UN World Water Development Report 2018 - Nature-based Solutions for Water

The WWDR 2018, titled ‘Nature-Based Solutions for Water’, demonstrates how NBS offer a vital means of moving beyond business-as-usual to address many of the world’s water challenges while simultaneously delivering additional benefits vital to all aspects of sustainable development.

The 2018 edition of the United Nations World Water Development Report (WWDR 2018) seeks to inform policy and decision-makers, inside and outside the water community, about the potential of nature-based solutions (NBS) to address contemporary water management challenges across all sectors, and particularly regarding water for agriculture, sustainable cities, disaster risk reduction and water quality.

The report demonstrates how NBS offer a vital means of moving beyond business-as-usual to address many of the world’s water challenges while simultaneously delivering additional benefits vital to all aspects of sustainable development. Working with nature improves the management of water resources, helps achieve water security for all, and supports the core aspects of sustainable development.

Full report
UNESCO World Water Assessment Programme
2018
0000261424
Executive summary
Connor, Richard
UNESCO World Water Assessment Programme
Coates, David
Uhlenbrook, Stefan
Koncagül, Engin
0000261594
Key messages
UNESCO World Water Assessment Programme
2018
UNESCO
0000384232
Facts and figures
Koncagül, Engin
UNESCO World Water Assessment Programme
Tran, Michael
Connor, Richard
Uhlenbrook, Stefan
2018
0000261579

NBS use or mimic natural processes to enhance water availability (e.g., soil moisture retention, groundwater recharge), improve water quality (e.g., natural and constructed wetlands, riparian buffer strips), and reduce risks associated with water-related disasters and climate change (e.g., floodplain restoration, green roofs).

Currently, water management remains heavily dominated by traditional, human-built (i.e. ‘grey’) infrastructure and the enormous potential for NBS remains under-utilized. NBS include green infrastructure that can substitute, augment or work in parallel with grey infrastructure in a cost-effective manner. The goal is to find the most appropriate blend of green and grey investments to maximize benefits and system efficiency while minimizing costs and trade-offs.

NBS for water are central to achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development because they also generate social, economic and environmental co-benefits, including human health and livelihoods, food and energy security, sustainable economic growth, decent jobs, ecosystem rehabilitation and maintenance, and biodiversity. Although NBS are not a panacea, they will play an essential role towards the circular economy and in building a more equitable future for all.

Restoration of the wetlands in Alviso Marsh, California