Monday, April 26, 2010

Chris Scott


Regional Director, Asia
Currently – Professor, University of Arizona, and IWMI wastewater irrigation collaborator,
cascott@email.arizona.edu

The Challenge of Policy-Relevant Science

IWMI’s greatest challenge is to be a catalyst in innovating with national and local partners while responding to rapidly evolving framing conditions.  How do we ensure continuity with change?  Agriculture and the water needed to support it, with all the tradeoffs we know so well, will increasingly be buffeted by global economic forces, climate change, other environmental processes, urban growth … the list goes on.  And for IWMI’s enterprise, a crucial element of change is donor commitment, which can be fickle.

To make progress towards our mission, we must remain focused on harnessing the talents of the NARS, universities, and NGOs in the many locations where we work.  For this, the regional offices and country programs are central to IWMI’s effectiveness; headquarters must play a support role while sparking innovation.  I say this based on the nearly a decade I spent working in regional offices (hence, I’m still using the first-person, “we at IWMI”).

The institute has no miracle crop variety or global systems model to distinguish us, which is fortunate, because we’re able to respond to rapidly evolving needs.  It’s crucial that we work not just on our partners’ current priorities, but help to shape their future objectives and capabilities to respond to rapid global changes.  In the process, we’ll undoubtedly find that our objectives change too in unexpected way.

IWMI’s research hallmarks are interdisciplinarity and stakeholder outreach.  The process of assembling integrated teams is increasingly sought after in the research I’m presently involved in.  And to make science relevant to policy-making, indeed to frame science questions based on stakeholder engagement, is the next wave.  My time at IWMI prepared me well, though it was difficult finding a ‘disciplinary’ home in U.S. academia.  But I’m pleased to say I continue to work today on many of the questions I unexpectedly came upon at IWMI.  And I’m keenly aware of how changing conditions drive us to innovate, seek new partners, and remain focused on the broader relevance of our work.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Dr. Walter Huppert

Former Member of IWMI ‘ s Board of Governors, currently Consultant, Water Management and Institutions

Making the “water issue” a top priority in the international debate on global development. In my opinion, IWMI’s biggest achievement is its contribution to ‘agenda setting’ in the international debate on water issues in general and on the topic of ‘water scarcity’ in particular. Linking sound scientific evidence with awareness raising efforts and joining forces with other prominent actors has generated a previously unknown international attention to global water issues. The latest evidence of IMWI’s leading role in this respect is its scientific guidance and coordination of a landmark interdisciplinary work, the “Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture” in 2007. 

Emphasizing the importance of ‘water productivity’ and making the slogan ‘more crop per drop’ becoming an internationally accepted guiding principle for water management in agriculture. IWMI’s longstanding efforts and exceptional achievements with respect to issues of efficiency in agricultural water use are legend. They culminated in the propagation of water productivity in agriculture in water scarce environments and in delivering the scientific knowledge base for such directions. Coining the slogan ‘more crop per drop’ helped greatly in disseminating the message of water productivity in agriculture. Re-defining ‘efficiency’ in ‘closed’ river basins added another important new perspective to the efficiency debate in the water sector. 

Creating a sound scientific knowledge base on “Agricultural Water Management” in general and “Irrigation Management” in particular. It is hard to imagine today that ‘irrigation management’ was a kind of non-topic in irrigation in the 1960’s and 1970’s and even in the early 1980’s when irrigation attracted the bulk of international investments in agricultural development. It is due to IWMI – the former Irrigation Management Institute – that the issue of “management” and related topics gained access into the international debate on agricultural water development and have been given ever increasing importance and a sound interdisciplinary scientific foundation since then.