|
6 November 2000 Who: WCD Secretariat, Twenty nine months after its birth, twenty-one months after it began its global programme of case studies, twelve months after starting a Cross-Check survey of 45 dams in Asia and Australia, nine months after a regional consultation in Hanoi and five months after reading 338 submissions from the region, the World Commission on Dams has completed its work. To fulfil its mandate, the Commission will present its comprehensive global analysis, independent findings and authoritative criteria and guidelines for action in Tokyo on the 27th of November, with a goal of turning controversies of the past into consensus for the future. "The proof of the pudding is always in the eating," said WCD Chair Kader Asmal. "So the real test of our work will be whether our report helps countries meet the day-to-day needs of our thirsty, hungry citizens without exhausting the waters that sustain us all. The measure of our progress over the last two years is how practical and useful our collective work has been for all. Only then will it endure." A multitude of studies, reviews, surveys and reports provided inputs to the WCD Final Report. They concerned the planning, decision making, performance, construction, operation and decommissioning of large dams. The Commission then used them to frame criteria and guidelines that can guide future decisions on water and energy development options. Each major study, report, review and survey prepared for the WCD has been rigorously peer-reviewed by the primary interests involved. "Some interests on both sides of the dams and development debate seem to feel that the research that goes into the WCD somehow, by itself, passes judgement, or makes recommendations," said Secretary General Achim Steiner. "It in fact does neither. Only one document embodies the values of and speaks with one voice from the Commission, and that is our Final Report, which will only be released in London on November 16." The Commission's Final Report, to be presented in Tokyo on 24 November, will not tell either the people or governments what to do about future or existing dams. It will, however, provide clear evidence, historic context and step-by-step framework from which they can carefully develop scarce natural resources together to meet local and national development needs. "Just as our journey ends, the real work of translation into action begins," said Kader Asmal. "We have fulfilled our mandate. We have learned hard lessons from the past, listened to voices hitherto unheard, and offered a new framework for decision making."
Copyright © 1999, 2000 The World Commission on Dams | ||||||||||||||||||||||