Webinar: SDG 6: Global progress and harnessing the power of the private sector

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Webinar: SDG 6: Global progress and harnessing the power of the private sector James Lott Manager, Water Security - CDP Angela Ortigara Associate Project Officer - WWAP Page 1

Agenda Introductions SDG 6 synthesis report key findings Join the Public Dialogue here! Harnessing the power of the private sector in pursuit of SDG 6 www.cdp.net @CDP Page 2

ADG/SC Information Meeting IHP (20.09.17) UNESCO World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP) NATURAL SCIENCES 3

UNESCO WWAP main product: UN World Water Development Report (WWDR) 2006 2012 2015 2017 2019 2003 2009 2014 2016 2018

SDG 6 Synthesis Report on Water and Sanitation Based on the work of UN-Water Task Force and MANY other contributors Members of Taskforce include: CEO Water Mandate, FAO, ILO, UNDP, UNECE, UNEP, UNESCO (WWAP, coordinator), UN-HABITAT, UNICEF, UNU, UN-Water TAU, WHO, WMO and World Bank

UN-Water SDG 6 Synthesis Report 2018 United Nations speaking with one voice on SDG 6 Objective Review current situation and trends at global/ regional level Provide data on global baseline status of SDG 6, Explore the linkages between SDG 6 and SDGs, Discuss ways to accelerate achieving SDG 6, and Offer policy perspectives on accelerating achieving SDG 6 in the overall Agenda 2030 context.

Global Monitoring for SDG 6 http://www.unwater.org/launch-of-sdg-6-indicator-reports/ SDG 6 The Water Goal Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all 8 targets 11 indicators Source: UN-Water, 2016 6.5.2 6.6.1 6.5.1 6.5 Water 6.6 Ecosystems GEMI management Integrated monitoring of water and sanitation related SDG targets (GEMI) 6.a.1 (6.4.3) 6.1 Drinking water 6.a and 6.b Cooperation and participation GLAAS 6.4 Water use and scarcity 6.4.2 6.1.1 6.4.1 WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP) 6.b.1 6.2 Sanitation and hygiene 6.3 Wastewater and water quality 6.2.1 6.3.2 6.3.1 UN-Water Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS) 6.1.1 Safely managed drinking water services (WHO, UNICEF) 6.2.1 Safely managed sanitation and hygiene services (WHO, UNICEF) 6.3.1 Wastewater safely treated (WHO, UN-Habitat, UNSD) 6.3.2 Good ambient water quality (UNEP) 6.4.1 Water use efficiency (FAO) 6.4.2 Level of water stress (FAO) 6.5.1 Integrated water resources management (UNEP) 6.5.2 Transboundary basin area with water cooperation (UNECE, UNESCO) 6.6.1 Water-related ecosystems (UNEP) 6.a.1 Water- and sanitation-related official development assistance that is part of a government coordinated spending plan (WHO, UNEP, OECD) 6.b.1 Participation of local communities in water and sanitation management (WHO, UNEP, OECD)

1- Eliminating inequalities SHORT SUMMARY: only selected KEY MESSAGES of the SDG 6 Synthesis Report 2018 3- Improving governance and participation 0- SDG 6 and 2030 Agenda 2- Developing capacity and using smart technologies 4- Creating new ways for financing SDG 6

Main Message 0 Achieving SDG 6 is essential for progress on all other SDGs and vice versa

Main Message 1 Eliminating inequalities is essential: Effective policies, strategies and subsidies must be developed to ensure no one is left behind. Extending access to safe drinking water still presents a huge challenge Billions of people still need access to basic toilet and handwashing facilities

SDG 6.1.1 Safely managed drinking water Global drinking water coverage (per cent) in 2015 Proportion of population using at least basic drinking water services in 2015 Data sources: WHO/UNICEF JMP, 2017

SDG 6.1.1 Safely managed drinking water Over 5 billion people (7 out of 10) used safely managed drinking water in 2015 Global drinking water coverage (per cent) in 2015 Proportion of population using safely at least managed basic drinking water water services in 2015 in 2015 2.1 billion lacked safely managed drinking water 844 million still lacked a basic service 263 million used a limited service 159 million used surface water sources Data sources: WHO/UNICEF JMP, 2017

SDG 6.2.1a Safely managed sanitation Proportion of population using at least basic sanitation services in 2015 Nearly 3 billion people used a safely managed sanitation service in 2015 (2 out of 5 lived in rural areas). Global sanitation coverage (per cent) in 2015 Proportion of population using safely managed sanitation services in 2015 4.5 billion people lacked safely managed sanitation services 2.3 billion people still lacked even a basic sanitation service 892 million people still practised open defecation Data sources: WHO/UNICEF JMP, 2017

SDG 6.2.1a Safely managed sanitation 892m people still practised open defecation in 2015: two thirds lived in two SDG regions (CSA + SSA) 80% live in 10 countries 9 out of 10 live in rural areas Providing WASH services to bridge the inequality gap is a great opportunity! Open defecation across SDG regions from 2000 through to 2015 Data sources: WHO/UNICEF JMP, 2017

Main Message 2 Developing capacity and using smart technologies Smart technologies could improve all aspects of water management...

