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Mitigating climate change requires the collaboration between different sectors and stakeholder groups. Traditionally, siloed approaches fail to recognize the systemic and connected nature of climate and water. To achieve water smart climate mitigation it is essential to assess synergies and address risks from a holistic perspective.
For example, mitigation through landscape restoration requires collaboration among the forestry, the agriculture and the water sectors: Trees can sequester carbon, but they require water to do so. By improving tree and forest coverage in the right places, in a specific catchment or landscape, we can increase water infiltration and moisture in the soil, recharge groundwater, which in turn, will lead to more secure water flows downstream.
Integrated approaches adopt such holistic systems thinking and can therefore capitalize on the connected nature of climate and water.
The report “The essential drop to Net-Zero: Unpacking freshwater’s role in climate change mitigation” presents a scientifically robust case for water-wise climate mitigation. Chapter 9 specifically, covered in this webinar, provides a guide for how to achieve this in practice.
Listening to this webinar will give an overview of different integrated approaches that can be adopted, such as Integrated water resources management (IWRM), the landscape approach, and source-to-sea (S2S). It will give concrete examples of how these solutions work in practice and how they can be implemented.
We also discuss challenges with integrated approaches as well as trade-offs that need to be considered between different ecosystem services, flows and sectors.
The call to action would be threefold:
Practically, this means to think outside of the box: If you are a planner, practitioner or scientist, see how you can work in a more holistic way. Reach out to other sectors, disciplines and stakeholders that you do not normally collaborate with, but who are also part of the solution.