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Transcript of Colorado Basin Water Conference Dr. Tim Casey, Professor of Political Science Colorado Mesa...
![Page 1: Colorado Basin Water Conference Dr. Tim Casey, Professor of Political Science Colorado Mesa University.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062421/56649d9d5503460f94a86aeb/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
International Rivers and Water Resource Governance: Lessons for the Colorado River
Basin
Colorado Basin Water ConferenceDr. Tim Casey, Professor of Political ScienceColorado Mesa University
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Government – Sovereign authority over a given territorial space.
Governance – cooperative agreement among equal sovereigns, or in the case of no clear sovereign
Federalism – United States system of shared Sovereignty between central government (Washington DC) and State governments (CO, UT, WY, NM AZ, CA, NV, etc.)
Government or Governance?
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Problem of shared and overlapping sovereignties (States, Federal Government and Mexico) raises the need for governance in the Colorado River Basin
Are there lessons to be learned from International Trans-boundary River Governance that might help with the process of conflict resolution between the states in the Colorado River Compact and the Federal Government?
Research Problem
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Case Studies in Trans-Boundary River
Governance
1992 European Water Convention 1994 Danube River Convention
Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna River System
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1992 UNECE Convention on the Protection and Use of Trans-boundary Watercourses and
International Lakes
It covers more than 140 trans-boundary rivers, 25 trans-boundary lakes and about 200 trans-boundary aquifers, and 53 sovereign countries and 460 million inhabitants in the region.
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Meta treaty to develop cooperation on sub-region basin agreements
Links surface water and ground water Holistic approach to manage watershed as ecosystem
and social system Stakeholder model encourages the development of
joint bodies for management and assessment Provisions exist for mandatory assessment at regular
intervals Governmental and non-governmental actors included
in decision-making Pollution control guidelines focus on emissions limits
and water quality objectives
Features of Water Convention
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1994 Convention on Cooperation for Protection and Sustainable Use of the Danube
River
Collects Water from 18 sovereign nations,forming the international boundary for 8 of them. 83 million people live in the basin, several major citiesIncluding Vienna, Budapest, and Belgrade on Danube.
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Significant role of public participation◦ Stakeholder groups in every country◦ Must be consulted in development plan◦ Regional and local officials, industry, agriculture, NGOs and
the public◦ Significantly decreased the time of preparation and approval◦ 1st Basin-wide international body to include public and NGOs
in planning process◦ Decreased conflict and increased support for outcome of
planning and water management Established institutional connection to public
participation by framework to develop Water Councils (within each nation, and multilateral)
Managing hydropower resources◦ Over 700 dams in basin generate 30K MW of power
Key features of the Convention
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Ganges –Brahmaputra –Meghna (GBM) River System
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System covers 6 sovereign nations and 581 million inhabitants living in the Basin
There are a few bilateral treaties for part of the system but no comprehensive treaty covering the entire basin
Lessons learned◦ Bi-lateral negotiations without watershed-wide
negotiations favor the party with greater power◦ Unequal power relationships without third party
involvement creates strong disincentive for cooperation
Challenges of Managing the GBM River System
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Need to focus management on Watershed as a whole – both ecological and social resources
Public participation is essential for sound management Successful trans-boundary river treaties need
brokerage efforts by a third party (UN, EU) to give incentives for participation and equity◦ US Federal government could play role in CO River Basin
efforts bringing states together Successful multi-issue treaties begin with functional
cooperation on some issues and build to others once institutions are established
Successful river agreements require regular assessment/review and transparency
Lessons for the Colorado River Basin