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Fair Water Footprints: making responsible water stewardship in supply chains the global norm

Local farmer harvesting tea leaves in Malawi. They are wearing a big basket for collecting the leaves on their back and a bright red hat.

Local farmer harvesting tea leaves in Malawi (Photo: JimmyM, via Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

The global community stands on the threshold of rapidly intensifying water insecurity, which will shape the wellbeing of billions of people for generations to come.

Across the world, the demand for water is predicted to outstrip freshwater supply by 40% by 2030. At present, inadequate access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene locks almost half of the world’s population into ill-health and hardship.

At the same time, global production and consumption of food, clothes and other goods is having a significant influence on society’s climate and water-challenges, and their solutions. For instance, the water used within farms, factories and mines, and for the growing, extraction and processing of raw materials, can cause pollution and resource degradation and depletion.

This results in less water and poorer quality water, increasing communities’ vulnerability to climate variability, drought, disease and conflict.

But the ‘embedded’ water – or ‘water footprint’ – of consumer goods and international trade links consumers and producers.

Fair water footprints are about people, communities, companies, investors and governments working together to trigger positive change by ensuring that everything we produce and consume ‘does no harm’ and, further, ‘does good’ for water security, climate resilience and progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals.

Objectives

Water’s role in food security, economic productivity, the clean energy transition and in driving instability and migration, means that water security is a collective and urgent global priority. In recognition of this, the Fair Water Footprints programme unites the power of enterprise, government and civil society to stimulate action and investment on water and climate risks in our global supply chains.

Through trade, policy, procedural reform, new knowledge and incentives, the programme sets out to reshape the political economy on water and establishing water stewardship as a norm – in order to drive sustainable, resilient and inclusive growth.

The declaration aims to transform the way the world's water resources are managed – to build climate resilience, support the needs of communities, businesses and ecosystems, and ensure water and sanitation for all by 2030.

Signatories to the Glasgow declaration are committing to work towards a fair water footprint. This means:

Zero water pollution

Sustainable and equitable withdrawal and water use

Full access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene for workers

Working with and protecting nature, and

Planning for droughts and floods.

This short animation captures what a fair water footprint is, and why it matters

What is IIED doing?

Fair Water Footprints partners, including IIED, have formed a programme management unit to oversee the delivery programme for the Glasgow declaration.

The unit:

Provides evidence of best practice and innovation on fair water footprints

Supports signatories to implement their commitments

Supports a community of practice where signatories share experiences, and discuss and resolve thematic or technical issues, and

Supports diplomatic efforts to grow the signatory community through outreach to partners and other initiatives.

Fair Water Footprints partners are also jointly developing the strategy for the programme’s overall communications.

IIED in particular is responsible for monitoring, evaluation and learning. This sees us identifying Fair Water Footprints’ evidence and lessons about effective approaches and tools, sharing that with consortium members and signatories, and developing a repository of knowledge.

IIED is leading on gender and social inclusion (GESI) for the programme. We are aligning a results framework and programme delivery for GESI, while setting and monitoring targets for this. IIED is also developing knowledge products that share best practice on how GESI can become more mainstream in the water sector.

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