Page 8 - report_A Matter of Survival
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Chairman’s Foreword



                       Future historians may look back at the first
                       decades of the 21  century as the time of
                                        st
                       dramatic global challenges and wavering global
                       responses. Never in human history has the world
                       been as interconnected and interdependent as it
                       is today. Yet never in human history has the gap
                       between the awareness of the global challenges
                       and the actual level of global cooperation been
                       as deep as it is now. Global peace in our era
                       must be much more than the mere absence of
                       a world war. Peace today requires strong and
                       sophisticated mechanisms for the fostering
                       of global security and all forms of global
                       cooperation. Effective global cooperation is
                       needed for the sustainability of the Earth’s
                       natural  environment, for economic and  social
                       development worldwide, and for the protection
                       of our common humanity and dignity.          Dr Danilo Türk, Chairman

                       One of the key areas of our common future is water, thus international water cooperation is
                       an imperative. Its importance is generally recognized – as witnessed in the pronouncements
                       of the UN Millennium Development Goals of 2000 and the more recent Sustainable
                       Development Goals of 2015. However, the actual level of international water cooperation
                       leaves much to be desired. In addition, water problems are becoming ever more central
                       in the armed conflicts of our era, a tendency that serves as a dramatic reminder of the
                       fundamental nexus between water, security and peace.

                       These considerations have led a group of fifteen UN Member States to initiate the creation
                       of the Global High-Level Panel on Water and Peace. The Panel was launched at a ministerial
                       meeting in Geneva on 16 November 2015. The fifteen Co-Convening Countries are: Cambodia,
                       Colombia,  Costa  Rica,  Estonia,  France,  Ghana,  Hungary,  Jordan,  Kazakhstan,  Morocco,
                       Oman, Senegal, Slovenia, Spain, and Switzerland.

                       The Global High-Level Panel on Water and Peace was asked to study the nexus between
                       water and peace, in light of the experiences of our era and to make recommendations for
                       water as an instrument of peace. The Panel was composed of fifteen members acting in
                       their individual capacities. We were tasked with preparing a report within two years and
                       offering recommendations that would help policy makers in the future. The Panel was also
                       asked to work in cooperation with the relevant stakeholders, notably the UN, and to hold
                       consultations to get inputs from experts, policy makers and other relevant actors in different
                       parts of the world.
                       The Panel met four times between November 2015 and May 2017 to discuss linkages between
                       water and peace, to conduct its analysis and to formulate its recommendations. The first
                       meeting was held in Geneva, Switzerland in November 2015. The second meeting was held
                       in Dakar, Senegal in April 2016, while the third meeting was held in San Jose, Costa Rica
                       in December 2016. The fourth and final meeting of the Panel was held in Amman, Jordan
                       in May 2017. The Panel met with experts and policy makers, as well as with civil society
                       organizations in the regions where the meetings were held. These consultations provided
                       the Panel with the opportunity to learn about the diversity of problems and about the





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