Title: Current Context and Evolution towards
1Nile Basin Initiative
- Current Context and Evolution towards
- Institutional Strengthening
International Workshop on Institutional Capacity
Development in Transboundary Basins, 10-12
November 2008, Bonn, Germany
By Hamere Wondimu Nile Basin Initiative
Secretariat, Entebbe Uganda
2Presentation Outline
- The Nile Basin Challenges and Opportunities
- Evolution of Cooperation on the Nile
- The Nile Basin Initiative
- Elements of Effectiveness
- NBI Capacity Development Approach Strategy
- NBI Evolution towards institutional Development
and Harmonization (challenges, and responses to
the challenges)
3The Nile Basin
The Nile River Basin The countries sharing the
Nile
- Nile Shared by 10 countries Nile - 6,700 km
length Basin 3million Km2 and a home of over
160 million people - Challenges
- Extreme poverty low GDP per capita
- History of tension instability
- Rapid population growth
- Environmental degradation
- Rainfall variability
- Inadequate infrastructure to store water and
regulate - Water Related Shocks - Recurrent droughts,
floods, .. - Opportunities
- Great potential to foster regional social and
economic Win-Win dev. - Cooperative WRM
- Greater economic, political and regional
integration with benefits beyond those derived
from the river
Egypt
Eritrea
Sudan
Ethiopia
Uganda
Kenya
D.R. Congo
Rwanda
Burundi
Tanzania
4Evolution of Cooperation on the Nile
- HYDROMET SURVEY Project to foster joint
collection of hydrometeorlogical data 1967-1992
(8 countries)
- Technical Cooperation Committee for the Promotion
of the Development and Environmental Protection
of the Nile (TECCONILE) 1993-1998 (6 countries)
- Nile Basin action plan prepared in 1995
- The first series of 10 Nile 2002 conferences
launched in 1993 informal mechanism for
dialogue and exchange of views
- Established a forum for a process of legal
institutional dialogue in 1997 that enables
riparian countries to move towards a long-term
Legal Cooperative Framework (9 countries)
- Nile Basin Initiative established in Feb, 1999
(9 countries)
5The NBI Shared Vision
- To achieve sustainable
- socio-economic development
- through equitable utilization of,
- and benefit from,
- the common Nile Basin water resources.
6Nile Basin Strategic Action Program
- SVP - Creates an enabling environment for
cooperative investments within a basin-wide
framework
- SAP - Promotes the Shared Vision through
sub-regional investment projects
- Parallel intensive Dialogue and negotiations on
the Cooperative Framework to endow NBI with a
permanent organization and legal foundation
7National NBI Offices
8SVP Project Portfolio (130million basin wide
projects)
9Built a Nile basin community of interest
A technical foundation for basin management
development
Established the NBI as a trusted institution
Promoted integrated approach to WRM
provided coordination across sectors
10Subsidiary Action Programs(ENSAP NELSAP)
- Delivering an initial set of agreed investment
projects (estimated US700 million)
- Planned at the lowest appropriate level - within
the basin-wide framework - Focusing on power development trade,
agriculture and irrigation, and water and natural
resources management and development (either
through ENSAP or NELSAP) - Aimed at poverty reduction, economic development
reversal of environmental degradation - Seeking win-win opportunities between riparian
countries - Both SAPs have shown remarkable success in the
preparation and implementation of both fast track
and big investment projects identified through a
highly participatory and consultative process
11NBI Development Partners Partnership
Development Partners
- 1st ICCON meeting held in Jun 2001 -
- Grant funding is mainly channeled through the
Nile Basin Trust Fund (NBTF) administered by the
World Bank - Other financing sources countries contribution
(in kind and in cash) direct financing from some
partners
NBTF partners are Canada (CIDA), Denmark, EC,
Finland, France The Netherlands, Norway (NORAD),
Sweden (SIDA), UK (DFID) and World Bank (DGF)
Other partners supporting NBI - Germany, UNDP,
ADB
12Elements of Effectiveness (Implementation
mechanisms and Institutional arrangement)
- Multi-track approach- created incentives for the
process and demonstrated benefits
- Shared vision Program that started with divergent
views but facilitated ownership and the
convergence of views - Keeping the principle of Subsidiary SAPs
- Cooperative Framework negotiations
- Transitional institutional structure and
implementation arrangement that facilitates
decentralization, broad involvement, ownership
commitment
- Broad inter-country and multi-stakeholder
participation and dialogue incubated strong
political support and cooperative actions
- Focus on the benefits that could be directly
achieved from cooperation (trade, power, food,
environmental manag. etc.)
