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Watershed Connect: The Simple Way to Find Watershed Solutions
Related LinksTweet March 13, Marseille --- Today at the 6th World Water Forum, the nonprofit organization Forest Trends will launch a collaborative platform to foster innovative approaches to solving the global challenge of ensuring access to clean water supply. Watershed Connect supports projects that recognize the linked economic and ecological benefits of healthy natural water resources.
40 percent of the world's population will face water scarcity by 2050 under a ‘business as usual’ scenario, while water pollution from agriculture and inadequate wastewater treatment is expected to worsen significantly in developing countries over the same period, according to new estimates from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). But as more than 300 cities and towns around the world have already discovered, it's possible to cost-effectively address these problems by restoring and protecting the 'ecological infrastructure' that supplies clean water. Healthy watersheds do much the same work as water treatment plants, levies, dikes, and other engineered solutions – without expensive equipment and with added benefits like protection of wildlife habitat and carbon sequestration. Natural ecosystems can filter out water pollution, regulate stream flows, recharge aquifers, and absorb floodwaters. The Watershed Connect platform advances an approach that recognizes the links between economy and ecology: payments for watershed services (PWS). PWS is an innovative financing model that creates incentives to invest in natural water infrastructure. New York City famously uses a PWS approach to protect its drinking water, which has saved the city a total of more than $8 billion in treatment costs. PWS is quickly gaining team around the world: Forest Trends’ Ecosystem Marketplace State of Watershed Payments report found that the value of active programs in 2008 was over US$9 billion. Accelerating the Pace and Scale of Watershed InvestmentDespite the amount of activity in watershed payments and markets, there has been no systematic effort to connect individuals with experience, expertise, and interest in this field across geographies and regions. Watershed Connect aims to fill this gap. “To solve the global water crisis, we need to identify and disseminate innovative models for financing watershed conservation,” explains Katherine Hamilton, Managing Director of Ecosystem Marketplace. “At the same time, transparency and access to information is critical for these financing tools to succeed.” Building a Global Community of Practice to Increase the Visibility of PWS“Conversations about investing in watershed services have tended to be cordoned off by sector or watershed,” says Dr. Jan Cassin, the director of the project behind Watershed Connect. “Watershed Connect will allow us to overcome that obstacle and bring these approaches to the scale we need to meet the global water crisis.” Watershed Connect will engage and support PWS practitioners, policy-makers, and other stakeholders in developing projects and sharing experiences. Watershed Connect also aims to support decision-makers unfamiliar with PWS in rapidly moving up the learning curve. The platform offers a suite of collaboration and communication tools, a global inventory of innovative watershed payment projects, project development guidance, a library of key resources, and the latest news and analysis on watershed payments. Leaders in the field are welcoming these efforts. "There's enormous value in connecting good people doing good work to protect watersheds across the world," says Bobby Cochran, Executive Director of the Willamette Partnership, in Oregon, USA. "This project will go a long way toward helping a dynamic idea turn into a reality that benefits people and places across the globe."
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