they can act nationally as well as locally, with great strength, visibility and unity. [more]
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  • Transfer of know-how held by Japanese local governments in the field of addressing environmental problems.
  • Lead Partner: Government of Japan - Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    Geographical Scope: Regional
    Summary:
    At WSSD, Japanese Government launched this partnership to contribute to sustainable development by further encouraging the sharing the know-how of Japanese local governments on environmental problems with local authorities in developing countries. This partnership also intended to promote the Kita-Kyushu Initiative adopted at the 4th Ministerial Meeting on Environment and Development held in Kita-Kyushu City in September 2000.
    On March 23, 2003, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan announced the "Initiative for Japan's ODA on Water" at the 3rd World Water Forum. In collaboration with the central government, Japanese public waterworks (operated by local governments) have played a significant role in assisting the ownership and capacity-building for planning, management, and control in the fields of water supply and sewage, as well as developing a network among Asian cities. [more]
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  • U.S.-Mexico Border Environmental Health Training Project
  • Lead Partner: Government of United States of America - Dept of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional USA-Mexico
    Summary:
    Rapid industrialization and population growth have produced profound environmental stresses along the U.S.-Mexico border. Despite efforts by both governments, risks to human health remain a significant problem. The goal of this project is to reduce exposure to environmental hazards, with a focus on children, by improving the capacity of lay community health workers (promotores) in U.S. communities along the US-Mexico border to raise public awareness and inform their peers about such hazards and how to minimize exposure. A seondary goal is to improve the capacity of health professionals in the same communities to recognize, manage, and report pesticide related illnesses. The objectives are: 1) improve knowledge of sources of environmental hazards and ways to minimize exposure; 2) improve knowledge of basic sanitation, referral resources for medical care and legal assistance, 3) understand how to report exposure to agricultural pesticides, 4) improve leadership and communication skills, 5) strengthen public participation through community mobilzation, and 6) develop mechanisms facilitating cross-border sharing of environmental health information. [more]
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  • US Tribal Water Access Partnership
  • Lead Partner: Government of United States of America - US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA)
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    Since the UN World Summit on Sustainable Development held in Johannesburg in August 2002, the United States has been committed to doing its part to provide safe drinking water and basic sanitation to communities around the world that currently do not enjoy these basic privileges many in the developed world take for granted. On behalf of American Indians and Native Alaskans, EPA included this UN development goal in its 2004-2008 Strategic Plan; and committed to leading the Federal Government in the challenge to reduce the number of tribal households that lack access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation by 50% by 2015. [more]
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  • Universal Flour Fortification (UFF) Initiative
  • Lead Partner: Government of United States of America - HHS/CDC
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Flour fortification with iron is an important component of any public health strategy for the prevention of iron, folic acid and other vitamin and mineral deficiency. It works well to deliver iron in constant small needed amounts to a majority of the population. There is widespread recognition that iron and folic acid deficiencies are prevalent throughout the world. The consequences of this are decreased cogitative capacity of the next generation, decreased work productivity, increased maternal deaths, increased disease and increased birth defects.
    Cereal flours are a major staple food throughout [g1]the world and in more than 30 countries fortified flour is being used to deliver essential vitamins and minerals in the diet. Flour fortification needs to be supported and expanded globally on an accelerated basis through stronger collaboration between private, public and civic organizations. [g2]The Association of Operative Millers (Africa and Middle East Chapter) is holding its annual meeting October 21-23, 2002in Mauritius. This is one of the largest meetings of flour millers outside of the US to be held this year.
    The Micronutrient Initiative, Ottawa, Canada and the HHS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA would like to take advantage of the occasion of the Annual Meeting of AOM to hold a forum immediately following the AOM meeting [g3]for a select number of senior staff from key public and private organizations to plan a joint strategy for Universal Flour Fortification wherever it is necessary and feasible.
    Forum Objectives
    To reach general agreement by key private, public and civic organizations to
    * support the concept of universal flour fortification,
    * identify key needs and actions to achieve this objective and
    * understand more clearly ways in which each organization could support this
    There is an invitation to other organizations interested to join the policy forum and contribute to this initiative. [more]
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  • Vocational education in an agriculture for the environment
  • Lead Partner: Association Abel Granier
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Mediterranean
    Summary:
    For sustaining development in agriculture in ecological fragile regions, the first step is building the necessary farming competences for cultures and cattle rising in country with semi-arid ecological conditions. The project is aiming to provide low cost process for soils restoration in the Mediterranean area.
    Stopping the continuous progressing desert in Mediterranean area is a objective for all our partners. The partnership seeks to teach relevant methods of cultures for natural soil restoration in semi-arid regions.
    The aim is to obtain in five years a local team of competent farmers for a complete rehabilitation of the soils, which would be cultivated with such methods, and to achieve the return of the treated land in productivity for men food and cattle grazing . It will be so new opportunities of employment and will refrain rural population from leaving their home region towards urban centers. But soon it must be planed about complementary projects to deal with the building of local industries for using the new farm products. [more]
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  • West Africa Water Initiative (WAWI)
  • Lead Partner: WAWI Secretariat
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional West Africa
    Summary:
    The West Africa Water Initiative (WAWI) works with communities and governments in Ghana, Mali, and Niger:
    1) To increase the access to sustainable, safe water and environmental sanitation for poor and vulnerable communities in rural and peri-urban settings.
    2) To reduce the prevalence of water-borne and sanitation-related diseases, particularly trachoma, guinea worm and diarrheal diseases through the promotion of personal hygiene and environmental sanitation practices.
    3) To ensure ecologically, financially, and socially sustainable management of water quantity and quality.
    4) To foster a new model of partnership and institutional synergy to ensure technical excellence, programmatic innovation, and long-term financial, social and environmental sustainability in water resources management that may be replicable in other parts of the world. [more]
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  • Youth Employment in Water and Sanitation Sector in Bangladesh
  • Lead Partner: National Federation of Youth Organisations in Bangladesh
    Geographical Scope: National
    Summary:
    The prime and primary need to improve the public health condition is to provide the population with pure drinking water, healthful sanitation and increased health care facilities. But the data in hand shows that we are yet in an alarming condition.

    From a latest report on Water and Sanitation Condition of Bangladesh about 97% of the total population of our country uses water from tap, tube-well and ring wells. But in the dry season 550 million people suffers from the unavailability of water from the tube wells. And the greatest problem with drinking water is due to Arsenic and unfortunately 320 million people of Bangladesh live in great risk with Arsenic.

    In the Sanitation sector about 56.7% of the total population do not use hygienic latrines. 23.7% of the total families leave there wastes in open places and this causes a lot of environment and health hazards.

    About 55% of the govt. and registered primary schools do not have pure drinking water and hygienic sanitation facilities. So, a lot of work to be done in this sector and to do that we need a huge number of capable people and thus the employment opportunities are unlimited to say.
    . [more]
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