SDG 6.4.2 Level of water stress: freshwater withdrawal as a proportion of available freshwater resources Level of water stress More than 2 billion people live in countries experiencing high water stress. The situation will likely worsen as populations and the demand for water grow, and as the effects of climate change intensify. Average Global Water Stress is 11 % Highest water stress are Northern Africa and Western Asia (79%) and Central and Southern Asia (66%). Sub-Saharan Africa, has a low level of water stress at 3%, but this hides the large differences between the wetter north and drier south. Data source: FAO, 2016

WATER USES for AGRICULTURE and INDUSTRIES Agriculture places enormous stress on water, but is also part of a water-saving solution: saving just a fraction of agricultural withdrawals would significantly alleviate water stress in other sectors. Data sources: AQUASTAT 2018

SDG 6.3.1 Proportion of wastewater safely treated By 2030, improve water quality by reducing pollution, eliminating dumping and minimizing release of hazardous chemicals and materials, halving the proportion of untreated wastewater and substantially increasing recycling and safe reuse globally The extent of industrial pollution is not known, as discharges are poorly monitored and seldom aggregated at national level Data sources: WHO UN-HABITAT, 2018

Main Message 2 Developing capacity and using smart technologies TREATING and REUSING WATER IRRIGATION INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES POTABLE WATER AQUIFER RECHARGE HEATING/COOLING Treated ( fit-for-purpose ) wastewater is a safe and reliable source of water that can be used to offset water scarcity Data sources: WWDR, 2017

Main Message 2 Developing capacity and using smart technologies Smart technologies could improve all aspects of water management, but only limited progress can be made and any investment is at risk without developing the necessary human and institutional capacity.

Main Message 3 Improving Governance and Public Participation Implement IWRM Integration across water and waterusing sectors and effective transboundary governance frameworks is essential to ensure that limited water resources are shared effectively among many competing demands. Public participation is critical to water management. Community participation in decisionmaking can yield many benefits, but better means of measuring quality and effectiveness of such participation are needed.

SDG 6.b.1Percentage of local administrative units with established and operational policies and procedures for participation of local communities in water and sanitation management. Over 75% of countries report having clearly defined policies and procedures in place for the participation of service users and communities in planning programmes for drinking water supply. However, the number of countries that report high levels of user participation remains comparatively low. Percentages of countries with defined procedures in law or policy for participation (number of countries = 110) Source: WHO and UN-Water (2017). Data sources: WHO and UN-Water (2017).

Main Message 4 Creating new ways to finance water and sanitation US$114 billion per year are estimate as the annual capital costs of meeting SDG targets 6.1 and 6.2 (without operation and maintenance, monitoring, institutional support, sector strengthening and human resources). This does not include other SDG 6 targets.

SDG 6 Synthesis Report 2018 Available in: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish http://dialogue.unwater.org/resources/

Until 30 th September http://dialogue.unwater.org/sdg6-synthesisreport/dialogues/the-way-forward/

Thank you! Join the discussion on: dialogue.unwater.org/sdg6-synthesis-report/ Already waiting for your inputs! Look at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/unsdg6synthesisreport 19 September 2018 Page 26

Thank you! This work is only possible due to the support from: UN-Water Task Force SDG 6 Synthesis Report CEO Water Mandate, FAO, ILO, UNDP, UNECE, UN-Environment, UN-Habitat, UNESCO WWAP (coordinator), UNICEF, UNU, UN-Water TAU, WHO, WMO and World Bank. Contribution to data analysis by UNESCO IHP, CDP,. Main Partners Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), Germany Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), Switzerland Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment, Netherlands Swedish Development Cooperation (SIDA), Sweden Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Italy 19 September 2018 Page 27

Thank you! Join the discussion on: dialogue.unwater.org/sdg6-synthesis-report/ 19 September 2018 Page 28

Harnessing the power of the private sector in pursuit of SDG 6 James Lott Manager, Water Security www.cdp.net @CDP Page 29

Vision Our vision is for a thriving economy that works for people and planet in the long term. Mission Our mission is to focus investors, companies and cities on taking urgent action to build a truly sustainable economy by measuring and understanding their environmental impact. Areas of focus Engage and inform www.cdp.net @CDP Page 30

CDP holds the world s largest corporate water dataset This data is collected on behalf of: 655 institutional investors, representing US$87 trillion in assets 43 purchasing organizations with a combined spend of US$1 trillion www.cdp.net @CDP Page 31

