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The Political Economy of Regionalism and International Waters
1. ORGANIZATION
BackgroundAMERICAN STATES
INTEGRAL SECRETARY OF INTEGRAL DEVELOPMENT
DEPARTAMENT OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
• The Organization of American States (OAS) is the oldest
public international organization in the world.
•
•
OAS evolved from the Commercial Bureau of American Republics
(1890) into the Pan-American Union and then to the OAS in 1948.
The Political Economy of Regionalism
Brings together countries and International Waters
of the Western Hemisphere to
strengthen cooperation and advance in common interests.
• Development work experience since the 1960s (land-use
planning, integrated water resource management, national
development plans and disaster management) later focused
on environment and sustainable development.
Maximiliano Campos
Senior Water Specialist
Chief Integrated Water Resources Management
2. Global Challenges =
IMPACTS
Σ [ Hemispheric {Σ Regional (Σ Local)} ] Challenges
IMPACTS
SOLUTIONS
SOLUTIONS
Global / Local interactions of global warming
3. Overview and Context
•
The Organization of American States (OAS) is the oldest public
international organization in the world.
•
The OAS brings together all 35 independent states of the Americas
and constitutes the main political, juridical, and social
governmental forum in the Hemisphere. In addition, it has granted
permanent observer status to 67 states, as well as to the European
Union (EU).
•
Brings together countries of the Western Hemisphere to
strengthen cooperation and advance in common interests.
•
The Organization was established in order to achieve among its
member states, as stipulated in Article 1 of its Charter…………..
"an order of peace and justice, to promote their solidarity, to strengthen their
collaboration, and to defend their sovereignty, their territorial integrity,
and their independence”.....
4. Basis for Action
•Summit of the Americas Process
•OAS-General Assembly Resolutions
•Santa Cruz +10 Declaration:
– Inter-American Program on Sustainable Development (PIDS)
2006-2009 (extended to 2014),
– Declaration of Santo Domingo for the Sustainable Development
of the Americas;
– Strategic Plan for Partnerships for Integral Development
– Declaration on Security in the Americas (October 28, 2003)
•PC Committee on Hemispheric Security
•Joint Consultative Organ (JCO) on Natural Disasters
•National Focal Points (Networks)
5. Department Sustainable Development
•
More than 50 years of experience on Sustainable Development and Environment in the
Americas.
•
Principal Technical arm of GS/OAS, responsible for supporting Political Organs of OAS
and meeting technical-policy needs of Member States on Environment and Sustainable
Development.
•
Facilitates regional exchange of information and cooperation on Sustainable
Development through project execution, policy recommendations, support to political
bodies and Ministerial Processes.
•
Vehicle for Public Participation in Sustainable Development and Environmental
Management (Secretariat for ISP and highest percentage of Civil Society relations in
the Organization)
•
Supports Program of Work of the General Secretary of OAS in addressing Democracy
and Development by fostering cooperation among countries with shared
circumstances or problems and by strengthening multinational and national
cooperation for sustainable development and environment in its strategic areas.
6. Strategic Priority Areas
•
Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM)
•
Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Use of Forests
– Sustainable Cities
•
Sustainable Energy and Climate Change Mitigation
•
Management of Natural Hazards Risk
•
Environmental Law, Policy and Good Governance
7. GLOBAL TO LOCAL
CHALLENGES
GENERAL SCENARIO IN THE AMERICAS
-Weak institutions, obsolete or fragmented legislation, limited investments and/or
financial mechanisms, unarticulated participation of civil society, private sector,
academia and government, need for transparent management with information access
and accountability …………. fragile GOVERNANCE
Good Governance Environment
Good Governance Environment
COORDINATE WATER (& OTHER RESOURCES) MANAGEMENT
COORDINATE WATER (& OTHER RESOURCES) MANAGEMENT
MAXIMIZE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC WELFARE
MAXIMIZE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC WELFARE
(NON COMPROMIZING SUSTAINABILITY OF VITAL ECOSYSTEMS)
(NON COMPROMIZING SUSTAINABILITY OF VITAL ECOSYSTEMS)
-Exponential contamination of water.
-Decrease in financial investments for
maintenance and new hydraulic
infrastructure (safe drinking water,
sanitation, hydropower,
transportation, tourism and
recreation).
OAS WATER AGENDA: Support Member States in developing plans, policies and projects
to improve management, protection, conservation and sustainable use of water resources in the
framework of their efforts to reduce poverty, converting water resources in a factor for
understanding, cooperation and integration as well as a mechanism to strength peace, democracy
and to promote sustainable development.
Project Level
Satellite Program for Development Argentina
INTERAGUAS-Brazil
-Changes in water supply due to
climate variability and change.
Coastal Caribbean Aquifers
IWRM
Focal Points
San Juan River Basin
-Increase in water demand due to
population growth and water’s
associated services
Information Exchange
Level
Upper Paraguay River Basin
Bermejo River Basin
Water and
Youth
Water Resources in Brazil
Policy Level
DeltAmerica
Guarani Aquifer
San Francisco
Summit of the Americas
Process
CEHICA
Parnaíba River Basin - Brazil
ISARM-Americas Program
Transboundary
Aquifers Focal
Points
Artibonito
OAS General Assembly
Ministerial
Inter American Commission
on Sust. Dev. (CIDS)
Rio de la Plata Basin
Regional Dialogues
Amazon Basin
Water and Health
PRODESAM - Brazil
Rio Negro Basin
Wider Caribbean Water Resources Adaptation
to Climate Change
Esmeralda River Basin
World Water Forum
8. Challenges: Planetary-Hemispheric-Regional-National-Local
Benefits of Regionalism:
3 objectives of GEF-IW-6 …. TRANSBOUNDARY….. They recognize the importance of regionalism
•Transboundary factor: multilateral regional agreements/political resolutions,
transboundary vision for problem/solution, experiences/best practices exchange
•Complementarity: regional added value to national efforts, capacity building at the
regional level, scale economy….
•Transparency/accountability: international/country supervision, agreed administrative
procedures and processes, auditing.
•Political engagement with Decision Makers: it provides confidence and trust to other
sectors (private sector) …. platform for sustainability
Notas del editor
Some background about OAS:
OAS evolved from the Commercial Bureau of American Republics (1890) into the Pan-American Union and then to the OAS in 1948. Its legal capacity is established in the charter of the Organization signed in Bogotá in 1948 and in the Agreement of Privileges and Immunities of the Organization.
Its early work in land-use planning, integrated water resource management, and disaster management was instrumental in establishing a number of groundbreaking policies, institutions and ministries that remain active in the Western Hemisphere today
Global Challenges are certainly a magnified expression of the addition of local, regional and hemispheric challenges with related impacts at all scales too.
Global warming (the rise in the average temperature of Earth's atmosphere and oceans primarily caused by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases produced by human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation) is an example on how local activities can lead to and have global impacts. It is also an example on how, even the best of global policies (expressed trough treaties, Conventions and protocols) can not be enough without local engagement (local policies).
It evolved from the Commercial Bureau of American Republics (1890) into the Pan-American Union and then to the OAS in 1948. Its legal capacity is established in the charter of the Organization signed in Bogotá in 1948 and in the Agreement of Privileges and Immunities of the Organization.
Its early work in land-use planning, integrated water resource management, and disaster management was instrumental in establishing a number of groundbreaking policies, institutions and ministries that remain active in the Western Hemisphere today