World Bank Group  
OED Banner  
  Home > Independent Evaluation > Water and Development  
Water and Development
Download the Report
Findings
Recommendations
Background Documents
IEG Site Tools
Request a Hard Copy
Contact Us
 
PSIA
 
summary

Faced with mounting shortages of water, a worsening trend in water pollution and growing damages from climate change, the international community must find additional ways to support countries in managing their water resources. The challenge, according to the World Bank’s Independent Evaluation Group, is to meet today's water needs while putting in place innovative strategies to address water stress -- manifested in shortages projected in the order of 40 percent by 2030 according to some calculations. This report examines the World Bank’s support for water-related activities and draws implications for what ought to be done. MORE >

Videos: World Bank Projects in Watershed Management | Water and Development

Op-ed: Water, Water ... Anywhere?
Baltimore Sun, June 1, 2010

Op-ed: The green answers for a world going dry

South China Morning Post, March 30, 2010

Management Response | Chairperson's Summary: Committee on Development Effectiveness

findings
category

Click on a tab to browse findings by each category.
Click here for a summary of all Findings and Recommendations

Increased Lending and Improving Project Performance

The Bank increased its lending for water and the number of countries served during the period evaluated.

The integration of water practice across Bank sectors appears to be well under way.

Water projects in the aggregate have good success rates when measured against objectives.

The focus of Bank activity within the water sector has shifted over time.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »

Water Resource Management

Effective demand management is one of several critical challenges worldwide in the face of increasing water scarcity.

 Integrated water resources management, the focus of two consecutive water strategies, has gained traction within the Bank but has made limited progress in most client countries.

Where IWRM has been successful, it is most often in a particular location at a time of necessity.

The number of projects dealing with groundwater issues has been declining, although within that problematic trend the portfolio has also witnessed a positive shift away from a focus on extraction.

Watershed management projects that take a livelihood-focused approach perform better than those that do not.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »

Environment and Water

Environmental restoration has been underemphasized in the Bank’s water portfolio, possibly because its immediate and long-term financial importance is unclear.

Most Bank water projects focus on infrastructure, even though in some cases environmental restoration is more strategically important.

Countries and donors will need to focus more on coastal management, because some 75 percent of the world’s population will soon be living near the coast, putting them at heightened risk from the consequences of climate change.

Many projects contain funding for water quality management, but few countries measure water quality.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »

Water Use and Service Delivery

The Bank has increasingly focused on water service delivery, but there has been a declining emphasis on monitoring economic returns, water quality, and health outcomes.

Sanitation needs greater attention.

Hydropower projects have performed well, and significant untapped potential remains for appropriate development, particularly in Africa.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »

Institutions and Water

Water services are delivered by public providers in most countries, although private sector participation has made some progress.

Water projects operating in a decentralized environment have had difficulty meeting expectations, but when the budget and authority accorded to the lower level of government have matched the responsibility assigned to it, projects have had positive achievements.

Support for institutional reform and capacity building has had limited success in the water sector.

The Bank has been actively engaged in addressing transboundary water issues.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »

Strategic Issues

The Bank’s complementary strategies for the water sector have been broadly appropriate.

Water stress needs to be confronted systematically.

Collaboration with other partners is particularly important, and it is likely to increase in importance as the Bank helps countries tackle water crises.

Successful implementation of the Bank’s Water Resources Sector Strategy will require a great deal of data on water resources, and therefore data gathering must become a higher priority.

For more information on these findings, click here.

« Previous | Next »


photos
Search | Index | Feedback | Help | WB Home
© 2010 The World Bank Group, All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions