Countries in Asia and the Pacific Need to Work Together to Protect Our Common Forest and Freshwater Resources
Society
OP-ED
FROM UN FAO:
By Jong-Jin Kim, Assistant Director-General and Regional
Representative, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
United we stand, divided we fall – it’s an old cliché, but
when talking about access to fresh water in this Asia and Pacific region, it’s
worth reminding ourselves how imperative it is to work together, within
countries and across borders, to share and protect this precious resource.
Like water, our forests recognize no boundaries, but they are
equally vulnerable and play such an important part in our region’s commonly
shared ecosystem. They too need a united front to protect and restore our forests
for the common good.
Taken together, water and forests are two of mother nature’s
children.
This month, the world and our Asia-Pacific region observes two
special days, back-to-back – International Day of Forests on the 21st
of March, and World Water Day on the 22nd.
While each day has its own theme, ‘Forests and Innovation’
and ‘Water for Peace’, their natural bond is evident and essential. The latter reminds us that water can be a tool
for peace, but unfair advantage by one country or community, or lack of access
to water, can spark and intensify conflict and hostility. Likewise, neglect and
over-exploitation of forests can lead to land disputes that can spill across
borders, and impact communities, particularly those of Indigenous peoples in
our region.
This is why countries in Asia and the Pacific need to work
together to protect and enhance our common forest and water resources for this
generation and for those still to come.
From the perspective of forests and water’s link to agrifood
systems in Asia and the Pacific – the systems that provide us with the
nutrition we need each day to survive and thrive – the stakes are high. In this
region, water resources form the basis of agrarian prosperity and economic
development. The vast majority of aquaculture produced in the world comes from
this region, as just one example.
Yet more than 90 percent of this region’s population is on
the brink of a water crisis, with water scarcity increasing across Asia and the
Pacific. Transboundary water
resources add a layer of complexity to the water scarcity challenges, with over
780 million people depending on transboundary rivers in the Asia-Pacific region.
And so governance
of these shared water resources is vital for sustaining livelihoods,
agriculture, and development, as well as for securing regional and
international peace and prosperity. However, national water policy and
regulatory responses in the Asia-Pacific region are often limited and, in some
cases, not effectively operationalized in practice. Meantime, transboundary
water treaties and institutions need greater political support.
Hence, there
is an urgent need to support countries in building stronger policy frameworks
to navigate water scarcity, ensure inclusion in water management decisions,
collect data, and establish sustainable and equitable water allocation systems.
Working together, with shared commitments and actions, water and peace can
coexist.
In this
region, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), has
established an FAO Asia-Pacific Water Scarcity Programme to bring water use to
within sustainable limits. FAO is also helping to improve transboundary
cooperation for effective management of shared water resources, working with
eight countries in the Asia-Pacific region.
Reducing
degradation of forests goes hand-in-hand with securing water resources. In
forestry, FAO has worked with partners to compile a range of innovative
technologies in the forest sector. Many of these innovations are being
successfully applied in the region. Examples include the use of drones and
advance remote sensing in forest management. Many countries in this region,
with help from FAO, are deploying geospatial technologies for strengthening
national forest monitoring.
Such
innovations are important in the context of promoting sustainable supply
and use of forest ecosystem services and crucial for advancing a sustainable
bioeconomy. Employing them further can help achieve many other objectives too,
like mapping and securing customary land which can empower the region’s
Indigenous Peoples.
Indeed, innovative approaches under the United Nations
Decade on Ecosystem Restoration can contribute one third of the total climate
mitigation needed to limit warming to below 2°C by 2030, while boosting food
security and livelihoods.
We can already see the power of research and science and how
they are pushing the boundaries of what we can do to protect and make better
use of our forests and our water resources. By doing so, we can provide
significant socio-economic and environmental benefits for countries in the Asia
and Pacific region.
Let’s work
together to help Mother Nature’s children not only survive but thrive.