13Elements of Effectiveness (Implementation
mechanisms and Institutional arrangement)
- Promoting public participation and awareness
collaboration with Nile Basin Discourse promoted
involvement of the civil societies, NGOs
- Growing partnership with donors through the NBTFC
forums (recognition by donors that NBI needs
resources and time to successful)
- Focus on the benefits that could be directly
achieved from cooperation (trade, power, food,
environmental manag. etc.)
- NBI adopted Results Based System for planning,
monitoring and reporting
- Preference for hiring NB nationals and locating
the PMUs in different countries of NBI
14NBI Capacity Development Approach Strategy
- Assessments on needs for capacity development
conducted by each SVP project at different levels
with different scope and focus
2. Institutional and human resources capacity
building through on-the-job and targeted training
as well as study tours and exchange visits by all
SVP projects
- Capacity building on environmental management,
power trade, water policy, KM, efficient use of
water for agri production, WQM, negotiations,
communications, etc.
3. One SVP project focusing on Applied training
- Short and long term training opportunities
develop. short courses MSc curricula and
adoption by institutions - Exchange visits and study tours coordinated and
collaborative applied research and studies - Establishing partnership and collaboration with
other training and research institutions - Nile Basin University Leaders Forum and Nile-Net
15NBI Capacity Development Approach Strategy
4. SVP Coordination Project - strengthening the
capacity of the NBI institutions to execute and
coordinate cooperative basin-wide projects and
coordinating the CB efforts
5. Development of short and long-term NB Capacity
Development Strategy is on process
- NB CDS will build upon the lessons learnt from
the NBI approach so far - Focus on the long term and future RBO
institutional and functional needs - Aim at complementarity - focus on strengthening
collaboration with other training institutions
within and outside the basin - Inclusion of research and technology development
16NBI Evolution towards institutional Harmonization
Challenges and Issues
- From SVP to IWRM Critical functions need to be
captured to support the long-term River Basin
Management
- From identification and preparation to investment
moving to big joint investments which requires
countries commitment and financing mechanisms
- From transition to permanence conclusion of
the Cooperative Framework agreement an
establishing of a RBC
- From NBTF to NBI resource mobilization
Developing a resource mobilizaton strategy,
building skills and systems for funds management
- Collaborate with existing and immerging regional
institutions - capture synergies and avoid
duplication
17NBI Evolution towards institutional Development
and Harmonization
Institutional Strengthening Project (cost US33.7
million) as a response to the NBI Challenges
- To undertake an institutional design process to
prepare NBI for the new challenges it will face
with or without CFA ( provide time and resources
to resolve the issues)
- To enhance basin-wide institutional integration
through a harmonization of NBI policies and
procedures across the basin
- To equip NBI with a more robust institutional
infrastructure and critical skills needed to
deliver its current program more effectively
- To consolidate and mainstream SVP outputs and to
establish IWRM unit
18President Barack Obama
. But there is so much more to do. So tonight,
let us ask ourselves - if our children should
live to see the next century . what change
will they see? What progress will we have made?
This is our chance to answer that call. This is
our moment. This is our time - to put our people
back to work and open doors of opportunity for
our kids to restore prosperity and promote the
cause of peace
19g
Thank You
20Floods
Droughts
Threats to lives, property, infrastructure and
to the environment
21NBI Donors Partnership
22(No Transcript)