United Nations water conferences: reflections and expectations

IF 2 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 WATER RESOURCES International Journal of Water Resources Development Pub Date : 2023-02-16 DOI:10.1080/07900627.2023.2176655
A. Biswas, C. Tortajada
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

During the 1970s, the United Nations (UN) held a series of world conferences at high political levels on specific topics, to enhance global awareness of the magnitudes and extents of the problems and to formulate strategies to solve them. The topics of these conferences were complex and no single nation could solve them individually. The focus of the first of this new type of major conferences was on the Human Environment, in Stockholm, in 1972. It was followed in rapid succession by similar high-level global meetings on Population (Bucharest, 1974), Food (Rome, 1974), Women (Mexico City, 1975), Human Settlements (Vancouver, 1976), Water (Mar del Plata, 1977), Desertification (Nairobi, 1977), Science and Technology for Development (Vienna, 1979), and New and Renewable Sources of Energy (Nairobi, 1981). One of the co-authors of this editorial, Professor Biswas, attended all these conferences, primarily as the Senior Scientific Advisor to the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme. Nearly all these conferences were initiated and then actively promoted by a government or governments and then ultimately approved by the UN General Assembly. For example, the Conference on Human Environment was suggested and promoted by Sweden. Later, it was approved by the UN General Assembly. In this sense, the Water Conference was an anomaly. The idea of this conference did not originate from any government but from three remarkable senior employees who floated the idea and then managed to get countries to propose it and finally get it approved by the UN General Assembly. This unsung trio was Vladimir Baum, Enzo Fano and Alagappa Alagappan, senior officials of a now-defunct UN body, Centre for National Resources, Energy and Transport. The Water Conference was officially first proposed in 1971 by the UN’s Committee on Natural Resources. It was then approved by the UN’s Economic and Social Council, in 1973. The UN General Assembly finally endorsed it in December 1975, under Resolution 3513 (XXX). The main objective of the conference was to promote a level of preparedness nationally, regionally and internationally, which would help the world to avoid a water crisis of global dimensions by the year 2000. Its goal, undoubtedly, was ambitious: to ensure the world had an adequate supply of water, of good quality, to meet the needs of a world population that was increasing and urbanizing, but also to seek improved economic and social conditions for all people within a little over two decades. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT 2023, VOL. 39, NO. 2, 177–183 https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2023.2176655
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联合国水事会议:思考和期望
20世纪70年代,联合国就特定议题举行了一系列高政治级别的世界会议,以提高全球对问题的严重性和广度的认识,并制定解决这些问题的战略。这些会议的议题很复杂,没有一个国家能够单独解决。1972年在斯德哥尔摩举行的第一次此类大型会议的重点是人类环境。随后迅速举行了类似的关于人口(布加勒斯特,1974年)、粮食(罗马,1974年、妇女(墨西哥城,1975年)、人类住区(温哥华,1976年)、水(马德普拉塔,1977年)、荒漠化(内罗毕,1977年、科学和技术促进发展(维也纳,1979年)以及新能源和可再生能源(内罗毕,1981年)的高级别全球会议。这篇社论的合著者之一比斯瓦斯教授参加了所有这些会议,主要是作为联合国环境规划署执行主任的高级科学顾问。几乎所有这些会议都是由一个或多个政府发起并积极推动的,最终由联合国大会批准。例如,瑞典建议并推动召开人类环境会议。后来,它得到了联合国大会的批准。从这个意义上说,水资源会议是一个反常现象。这次会议的想法不是来自任何政府,而是来自三位杰出的高级职员,他们提出了这个想法,然后设法让各国提出,并最终获得联合国大会的批准。这三名无名之辈是弗拉基米尔·鲍姆、恩佐·法诺和阿拉加帕·阿拉加潘,他们是现已解散的联合国机构国家资源、能源和运输中心的高级官员。水资源会议于1971年由联合国自然资源委员会首次正式提出。1973年,它被联合国经济及社会理事会批准。1975年12月,联合国大会根据第3513(XXX)号决议最终批准了该决议。会议的主要目标是提高国家、区域和国际的准备水平,这将有助于世界在2000年之前避免全球性的水危机。毫无疑问,它的目标是雄心勃勃的:确保世界有充足的优质水供应,满足日益增长和城市化的世界人口的需求,但也寻求在20多年内改善所有人的经济和社会条件。《2023年国际水资源开发杂志》,第39卷,第2期,177-183https://doi.org/10.1080/07900627.2023.2176655
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
9.70%
发文量
23
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: International Journal of Water Resources Development is a policy and practice-oriented Journal that covers all aspects of water resources policy, management, development and governance. It is an interdisciplinary journal that focuses on water resources and their economic, financial, social and environmental-related impacts. Contributions which include the interdependences and inter-linkages between the water and the agricultural, energy, industrial and health sectors in both developed and developing countries, both at present and in the future, are welcome.
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