Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 61
Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 6
Introduction to the integrated baseline process for SDG 6 monitoring
Global processes and SDG 6
Riccardo BiancalaniProject Coordinator
Integrated monitoring Initiative for SDG 6
Tel.: +390657054825
Skype: rbiancalani
Email: [email protected]
FAO Land and Water Division
Michela MarinelliEnvironmental Analyst
Tel.: +390657052129
Skype: michela.marinelli1
Email: [email protected]
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
“plan of action for people, planet
and prosperity”
“we pledge that
no one will be
left behind”
“We are determined to take the
bold and transformative steps …
to shift the world onto a
sustainable and resilient path”
“This is an Agenda of unprecedented
scope and significance … These are
universal goals and targets which
involve the entire world, developed
and developing countries alike”
▪ September 2015 - All 193 UN Member States adopt the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable, including 17 SDGs and 169 targets
▪ Each government to fashion its own targets “guided by the global level of ambition but taking into account national circumstances”
▪ FAO prominent among UN agency SDG support to countries; based on broad priorities in the 2030 Agenda
The Countries’ Agenda
Millennium Development Goals MDGs• UN-led
• 8 goals and 21 targets, focusing on poverty reduction
• Relevant to low income countries
• 2 water and sanitation targets under MDG 7
• 3 core indicators on water and sanitation
• Monitoring through household surveys
Sustainable Development Goals SDGs• Country-led
• 17 goals and 169 targets, focusing on the three pillars of sustainable development
• Relevant to all countries
• 8 water and sanitation targets under SDG 6
• 11 core indicators on water and sanitation
• Monitoring by national authorities, feeding into regional and global reporting
5
Effective monitoring, review and follow-up process critical to success
of 2030 Agenda
➨ 230 indicators identified to monitor the 169 targets
➨ SDG indicators tiered (I, II, III) depending on stage of development
Scale of indicators - challenge for countries
➨ About 4 times more indicators for SDGs than MDGs
➨ Disaggregated by gender, age, income, geography, occupation etc.
Only SDG indicators agreed by UN Member States are used to assess
progress at global level
Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 67
Global indicator frameworkRoles and responsibilities
• Countries
• Collect and make available data and metadata for the purpose of global reporting
• Regional mechanism
• Facilitate data and metadata transmission from national to global levels as appropriate
• Custodian agencies
• Compile and verify country data and metadata, support countries in their monitoring efforts, develop recommended methodologies
• United Nations Statistics Division
• Publish data and metadata to inform HLPF
• UN-Water/Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 6
• Gather custodian agencies for SDG 6 indicators, to ensure coherent and integrated efforts
Thematic databases and
reports
Global SDG Indicator Portal
and Annual SDG Progress
Report
SDG 6 data portal and SDG 6
Synthesis Report
Integrated Monitoring Initiative for SDG 68
Follow-up and reviewGlobal level
• Global review every year in the High Level Political Forum (HLPF)
• Thematic review – focus on specific SDGs
• 2016 Ensuring that no one is left behind
• 2017 Eradicating poverty and promoting prosperity in a changing world
• 2018 Transformation toward sustainable and resilient societies
• 2019 Empowering people and ensuring inclusiveness and equality
• Also review of means of implementation and global partnership
• Voluntary National Reviews • each country reviewed two
times in during the SDG period
• Annual SDG Progress Report• data on global indicators,
aggregated to major regions • annual requests for data• reporting frequency not
specified
“Follow-up and review processes at all levels … voluntary and
country-led ... the outcome from national level processes will be the
foundation for reviews at the regional and global levels … global
review will be primarily based on national official data sources”
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)*
SDG 6 global indicators
6.6Eco-
systems
6.1Drinking
water
6.5Water
manage-ment
6.2Sanitation
and hygiene
6.3Waste-
water and water quality6.4
Water use and
scarcity
6.a and 6.b
Cooperation and
participation
6.1.1
6.2.1
6.a.1
6.3.1
6.3.2
6.4.16.4.2
6.5.1
6.5.2
6.6.1
6.b.1
SDG 6 global monitoring
6.6Eco-
systems
6.1Drinking
water
6.5Water
manage-ment
6.2Sanitation
and hygiene
6.3Waste-
water and water quality6.4
Water use and
scarcity
6.a and 6.b
Cooperation and
participation
6.1.1
6.2.1
6.a.1
6.3.1
6.3.2
6.4.16.4.2
6.5.1
6.5.2
6.6.1
6.b.1
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)*
JMP
WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supplyand Sanitation (JMP)
GEMI
Integrated monitoring of water and sanitation related SDG targets (GEMI)
UN-Water Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS)
GLAAS
UN-Water
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)*
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)*
Objectives of the Integrated Monitoring Initiative
1. Develop methodologies and tools to monitor SDG 6 global indicators
2. Raise awareness at national and global levels about SDG 6 monitoring
3. Enhance country capacity in monitoring (technical and institutional)
4. Compile country data and report on global progress towards SDG 6
From global goals to national plans
The SDGs are shaping national development plans. Countries are now:
➢ Integrating SDGs to national plans, “guided by the global level of ambition but taking into account national circumstances”
➢ Securing local participation for greater policy ownership
➢ Developing innovative partnerships and mobilizing means of implementation
➢ Defining ways to measure progress and strengthening statistical capacity
Objectives of the workshop• To describe the methodologies for the computation of the indicators of the
SDG target 6.4, and discuss their implementation in the participant countries.
• To discuss the institutional arrangements needed in the different countries for the implementation of the SDG monitoring system.
• To define the next steps that will be needed in order to have data from the countries, according to the timeframe defined by the SDG process.
• To identify needs and opportunities for further support from FAO to the participant countries, including establishing synergies with existing projects and programs, as well as identifying new possibilities at regional and national level.
Expected results
• Improved knowledge of methodologies for the evaluation of indicators 6.4.1 and 6.4.2.
• A better understanding of the SDG framework and reporting process
• A direct experience of compiling the indicators, through a simulation work that will be done in the workshop
• A draft work plan, to be discussed in their own countries, for the collection of data and the calculation of the indicators for the year 2020.
Thank you