the side event “Latin American Women United for Water. Towards a Regional Action Agenda” It was developed under the face-to-face modality last Friday, March 24, and its objective was to hold the first regional meeting of Latin American women united by water. This, in order to identify and strengthen ties for the generation of networks and the establishment of a regional gender and water agenda.
ECLAC participated in the event as a co-organizer along with the participation of various organizations involving professional women who work on water issues. Among them is the Water Valuation Initiative of the Netherlands, the Río Bravo Basin Council, the Futuro Latinoamericano Foundation, the Suwo Di/Youth Foundation for Water Network Central America, the Coastal Solutions Fellows Program of Cornell University, the Cooperativa de Aguas el Patagual Ltda. ., Red Agua of Ecuador, the Mexican Hydraulic Association (AMH), and UNESCO with the Intergovernmental Hydrological Program for Latin America and the Caribbean (PHI-LAC).
The ECLAC presentation It was in charge of Ms. Silvia Saravia from ECLAC, who proposed the diagnosis of gender and water in LAC. She pointed out that ECLAC identifies 4 main gaps: i) gap in access and infrastructure for water and sanitation, which is directly related to health and education; ii) gap in water collection and management, which impacts the use of time by women and ultimately their job opportunities, iii) gap in access to water for agricultural production with an impact on food security and iv) The gap detected is related to governance, with an effect on collective management.
Based on this diagnosis, Saravia Matus presented the opportunities and recommendations that ECLAC envisions, including: incorporating projects aimed at promoting equity and social inclusion, highlighting the importance of investing capital and knowledge for rural women in agricultural activities; investment for the mainstreaming of the gender perspective in water management, which is associated with a high return and offers economic, social and environmental benefits, especially in rural areas; disaggregate data by sex; implement monitoring and evaluation processes with indicators with a gender perspective; and lastly, create capacity-building and awareness-raising programs on the subject.
Finally, Saravia Matus shared the Regional Action Agenda for Water, which was the main result of the 2023 Regional Water Dialogues, which constitutes a call to action to mobilize all the political, technical and financial resources of the region. This Agenda includes the main voluntary commitments expressed by LAC countries, civil society, and regional institutions and organizations. Its areas of action are i) democratic governance of water, ii) adoption of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) to increase resilience to climate change and mitigate the impact of disasters, iii) adoption of innovative investment models and training public-private partnerships, including civil society and local communities, and iv) harmonization of political processes for decision-making, monitoring and management of shared transboundary waters and recognition of community and peoples management indigenous peoples, for the creation of inclusive alliances for water.
Subsequently, UNESCO presented several gender and water initiatives led by its institution. Gloria Alvarado, Diana Ulloa and Geisel Sánchez from the Latin American Youth Coalition made the presentation “Assessing the multiple perspectives on water and gender and intergenerational empowerment of women in Latin America.” Finally, Marissa Mar Pecero, from the Community of Women in Water, described the necessary commitments to accelerate gender equality in the regional water space.