Last week, key stakeholders from the Pacific water sector gathered for the Pacific Water and Wastewater Association (PWWA) Annual Conference & 7th Ministerial Meeting of Water Ministers in Palau, under the theme of ‘Water Resilience, Infrastructure, and Climate Change’.
The Australian Water Association (AWA), supported by Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade via the Australian Water Partnership joined the program to co-present with Solomon Water and Tonga Water Board, on the theme of ‘partnerships that work’. The article below is an abridged version of this presentation, presented by Scravin Tongi of Solomon Water, Paulino Lakei Fifita of Tonga Water Board, and Zac Rudge of AWA.
To mitigate the impacts of climate change on water resources, infrastructure, and vulnerable communities in the Asia-Pacific region, there is an urgent need for collective action. By uniting efforts, through transformative partnerships between key stakeholders we can accelerate progress towards climate resilience, adaptive water management, and sustainable development.
AWA is partnering for collective impact with peak water associations and their members in Vietnam, Indonesia, Solomon Islands, and Tonga to achieve Sustainable Development Goals in clean water and sanitation, gender equity, and climate action, through the ‘Partnerships for a Resilient and Climate Smart Water Sector’ Program.
As part of this Program, AWA is partnering with the Pacific Water and Wastewater Association (PWWA) to support localised projects with Tonga Water Board and Solomon Water, who are ‘twinned’ with two Australian utilities: Unitywater, from Queensland, and Goulburn Valley Water, from Victoria.
“By building strong international partnerships, we are extending our disaster resilience and response teams beyond our national sovereignty. With more, and stronger networks, utilities are better able to mobilise resources when necessary, and we are better able to look after our global family”. - Scravin Tongi of Solomon Water
Through these partnerships, we are more able to create change across the region on the big issues of climate change and access to clean water.
Solomon Water and Goulburn Valley Water Twinning Partnership: From Spring to Cash
Through the partnership, Solomon Water and Goulburn Valley Water have created project teams to work on each of the following action areas:
Unitywater and Tonga Water Board Partnership: Managing Assets, Disaster Response, and Operator Capacities
Through the partnership, Tonga Water Board and Unitywater have created collaborative project teams on the following key action areas:
Based on Tonga Water Board and Solomon Water experiences with Unitywater and Goulburn Valley Water, here are some reasons why these partnerships are working:
“With these partnerships we are building long term relationships and capacity, not just doing projects. Let’s keep this partnership work an ongoing priority in the years to come.” – Paulino Lakei Fifita of Tonga Water Board.
These partnerships are proving strong, and successful, but they are young. Achieving impact in one, two, or three years is challenging – we must think of longer timelines. What can we do now that will sustain impact in 40, 50, or 100 years time?
It takes time and investment to build respectful, impactful partnerships, where all partners can contribute fully. Together with PWWA, we are committed to strengthening the relationships that we have built, and to supporting the development of new transformative partnerships that can meet the challenges we all face from a changing climate.