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Director Swedish Water House and International Policy
thomas.rebermark@siwi.org +46 (0)72 0506 085In less than a decade, the world needs to urgently slash carbon emissions, reverse environmental degradation, and achieve the 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Progress has so far been limited. It is becoming increasingly clear that a new, and more holistic, approach is needed.
SIWI has long argued that we can only achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) if we understand how each goal is dependent on the others and on healthy people and ecosystems. Freshwater is an important connector between the different SDGs and a good starting point for solutions that increase the resilience of both people and the planet.
By participating in international processes and meetings, SIWI raises awareness of the water dimensions of all the SDG targets as well as those of climate mitigation and adaptation. Together with a global network of partner organizations, SIWI sheds new light on how water-related solutions make it possible to successfully address several problems at the same time. This new approach can pave the way to the future we want.
The window of opportunity to tackle climate change and environmental degradation is rapidly narrowing, with dramatic consequences for the implementation of all the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The UN Secretary-General António Guterres has warned that “humanity is waging war on nature” and described this and growing inequalities as the main obstacles to achieving the SDGs. In the Sustainable Development Goals Report 2019 he emphasized how closely all the goals are interlinked and called on the act global community to act more coherently and decisively.
The case for this has only become stronger since then, with even more research pointing to how the impacts of climate change and degraded ecosystems jeopardize food security and access to water. The global COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the link between human health and environmental health, while reminding us of how crises always tend to disproportionately harm already vulnerable groups.
Yet, at least until now, governments have not managed to respond in an effective and integrated manner. One example is the trend in the Voluntary National Review reports that countries submit to describe how they work to achieve the SDGs. A 2019 independent assessment of the voluntary reviews showed that only one quarter of them even touched upon the linkages between different goals. It was especially discouraging to see a downward trend, with fewer and fewer countries aiming for policy coherence.
This means that countries continue to try to solve problems one by one even though we know that this approach will not be effective. Decision-makers lose valuable time and waste limited resources by failing to consider the interlinkages that science has made increasingly clear.
Things may however be starting to change. More governments and corporations are setting ambitious goals to reduce their carbon emissions as well as their impact on the natural world. SIWI helps different actors understand how these processes must be aligned and how restoring the water cycle is crucial to a more resilient future.
There are many inspiring examples across the world of how farmers, city planners, water utilities, energy producers and others have started working with nature instead of against it. In the process, they find solutions that reduce carbon emissions, prevent soil erosion, recharge water resources, and protect against extreme weather events.
SIWI encourages more sectors to become part of this journey and offers practical support. But obstacles exist such as lack of knowledge, lack of financing or obsolete practices that must be overcome. SIWI raises this perspective in different international processes to help the world change track. With a focus on freshwater aspects, we can identify solutions that address more than one problem simultaneously and create virtuous cycles.


