Presenter: Sally Spener
Acting Secretary
U.S. Section, International Boundary and Water Commission
November 17-18, 2005 McAllen, TX – Reynosa, Tamps. 200 participants from both countries
Sponsored by the International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mexico
Minute 307(2001): Animated by the spirit of friendship, the two countries will work jointly to identify measures of cooperation on drought management and sustainable management of this basin.
Minute 308 (2002): Desire of both Governments to convene a binational summit meeting of experts and water users to provide information concerning sustainable management of the Rio Grande Basin. Taking the recommendations of the summit into account, the two Governments will consider a binational sustainable management plan for the basin.
Minute 308: To strengthen the Commission’s role in the area of sustainable management of the basin and drought management planning, the IBWC will establish a forum for the exchange of information and advice to the Commission from government and non-government organizations
Summit Themes– Legal and Institutional Aspects– Binational Basin Management– Environment and Water Quality– Financing
Keynote Speakers– Jean Francois Donzier,
President, International Network of Basin Organizations
– Kathleen White, Chairman, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Objectives– Legal and Institutional – To strengthen institutions and
institutional capacity and to improve the implementation of basin management strategies in order to enhance cooperation and coordination within the basin.
– Binational Basin Management – To promote water use efficiency by water users, to improve efficiency in water storage and conveyance systems, and use existing mechanisms for water marketing and transfers with the goal of improving sustainable management of the Rio Grande basin.
Objectives– Environment and Water Quality – To preserve
and improve water quality, riparian habitat, and environmental conditions in the Rio Grande basin.
– Financing – To identify projects, estimated costs, and possible financing mechanisms for projects that benefit the sustainable management of the Rio Grande basin.
Presentation topics– State legislation, laws, responsibilities– Binational jurisdiction, prospects for cooperation– Projected water demand for agricultural and municipal
use– Availability of groundwater– Planning and information technologies/modeling– Water rights and marketing– Droughts– Conservation and Re-use
Presentation topics– Water for the environment– Forest management– Biodiversity– Climate change– Invasive Species– Funding needs– Funding sources
Hydrilla below Falcon Dam
Recommendations– Over 80 speaker recommendations– Over 50 work group recommendations– Many recommendations relate to issues beyond the
jurisdiction of IBWC and the federal governments– Some recommendations are very general (i.e.,
reduce demand)– IBWC working to identify recommendations for
follow-up by both governments
Themes of work group recommendations– Promote water conservation, fund conservation
projects– Clarify treaty, institutional roles and responsibilities– Promote data exchange and information sharing– Promote regional planning– Expand water quality monitoring, reduce
contamination– Evaluate and manage for ecosystem needs
– IBWC as a convener of binational groups to address various challenges in the basin:
Watershed councilsAnnual summitInvasive speciesScientific advisory groupWater scarcityPlanning
Next steps– IBWC to identify
recommendations for follow-up
– Publish summit proceedings
– Establish a mechanism to pursue follow-up actions
– Potential IBWC minuteCommissioners Herrera (l) and Marin
Summit information online– http://www.ibwc.state.gov/html/rg_summit.html– Background Document
Includes links to related material Treaty framework, interstate compacts Past conferences and reports Environmental studies Water management, water rights
– Speaker presentations
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