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Quantity and Quality: Strengthening of the Knowledge-Based and Data-Driven Decision Making and Cooperation for Security and Peace


                     THE PANEL RECOMMENDS





                     The level of knowledge relating to water quality and quantity issues has to be improved at all levels. Knowledge
                     on groundwater and aquifers, representing more than 90 percent of unfrozen global freshwater reserves,
                     should be enhanced as a matter of priority.
                     Investing in and cooperating for improved water data should be used for trust building and broader
                     cooperation, and thus contribute to the prevention of potential conflicts.

                     More specifically we recommend:
                     •  The existing mechanisms of water data collection, storage and access should be developed further and
                       provide for better integration of spatial and disaggregated socio-political data. This development should
                       include innovative, non-traditional data sources such as crowdsourcing in order to strengthen data
                       collection processes.
                     •  Particular attention needs to be paid to the proper understanding of asymmetries among countries and
                       sectors of activity within river basins and to developing methodologies that will help the efforts of conflict
                       prevention with timely and credible information.
                     •  States Parties to treaties establishing transboundary water cooperation systems should strengthen these
                       systems by prioritizing the issues of water quality, pollution and contamination.
                     •  In this context, the Panel recommends systematic application of the relevant provisions of International
                       Water Law and existing international standards (WHO and FAO) and, as appropriate, the relevant regional
                       standards. These standards should guide decision making by states, including the decisions relating to the
                       strengthening of relevant institutional structures.
                     •  The existing data and knowledge bases administered by different UN agencies should be brought together
                       into a coherent system. The Panel supports the system-wide coordination work being done by UN-Water
                       in this regard and recommends the UN General Assembly to stimulate and support this effort, including
                       through the UN World Water Assessment Program and using the experience of relevant non-governmental
                       global water science programs.
                     •  As a matter of a long-term vision, the Panel advocates the establishment of a strong global data system
                       and monitoring mechanism on the basis of existing work. Its task should be to monitor and analyze water
                       quality issues globally and in transboundary basins and aquifers in particular, with a view to providing
                       reliable information to the interested public on short notice.





































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