To catalyse action to improve water security. - Mission, CDP s water program www.cdp.net @CDP Page 32

Framework for water stewardship CDP aims to support, contribute to and reflect advanced corporate reporting practices, our questionnaire: Drives greater transparency of water issues; Facilitates informed decision making; Encourages action to improve water security; and Promotes competent and robust governance of water issues. www.cdp.net @CDP Page 33

CDP s disclosure framework supports business to progress the SDGs Map relevance against 7 targets and 9 indicators of SDG 6 Identify opportunities Set targets Track progress Mapping document www.cdp.net @CDP Page 34

Alignment with CDP s 2018 water security questionnaire 6.2 Sanitation and hygiene 6.3 Waste-water and water quality 6.4 Water use and scarcity 6.6 Ecosystems www.cdp.net @CDP Page 35

Why business action on water matters Now is the time to mobilize the global business community as never before. The case is clear. Realizing the Sustainable Development Goals will improve the environment for doing business creating huge opportunities for responsible companies to deliver solutions UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Industry accounts for over 19% of global water withdrawal and global agricultural supply chains account for 70% more. In developing countries, up to 70% of industrial wastewater is discharged untreated Three in every four jobs are dependent upon a stable supply of water www.cdp.net @CDP Page 36

Why business action on water matters More than 7,300 substantive water risks reported in 2017 Representing shared water challenges in 149 river basins and 102 countries Commanding over US$20.3 Trillion in market capital, these companies represent a powerful lever for change 7 3 0 0 In 2017, US$23.4 Billion invested across more than 1,000 projects to tackle water risks across 91 countries www.cdp.net @CDP Page 37

SDG 6: How disclosure drives business action on water Link to infographic Link to blog www.cdp.net @CDP

6.4 Water use efficiency www.cdp.net @CDP Page 39

6.3 Wastewater and water quality www.cdp.net @CDP Page 40

6.6 Ecosystems www.cdp.net @CDP Page 41

6.3 Water, sanitation and hygiene www.cdp.net @CDP Page 42

Corporate ambition www.cdp.net @CDP Page 43

Companies are setting SDG-aligned targets & goals www.cdp.net @CDP Page 44

Suntory Beverage & Food The Suntory Group has set the target of expanding the area of Natural Water Sanctuaries to 12,000 ha by 2020, which will store twice as much water as their domestic plants withdraw per year. www.cdp.net @CDP Page 45

Targets and goals aligned with SDG6 in 2017 First Solar set a goal to conserve natural resources, minimize waste, protect biodiversity and native habitats, and prevent pollution from the manufacturing, construction and end-of-life management of their PV products. First Solar We were the first beverage company to sign the WBCSD WASH at Work Pledge and have set a target to provide 100% of Diageo employees with access to water, sanitation and hygiene. Diageo By 2017, engage in watershed protection measures at 100 percent of our facilities located in key areas in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Mexico, Peru and the United States, in partnership with local stakeholders. Our base year is 2012. This goal was adopted because water quality is important to our operations, watersheds are critical to water quality and external partnerships are necessary to accomplish this goal. Safely return to nature an amount of water equivalent to that which we use in our beverages by 2020. Coca-Cola Amatil Anheuser Busch InBev www.cdp.net @CDP Page 46

Measuring progress CDP s data is used to inform: SDG 6 Synthesis Report 2018 on Water and Sanitation UKSSD regional progress report on SDG 6 www.cdp.net @CDP Page 47

Disclosure works www.cdp.net @CDP Page 48

Increased ability to measure and monitor water use #Disclosure works 71% 75% 79% First time disclosers regularly measure and monitor water use www.cdp.net @CDP Second time disclosers regularly measure and monitor water use Third time disclosers regularly measure and monitor water use

Increased percentage with board level oversight of water 67% 71% 74% first time disclosers have board level oversight of water Of second time disclosers have board level oversight of water Of third time disclosers have board level oversight of water www.cdp.net @CDP

More repeat disclosers with targets and goals 50% 60% 66% first time disclosers have set company-wide targets and goals Of second time disclosers have set company-wide targets and goals Of third time disclosers have set company-wide targets and goals www.cdp.net @CDP

Resources and publications CDP s 2017 Global Water Report How disclosure drives business action on water Cities and water infographic CDP s 2018 water questionnaire SDG mapping document Data access www.cdp.net @CDP Page 52

Thank you For further information on how to access CDP data please don t hesitate to get in touch. James Lott Manager, Water Security James.lott@cdp.net www.cdp.net @CDP Page 53

Questions James Lott, CDP - James.lott@cdp.net Angela Ortigara WWAP - a.ortigara@unesco.org www.cdp.net @CDP Page 54