Water, Sewage & Effluent September October 2018 | Page 32

World Water Week review Annually, Stockholm Sweden hosts World Water Week, the leading event on global water issues, organised by Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI). Held from 26 to 31 August, this year’s theme was “Water, Ecosystems and Human Development”. Words and images by Kim Kemp T he city of Stockholm is located in a tracery of waterways, making it ideally suited to host the World Water Week event. The populace is proud of its water heritage, and the example is set by its royal family. On Thursday, 23 August, HRH Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden paid a visit to SIWI to learn more about the challenges facing the sector. Crown Princess Victoria is devoted to all issues water, having previously graced the event as a keynote speaker and as UN Advocate for the Sustainable Development Goals. HRH is also the Patron of the Stockholm Junior Water Prize, which is awarded every year during World Water Week. With more than 3 000 participants from more than 133 countries representing governments, the private sector, multilateral organisations, civil society, and academia, the event is aimed at shaping solutions to global water challenges. 30 SIWI’s executive director, Torgny Holmgren, said, “We need to work together, with each other and with nature. We need to innovate but also learn to make better use of traditional knowledge,” and added: “Scarcity of water has become the new normal in so many parts of the world.” While Antonella Vagliente from Young Water Solutions stressed how young people from indigenous backgrounds are turning traditional knowledge into new businesses: “They have adapted their lifestyles and their communities to nature, and we have a lot to learn from that,” she said.  Climate change once again surfaced as the greatest culprit of water scarcity worldwide and, during the opening plenary, human negligence and overpopulation also took a bashing, with the mayor of Stockholm, Karin Wanngård, pointing out the impact these had on the environment, Water Sewage & Effluent September/October 2018 leading to stressed ecosystems and putting pressure on limited water resources. “We hold the future of the biosphere in our hands,” she pointed out. Around water management she added: “Anyone with knowledge has an obligation to act.” The ongoing plight of women in a water-scarce environment was addressed by Amino Magaji Bala of Lake Chad Basin Commission and, as an example of the dramatic consequences of a collapsing ecosystem, she explained how Lake Chad, which has shrunk by 90%, “has impacted food insecurity and is increasing the risk of waterborne diseases”. She pointed out that this is also causing poverty by taking away farmers’ livelihoods, “especially for women”. While Åsa Regnér, assistant secretary general and deputy executive director, director for the Intergovernmental Support and Strategic Partnerships Bureau, at UN Women, described how