Water: A Shared ResponsibilityUN-HABITAT, 2006 - 584 pages A joint undertaking of the 24 UN agencies comprising UN-Water, and in partnership with governments and other entities concerned with freshwater issues, this volume, covering as it does all regions and most countries of the world, provides an up-to-date global overview of the state and uses of freshwater, critical water-related problems, and societies coping mechanisms. Drawing on an extensive database, expert analysis, case studies, and hundreds of graphic elements, it is the most comprehensive undertaking to date of freshwater assessment, providing a mechanism for monitoring changes in the resource and its management and progress towards achieving development targets, particularly the Millennium Development Goals. Building on the conclusions of the first United Nations World Water Development Report, Water for People, Water for Life, the 2006 Report confirms the ongoing, serious and growing water crisis, essentially a crisis of governance, and points to a prevalent lack of capacity and knowledge base as todays primary obstacles to achieving the necessary levels of water governance. This volume proposes a more integrated vision of water resources management to respond to changing environmental and socio-economic conditions.--Publisher's description. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 12
Page 31
... TARWR volume ( total annual renewable water resources ) TARWR per capita Surface water ( SW ) as a % TARWR Groundwater ( GW ) as a % of TARWR Overlap % TARWR Inflow % TARWR Outflow % TARWR Total Use as % TARWR See Chapter 4 : The State ...
... TARWR volume ( total annual renewable water resources ) TARWR per capita Surface water ( SW ) as a % TARWR Groundwater ( GW ) as a % of TARWR Overlap % TARWR Inflow % TARWR Outflow % TARWR Total Use as % TARWR See Chapter 4 : The State ...
Page 36
... TARWR volume ( total actual renewable water resources ) TARWR per capita Surface water ( SW ) as a % of TARWR Groundwater development ( GW % of TARWR ) Overlap % TARWR Inflow as % TARWR P K RRSSPD S D K D D D B K S D S D S K S D S D Outflow ...
... TARWR volume ( total actual renewable water resources ) TARWR per capita Surface water ( SW ) as a % of TARWR Groundwater development ( GW % of TARWR ) Overlap % TARWR Inflow as % TARWR P K RRSSPD S D K D D D B K S D S D S K S D S D Outflow ...
Page 119
... .............152 Total Actual Renewable Water Resources (TARWR) 5c. Impacts..............................................................152 Table 4.3: Water availability information 5d. Responses .......................
... .............152 Total Actual Renewable Water Resources (TARWR) 5c. Impacts..............................................................152 Table 4.3: Water availability information 5d. Responses .......................
Page 130
... TARWR information . Section 2 : CHANGING NATURAL SYSTEMS Most renewable groundwater is of a high quality , is adequate for domestic use , irrigation and other uses , and does not require treatment Table 4.2 : Selected large aquifer ...
... TARWR information . Section 2 : CHANGING NATURAL SYSTEMS Most renewable groundwater is of a high quality , is adequate for domestic use , irrigation and other uses , and does not require treatment Table 4.2 : Selected large aquifer ...
Page 131
... TARWR does not reflect the ranges that can occur within nations . The recently developed small - scale Relative Stress Index Map ( Vörösmarty ) could assist in overcoming this oversight . Third , there is no data in TARWR that ...
... TARWR does not reflect the ranges that can occur within nations . The recently developed small - scale Relative Stress Index Map ( Vörösmarty ) could assist in overcoming this oversight . Third , there is no data in TARWR that ...
Other editions - View all
Water: A Shared Responsibility Unesco,World Water Assessment Programme (United Nations) Limited preview - 2006 |
Water: A Shared Responsibility Unesco,World Water Assessment Programme (United Nations) No preview available - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
Africa agencies agriculture aquifers areas Asia assessment biodiversity capacity challenges Chapter climate change costs decision-making developing countries disaster risk reduction disease drinking water economic ecosystems effective energy environment environmental flood freshwater global groundwater households human hydrological hydrological cycle hydropower impacts implementation important improved water increasing indicators industrial infrastructure institutions integrated international water investment irrigation IWRM Lake malaria MDGs Millennium Development Goals million monitoring needs organizations percent planning political pollution poor population potential poverty production programmes reduce reform regions River Basin role runoff rural social Source South Africa stakeholders strategies supply and sanitation surface water targets TARWR transboundary Uganda UN-HABITAT UNESCO United Nations urban users virtual water wastewater water and sanitation water governance water management water quality water resources water resources management water sector water services water supply water-related wetlands World Water