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Lessons learnt on scaling-up multiple-use water services

This presentation focuses on the lessons learnt from scaling-up multiple-use water services (MUS) in various regions, including the Mekong, Nile, Andes, Indus-Ganges, and Limpopo. It explores the different stakeholder groups involved in scaling-up MUS, such as water users, community-based organizations (CBOs), NGOs, the domestic sector, the productive sector, and local government. The presentation also discusses the opportunities for scaling-up MUS and highlights the need for collaboration and integrating fragmented support to achieve sustainable and inclusive water services.

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Lessons learnt on scaling-up multiple-use water services

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  1. Lessons learnt on scaling-up multiple-use water services Barbara van Koppen International Water Management Institute

  2. Lessons from the Learning Alliances of the ‘MUS project’of the Challenge Program Water and Food 4 5 3 1 2 Mekong (Thailand) Nile (Ethiopia) Andes (Colombia & Bolivia) 3 1 5 Indus-Ganges (India & Nepal) Limpopo (Zimbabwe & South Africa) 4 2

  3. This presentation Project focus on • Homestead-scale MUS • Community-scale MUS Scaling-up by five water stakeholder groups • Water users, CBOs, and local private service providers • NGOs • Domestic sector • Productive sector • Local government

  4. Homestead-scale MUS50-100 lpcd; 5 lpcd safe‘most MDG per drop’ resilient food and income…. health labour saving, gender ..from crops ..from enterprise ..from livestock ..from fish

  5. Community-scale MUS Multiple sources, shared infrastructure, re-use People’s participation for livelihoods and sustainability

  6. 1. Water users, CBOs • Own investments and innovations for self-supply and local management have always been for MUS • Seeking to integrate fragmented professional support Farmer Wisdom Network N.E. Thailand Water for Food Movement South Africa Communal self-supply in peri-urban Cochabamba, Bolivia

  7. 2. NGOs • MUS increasingly obvious for livelihoods goals • Technological innovation homestead-&community-scale MUS • Institutionalizing MUS in government for sustainability and upscaling IDE, Nepal Mvuramanzi, Zimbabwe CRS, Adi Daero basin, Ethiopia

  8. 3. Domestic sector • Targeting everybody, including the poor, and homesteads • Single-use expertise on health • Expertise on engineering and management for small-scale uses • Claiming unplanned livelihood benefits • Recognizing higher design norms for anticipated expansion • Future planning for higher service levels, with 5 lpcd safe • Moving up from ‘add-ons’ to community-scale MUS IDE, Jalswarajya/Aple Pani Maharashtra Cinara, PAAR, Colombia

  9. 4. Productive sector • Expertise on productive end-uses at fields and direct access (crops, soils, markets, livestock, fisheries) • Expertise on engineering and management for larger-scale uses and water resources management • Recognizing the homestead as a site of pro-poor and gender-equitable productive water uses, besides domestic uses • Moving from ‘irrigation add-ons’ to community-scale MUS

  10. 5. Local government • Permanent democratic interface to match communities’ needs with fragmented support • Developing implementation capacity for iterative community-scale MUS (e.g. SADC seven steps approach) AWARD, South Africa, integrating MUS in municipal Integrated Development Plans

  11. In sum Opportunities for Scaling-up MUS Water users, CBOs and NGOs: • Community-scale MUS for livelihoods • Homestead-scale MUS a likely priority Domestic and productive sectors: • Merging resources and expertise on engineering and management across sites and scales; • Providing single-use expertise according to people’s priorities Local government: the coordinator

  12. Thank you for your attention All outputs at www.musproject.net www.musgroup.net

  13. CRS, Adi Daero sub-basin, Ethiopia

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