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Financing and water resources development and management Roberto Martín-Hurtado OECD Environment Directorate www.oecd.org/water Martin Walshe Global Water Partnership www.gwpforum.org Context • Considerable progress made on financing WS&S BUT to achieve water security need a clearer understanding of financing for water resources to meet increasing challenges : climate change and growing demand. • Economically productive sectors, (agriculture, industry, energy etc) and healthy environment depend on water BUT other sectors not sufficiently aware that their sustainability depends on successful WRM. • THUS need to tackle complex issue of financing for water resources development and management. Framework for analysis • Need to develop a conceptual reference framework for financing WRM based on in-depth country analysis • Key notions in financing: – Have to reach financial sustainability – financing gap can be closed by reducing costs and by increasing revenues from the 3Ts (Tariffs and other user charges, Tax-based subsidies and external Transfers) – Have to look at financing both water governance and infrastructure aspects Issues to consider • Setting the scene: water resources availability; financing systems; extend beyond the water system; integrated approach; complex interplay between the costs and the benefits raises governance questions • Benefits of WRM: benefits of different WRM functions; beneficiaries of individual WRM functions • Investing in WRM : Tracking expenditures and evaluating costs, cost effectiveness. Minimising costs, improving cost-effectiveness, benchmarks. Allocating existing financial resources Issues to consider • Paying for WRM: Establishing a financing framework; Using a broader set of mechanism for mobilising revenue; Undertaking policy and institutional reforms • actual expenditures presently incurred are not known – accounted for across many budgets. • Little analysis of ways to reduce costs and the different financing sources to pay for water resources management. Soft and hard interventions • Dynamic interaction between supply (hard) side of water resources development (infrastructure and O & M) and demand side and soft interventions • Better governance can reduce the need for and cost of infrastructure. • Better infrastructure might reduce governance difficulties (e.g. Reduced conflict) Infrastructure • Infrastructure for water resources development and management are big cost. (FFA: five times more finance needed compared with WS&S) • UNFCCC estimate that expenditures in water infrastructure will need to increase due to climate change. • Need to both minimise supply-side infrastructure costs and identify the funding needed for demand-side measures. Infrastructure • Functions relatively well understood but need to determine costs and how to benefit from optimisation and how to access financing from different sources. • WRM infrastructure have a lumpy nature and long lead in time • WR infrastructure very varied – for productive purposes (such as for energy, industry or agriculture) > can raise private finance. – for protective purposes (such as flood management, wastewater and pollution control, catchment management and eco-system management) > mainly public goods requiring different financing solutions Governance • Costs of governance functions unknown: e.g. On policymaking and planning, institutional reforms, stakeholder engagement, monitoring and information management, administration and enforcement of policies and regulations. • Little guidance on cost norms for establishing integrated water resources management and creating the enabling environment for a well governed sector. • Consequently there is uncertainty on what to finance. Governance • Making the right decisions on investment and ensuring financial sustainability depend on better governance and reforming policies • Whilst the level of funds needed is much lower, the governance and management functions also need to have secure and adequate financing. • How to finance the appropriate level of governance. Sources of finance • Different functions have different prospects for financing • Well-defined services with clear beneficiaries, such as for water abstraction or control of pollution, are suitable for user payments (tariffs or license fees) • Matching the best sources of finance to different functions requires careful analysis • Public goods may have to be provided through central or local government budgets, (i.e. allocations of taxation receipts) or through cross subsidization. Framework for financing WRM • OECD organised brainstorming meetings June and August 2009. • OECD, GWP, EUWI and other partners to develop an outline report by end 2010. • Study to include case studies from selected OECD countries and developing countries. Concluding thoughts • Adaptation funds a potential source for financing WRM: need to link water resources planning and National Adaptation Programmes of Action. • Businesses increasingly aware of WR risks and have raised this at the World Economic Forum. Reliable water resources a factor in future investment. • Complexity suggests the need for more integration and strategic financial planning that cuts across sectors. • Presently no macro-economic case for water (WRM and WS&S) – do we need a similar study to that of the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change? Concluding thoughts • What systems of governance need to be put into place and what levels of governance are needed? • What areas of governance expenditure produce the best returns? • What type and size of water resources infrastructure is needed to achieve water security? • What are the main blockages to financing WRM? • OECD and GWP welcome comments and suggestions on taking forward the financing WRM as well as examples of innovative financing of WRM