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LIMCOM's current ongoing interventions being undertaken include:
Many of the world’s freshwater resources are shared by two or more countries. There are over 263 transboundary river basins in the world, a third of which are shared by more than two countries (Giordano & Wolf 2003). Transboundary basin catchments represent 47% of the earth’s land and 40% of the world’s population (Wolf et al.1999). Over 145 countries share these basins; the territories of many countries lie exclusively within the hydrological boundaries of basins. Within Africa alone, there are 63 transboundary river basins.
A RIVER BASIN IS A UNIFIED HYDROLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL UNIT.
A river basin represents a unified hydrologic and geographic unit, which supports a holistic perspective on river basin management. River Basin Organisations (RBOs) have been promoted as the most appropriate means to manage water resources under some form of supranational authority (Johnston 2009). This supports the approach of Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM), which has been proposed under international water law.
Transboundary river basin organisations provide a framework for managing water resources across national boundaries. Other critical institutional responses to address some present-day water challenges include commitment to international treaties, effective national water laws and regulations governing access and use of water, and creation of a knowledge-base for basin managers to make informed decisions.
At the International level, UN Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (UN Convention) provides a framework and principles to guide basin level agreements. Within the Southern African Development Community (SADC), transboundary water management needs to be understood within the context of riparian nations membership to SADC (GEF 2008). The Revised SADC Protocol on Shared Watercourses (2000; Revised Protocol) is an example of a legal instrument at the regional level stipulating rules and regulations for members of SADC.
At the basin level, the Limpopo River Basin Commission (LIMCOM) makes reference to the Revised Protocol.
There are 12 continental member states* in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) which share 15 international rivers. South Africa, the most diversified economy in the SADC, shares six international watercourse systems with its neighbouring states. The four most important basins are the Limpopo, Incomati, Maputo and Orange which are shared with Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland and Zimbabwe [...] as part of what is being called a Hydro-political Complex (Ashton & Turton, 2007). The area of the four transboundary basins covers about 1.5 million km² or about 37% of the total area of the seven basin states. The rivers have a total mean annual runoff (MAR) of 23 000 million cubic metres per annum (Hirji et al., 2002), but the availability of water is under increasing pressure due to escalating developmental demands in each of the respective basin states.
Source: Pieter et al. 2008
*NB: SADC comprises in total 15 member states.
LIMCOM's current ongoing interventions being undertaken