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OUTLINE

THE NILE RIVER BASIN : PUBLIC PARTICIPATION CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNTIES By Aly M. Shady, P.Eng. For Presentation At University of Virginia Law School Charlottesville, VA, USA April 18-19,2003. OUTLINE. Africa : Population , Natural Environment and Water Resources.

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OUTLINE

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  1. THE NILE RIVER BASIN : PUBLIC PARTICIPATION CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNTIESBy Aly M. Shady, P.Eng.For Presentation AtUniversity of Virginia Law SchoolCharlottesville, VA, USAApril 18-19,2003

  2. OUTLINE • Africa : Population , Natural Environment and Water Resources. • Africa : Transboundary Water • Nile River Basin : Features , Challenges and Opportunities. • The Big Picture : Multi-tracks Hydro Diplomacy • Public Participation : The Realities on the Ground. • Concluding Remarks : prospects , potentials and Conclusions.

  3. AFRICA AFRICA POLITICAL

  4. POPULATION

  5. Ntural Vegetation Cover

  6. Water Resources and Population As percent of world, UN-WWDR,2003

  7. Installed Hydropower Capacity in 1996. Percent of world total ,WEC

  8. Number of Trans Boundary Basins and Areas within boundaries of shared basins Continent % of World, Number and Areas Africa 23 60 Asia 20 53 Europe 27 71 North America 14 39 South America 14 38

  9. Africa Fresh Water Resources and Use • 13% of world population. • 11% of world available freshwater. • 23% of shared river basins of the world. • 27 % of the world population • un-served by clean drinking water supply. • 13% of the world population without adequate sanitation. • <5% of world irrigated lands. • 3.2% of world installed hydro power.

  10. Africa Transboundary Water - Institutional and Legal Aspects. • 54 Shared river basins representing 60% of the surface area . • Mostly are covered by treaties and agreements. • Few active international basin institutions. • Low development impact. • Low – Medium current disputes ( low Development scenario) . • High potential for future disputes ( high Development scenario ).

  11. NILE COUNTRIES IN AFRICA

  12. Main Features of the River Nile Basin • Basin is about 3.0 million square km. • Length is more than 6000 km. • 10 Riparian States with 250 million people • Area of Lakes is 81500 square km. • Length of River and Tributaries is 37500 km. • Area of swamps is 70000 square km. • 5 States are among the Ten Poorest in World.

  13. Nile Basin Challenges  Extreme Poverty.  Instability.  Rapid Population Growth.  Environmental degradation.  Natural disasters (Floods, Droughts, ….etc.)  Complicated hydrology of Basin.  Low Specific Yield.  Equitable Use and no harm Principle.

  14. Nile Basin Opportunites  River is least developed in upper reaches.  Potential is great. (Water saving, Agriculture, Power pooling, ….etc)  Great chance for win-win solutions.  Serious steps taken for cooperation is an incentive for donors.

  15. The Big Picture

  16. Bilaterals • Government to Government. • Official delegation of experts. • Formal procedures and Processes. • Efficient and effective outcomes. • Minimum Public Participation. Multilaterals Civil Soceity • UN –IFI and Governments delegates. • High level expertise. • Steady financial commitments. • Slow- Complicated processes and procedures. • Low impact outcome. • Low public participation. • Nationally based NGO , Private sector, Universities and Gov. • High level of communication. • Slow and cumbersome process. • Mobilizes public input and support. • Assures sustainability. • Improves governance Multitracks Hydro-Diplomacy

  17. Grey Chart Assessment of Tracks Criteria Track #1 Bi Track #2 Multi Track #3 C.S. Order First Step Second Step Simultaneous Existing Capacity Variable / Asymmetric Good Poor Long-term Sustainability Low Medium Low Cost / Benefits Low/Low Medium / Low Very Low /Low Governance Status Quo Multilaterals Rules Democratization Political will High Medium Low Conflicts Prevention / Resolution High / High High / Low N.A. Water Development Medium Medium High Overall Effectiveness High Medium Low

  18. PUBLIC PARTICIPATION The Realities on the Ground

  19. Evolution of Cooperation in the Nile Basin • Agreements and Treaties. • The Hydro-meteorological Survey of Equatorial Lakes (HYDROMET 1967-1992). • Technical Cooperation Committee for Promotion of the Development and Environmental Promotion of the Nile Basin Project (TECCONILE 1992-1998). • Transition period (D-3 project, Nile 2002). • Nile Basin Initiative (NBI). • Civil Society participation (INBA , Nile 2002).

  20. TECCONILE • Egypt, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Congo Jointed The Project in January 1993. • Burundi, Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Kenya Participated as Observers • OBJECTIVES OF TECCONILE • * Short-Term • To Assist Member States to Develop Natural Water Master Plans and Integration Into a Nile Basin Development Action Plan. • Developing The Infrastructure, Capacity Building and Techniques for Management of Water Resources. * Long-Term • To Assist The Countries in The Development, Conservation and Use of The Nile Basin Water Resources in an Integrated Sustainable Way Through Basin-Wide Cooperation for The Benefit of All. • To Determine The Equitable Entitlement of Each Riparian.

  21. THE NILE BASIN INITIATIVE (NBI) Putting the Shared Vision into action

  22. Sudan Egypt Kenya Eritrea DRC International Nile Discourse Burundi Rwanda Ethiopia Tanzania Eastern Nile Nile Equatorial Lakes Uganda Nile Basin

  23. Strategic Action Program Shared Vision Shared Vision Program Subsidiary Action Prog. Action on the ground

  24. ? ?

  25. The Nile People IN ACTION

  26. Future Prospects. • Build trust and confidence between governments. • Strengthen the indigenous capacity of each region. • Take advantage of new information technology. • Policy reforms ,legal and institutional overhaul. • Emergence of civil society and their active participation. • Long term commitment , vision and political will. • Facilitation and support by external support agencies.

  27. Development and Cooperation Potential • High Hydropower generation potential- Shared grid. • High Irrigation potential – meet all Africa future food needs. • Improved river navigation – trade and transport. • Improved water quality – better health and high fresh water fisheries. • Ecological conservation and stewardship. • Poverty reduction.- Economic growth.

  28. Conclusions. • Participation in Transboundary Water development can contribute effectively to : - economic growth, - reduction of poverty - improved health and nutrition - promotion of peace and security

  29. MERCI

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