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The Government of the Netherlands and SIWI have a long history of collaboration, joining forces to influence the international agenda as well as to support regional, basin, and national actors addressing key water-related challenges. The partners strive to build a stronger international commitment to water through improving global engagement, coordination, and integrated policy development.
Specifically, the partnership covers five areas of fundamental importance:
Both the Government of the Netherlands and SIWI identify improved water governance as the key to progress on all the Sustainable Development Goals. SIWI works as an advisor to governments and international organizations on good water governance practices – from sanitation and water resources management to water diplomacy.
Karin Gardes, Chief Operating Officer at SIWI, is delighted that the partnership with the Government of the Netherlands is entering into a second phase: “SIWI and the Government of the Netherlands will continue to demonstrate the important role of water in achieving the 2030 Agenda on Sustainable development. As two international actors known for strong commitment, knowledge, and work on sustainable water development, we will make sure that the voice of water is heard loud and clear,” she says.
This will be especially important in the coming year, according to René van Hell from the Government of the Netherlands. He points to several worrying trends, including increasingly fragmented governance, shrinking space for civil society in many countries, and a lack of progress on many of the Sustainable Development Goals that should be achieved by 2030. SIWI is seen as an important partner to set the world on a more positive course.
“What I see SIWI doing is to develop and advance governance – tools, methodologies, and knowledge – at local, regional, and international levels. You are an effective convenor and facilitator of stakeholder dialogues that can attract not only decision-makers but the private sector, finance, and NGOs. Both the Government of the Netherlands and SIWI are working on capacity-development and to place water high on the international agenda,” René van Hell says.
Next year is considered a genuine watershed moment because the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Republic of Tajikistan will co-host the first United Nations Conference on water since 1977. The conference is an opportunity to share ideas and best practices on how to value and manage water better and take action to achieve SDG 6 and other water-related goals. Since water is essential to everyone and everything, it will be an important task for the co-hosts and partner organizations such as SIWI to bring parties together and make the conference as inclusive and cross-sectoral as possible.
“We really appreciate the emphasis placed by the Government of the Netherlands on inclusion. With growing water scarcity, competition over water resources looks set to grow, exacerbating existing inequalities. It is therefore of fundamental importance that water policy includes gender and youth perspectives, as well as Indigenous knowledge,” says Karin Gardes from SIWI.