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Green Recovery And Reconstruction: Training Toolkit For Humanitarian Aid Water and Sanitation...

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Green Recovery And Reconstruction: Training Toolkit For Humanitarian Aid Water and Sanitation Session 1: Introduction to Sustainable Water and Sanitation
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Green Recovery And Reconstruction: Training Toolkit For Humanitarian Aid

Water and Sanitation

Session 1: Introduction to Sustainable Water and Sanitation

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Getting to Know You…

Please pair-up and ask your partner the following questions: What is your name? What do you do? What type of watsan project have you been

involved in? What was one environmental issue you have come

across in your program?

Mod 7 Ses 1

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Ground Rules

Mobiles silent

Be punctual

Stay on topic

Succinct -be brief

One conversation

at a time

Active listening

Other?

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Green Recovery and Reconstruction Toolkit

Developed by WWF and the American Red Cross

Based on a 5-year partnership formed after the 2004 tsunami between WWF, AmCross and partners in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Maldives

Designed for use globally after natural disasters and conflict

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10 Program Modules

Green Guide to:

1. Opportunities for Green Recovery and Reconstruction: An Introduction

2. Project Design, Monitoring and Evaluation

3. Environmental Impact Assessment Tools and Techniques

4. Strategic Site Selection and Development

5. Materials and the Supply Chain

6. Construction

7. Water and Sanitation

8. Livelihoods

9. Disaster Risk Reduction

10.Organizational Operations

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GRRT Principles

“Do no harm” to people and communities recovering from disaster by addressing environmental sustainability

Recognize that addressing the environment has multiple benefits

Take ownership Build back safer Be solution-oriented Emphasize the use of local knowledge

“Words to live by.” -- Ron Savage, OFDA

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Workshop Agenda

08:30 – 10:20 Registration, Introduction to Sustainable Water and Sanitation

10:20 – 10:50 Break

10:50 – 12:30 Overview of watsan technologies

12:30 – 13:30 Lunch

13:30 – 14:45 Environmentally sustainable technologies, continued

14:45 – 15:00 Break

15:00 – 16:30 Case study analysis

16:30 – 17:10 Evaluation and closing

17:10 Adjourn

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Environmentally Sustainable Water and Sanitation

What do we really mean?

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Workshop Objectives

Promote and implement water and sanitation systems that improve community well-being through enhancing environmental sustainability.

Explain to stakeholders why water supply project infrastructure should include watershed protection.

Demonstrate how water and sanitation projects can be made more sustainable for communities through initial technology choice, project design and community consultation.

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Sustainability:

“Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of

future generations to meet their own needs.”

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GOAL: Develop watsan projects that meet the

needs of the present without compromising the ability of future

generations to meet their own needs.

How do we do that?Mod 7 Ses 1

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External threats can prevent the success of watsan projects

21Spring Catchment

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Source spring

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Catchment dam

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Downstream pipe

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Storage and distribution

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Logging

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Brick borrow site

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Agroforestry

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Recreation

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Mining

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Mining

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New road construction

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Watershed

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“Lack of cross-sectoral linkages leads to uncoordinated water resource development and management resulting

in conflict, waste and unsustainable systems.”

--UNDP Capacity Building for Integrated Water Resources Management

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Solution: Integrated Water Resources Management

Also known as: Comprehensive

Watershed Management Integrated Coastal Area

Management Integrated River Basin

Management Integrated Catchment

Management

Definition:Systematic, participatory process for the sustainable development, allocation and monitoring of water resource use in the context of social, economic and environmental objectives

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SPHERE and WHO Context

SPHERE Water Supply Standard 2 calls for “promotion of protected sources.”

SPHERE Shelter and Settlement Standard 6 key indicator: “natural resources are managed to meet the ongoing needs of displaced and host populations.”

WHO Guidelines for Safe Recreational Waters promote “Integrated Coastal Area Management.”

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Integrated Water Resources ManagementImplementation Framework

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Integrated Sustainable Solid Waste Management

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Recycling center

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Questions:

How would implementing IWRM or ISWM change the way you do your current projects?

What would you do differently in the future?

What are specific activities to address IWRM/ISWM?

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Let’s Take a Break.

InterWorks photo


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