Nickel mine exploitation threats to Sulawesi’s natural environment
14 November, 2024
Friday 11 october 2024
Header photo: Philippines (c) Maartje Hilterman/IUCN NL
Globally, both people and ecosystems suffer the consequences of inadequate availability of and access to clean water. Climate change is expected to further exacerbate this, its impacts are primarily felt through worsening floods, rising sea levels, wildfires and droughts. Good – inclusive and just – water governance is central to building the resilience of societies and ecosystems and to reducing carbon emissions.
Forests play an essential role in regulating fluxes of atmospheric moisture and rainfall patterns over land through processes like evapotranspiration. This process, where water is transferred from soil and plants to the atmosphere, is crucial for precipitation recycling, contributing at least 40% of rainfall over land and up to 70% in some regions like the Amazon[1]https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378017300134#sec0010.
In a world that is facing a water crisis and where water scarcity and pollution are creating tensions and fueling conflicts, we need locally-embedded actions that promote good water governance and water justice through the protection of forests. At IUCN NL, we work towards ensuring a sustainable water supply for ecosystems and communities and we have made it an integral part of all our work on forests.
Our approach integrates water governance with biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, and social equity, promoting fair access to water and addressing the needs of both IP&LCs and the urban population. We do this in collaboration with civil society organisations (CSOs) in South America, Southeast Asia and Africa.
With these CSOs, we work to protect and restore watersheds, rivers and creeks. We strengthen the capacity and voice of IP&LCs in water governance and management. We also ensure that these communities, including women and youth, can participate in decision-making processes that concern their water sources. In support of this, we work towards improved local and national water policies and their implementation and support legal action if needed.
In our work we also address the water footprint and conflicts caused by mining, industrial agriculture and dams. These economic activities consume large amounts of water, degrade and often pollute water resources. Reducing the water footprint and improving water governance can help mitigate conflicts and ensure a just and fair water distribution.
We advocate for water policies and investments that take into account nature, biodiversity, climate and fair access to water for communities and help to facilitate dialogue at different levels. We also support IP&LCs and other (women) environmental defenders to achieve water justice.
On the international level, we link water to global agreements such as the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and the Paris Agreement and make use of the UN’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process both in the Netherlands and in tropical forest countries to put water justice issues on the agenda.
Some examples of how we, together with its CSO partners, contribute to good water governance:
In Bolivia, we work with Probioma and Cedib to address the issue of water scarcity and wildfires in the tropical dry forest of the Chuiquitania region, where agribusinesses are pushing the deforestation and water scarcity to limits which are affecting local communities severely. We support the set-up of community-based water committees and their legal recognition, allowing community members to have a seat at the table in decision making spaces at the local and regional government.
With our partner WARSI, we work towards the protection of forests and water resources in West Sumatra, by assisting local communities to establish their village forests. Village Forest Management Groups have been formed and community-based enterprises established, leading to effective and continued water flows for the benefit of nature and local agriculture.
In Ghana, we work with A Rocha Ghana and the Concerned Citizens of Atewa Landscape to protect the Atewa Forest, which is not only a key biodiversity area but also an important source of water for over five million people, including in the capital of Accra.
In the Philippines, we work with Alyansa Tigil Mina and the Convergence of Initiatives for Environmental Justice to protect the Marbel Buluan Watershed, which is a main water source for domestic, industrial and agricultural purposes on the island of Mindanao. A large copper and gold mine is threatening the watershed. A major victory was achieved in 2024: the signing of a local law that formally protects the Marbel Buluan Watershed.
In Bolivia, we work with Fundación Natura Bolivia to tackle the issue of water scarcity, which is increasingly faced by communities across Bolivia. The community-driven watershed agreements are made to incentivise forest conservation and address the impacts of climate change. Their essence lies in their simplicity and reciprocal nature: upstream landowners are incentivised to conserve forests—not through complex economic transactions, but through tangible, mutually beneficial exchanges with downstream users.
Through the Forests for a Just Future programme by the Green Livelihoods Alliance, IUCN NL contributes to more sustainable and inclusive management of tropical forests that supports climate mitigation and adaptation, human rights, and the livelihoods of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities.
With the Strengthen the Roots project, IUCN NL and Wilde Ganzen support community based organisations in Bolivia, Ghana and Indonesia that stand up for nature in and around their communities, enabling them to mobilize local support for their work. This way, Strengthen the Roots works on nature conservation that is not performed top-down, but is driven by the collective strength of community organisations.