Integriertes Wasserressourcen- Management (IWRM) in Zentralasien: Modellregion Mongolei (MoMo) – Phase III (MoMo III)
The MoMo III project seeks to transfer the extensive research results from MoMo I and II on several water aspects (e.g. water institutions, protection of water resources, drinking water supply and wastewater treatment) to the Mongolian government through practical policy advice and knowledge/know-how transfer. After having examined the changing legal and institutional conditions of water governance and their effects on the implementation of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) in Mongolia, the DIE team will focus on advising the newly established Kharaa/Eroo River Basin Administration on developing and implementing the the Kharaa River Basin Management Plan (RBMP). This task will be complemented by further analytical work on the transformation of Mongolia’s water sector and by reflecting on the process of decentralization and its implication for River Basin Management (RBM) in the wider international context.
Projektleitung:
Ines Dombrowsky
Dietrich Borchardt, Umweltforschungszentrum Leipzig
Projektteam:
Jean Carlo Rodríguez de Francisco
Finanzierung:
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF)
Zeitrahmen:
2015 - 2018
/
Abgeschlossen
Kooperationspartner:
Projektbeschreibung
In the last three decades, Mongolia has undergone a deep and very rapid transformation resulting from its transition from socialism to democracy and subsequent engagement in the market economy. This transformation has translated in significant changes of the Mongolian economy that include the rapid development of the mining sector and the expansion of livestock farming. These changes together with an increasing urbanization and climate change in turn have resulted in stunning socio-political and environmental changes.
For the Mongolian water sector, these changes have meant increased water pollution, insufficient water availability and an ever increasing water demand. The Mongolian government has adopted the Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) approach in order to address these pressures and problems. Although legally adopted since 2004 and despite significant legal changes in 2012, there are still fundamental legal, political and financial shortcomings in the IWRM implementation process. These shortcomings include unclear mandates, lack of practical collaboration and coordination among different institutions at all levels (i.e. vertical and horizontal interplay and institutional fit), budgets that do not suffice institutional mandates, lack of stakeholder empowerment and participation, and the prioritization of economic interests over socio-environmental interests.
Seeking to boost IWRM in Mongolia, the overall objective of MoMo III is to transfer science-based results into practice, improve water sector capacities and foster cooperation between institutions for an improved integrated water resources management (IWRM) in Mongolia. In particular, the project seeks to support the development of the Khaara River Basin Management Plan.
Within this project, DIE researchers focus on analyzing and developing advice on
- the development of the legal, political and financial environment for river basin management (RBM) and
- the impacts of fiscal decentralization on RBM in Mongolia, and
- on consulting with regard to the preparation of the Kharaa River Basin Management Plan.
Publikationen
- Is the EU WFD suitable to support IWRM planning in non-European countries? Lessons learnt from the introduction of IWRM and River Basin Management in Mongolia
Heldt, Sonja / Jean Carlo Rodríguez-de-Francisco / Ines Dombrowsky / Christian K. Feld / Daniel Karthe(2017)
in: Environmental Science & Policy 75 (September), 28–37 - The devil is in the detail: administrative and fiscal challenges in implementing River Basin Management in Mongolia
Dombrowsky, Ines / Jean Carlo Rodríguez de Francisco / Mirja Schoderer / Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj(2018)
Briefing Paper 17/2018 - River Basin Authorities (RBAs) and institutional interactions
Rodriguez de Francisco, Jean Carlo / Ines Dombrowsky / Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj(2018)
in: Jürgen Hofmann / D. Battogtokh (eds.), Kharaa-Yeröö River Basin Atlas, 2nd ed., Ulaanbaatar, Berlin, 238-244 - The Mongolian legal framework for water policy
Rodriguez de Francisco, Jean Carlo / Ines Dombrowsky / Ariunaa Lkhagvadorj(2018)
in: Jürgen Hofmann / D. Battogtokh (eds.), Kharaa-Yeröö River Basin Atlas, 2nd ed., Ulaanbaatar, Berlin, 232-236 - Flussgebietsmanagement voranbringen: rechtliche, finanzielle und politische Dimensionen in der Mongolei
Rodriguez de Francisco, Jean Carlo / Annabelle Houdret / Ines Dombrowsky(2017)
Analysen und Stellungnahmen 8/2017 - Proceeding with River Basin Management: legal, financial and political dimensions in Mongolia
Rodríguez de Francisco, Jean Carlo / Annabelle Houdret / Ines Dombrowsky(2017)
Briefing Paper 6/2017 - IWRM in a country under rapid transition: lessons learnt from the Kharaa River Basin, Mongolia
Karthe, Daniel / Sonja Heldt / Annabelle Houdret / Dietrich Borchardt(2015)
published on Environmental Earth Sciences DOI: 10.1007/s12665-014-3435-y - Evolving river basin management in Mongolia?
Houdret, Annabelle / Ines Dombrowsky / Lena Horlemann(2014)
in: Dave Huitema / Sander Meijerink (eds.), The politics of river basin organisations: coalitions, institutional design choices and consequences, Cheltenham: Elgar, 265-297 - The river basin as a new scale for water governance in transition countries? A comparative study of Mongolia and Ukraine
Dombrowsky, Ines / Nina Hagemann / Annabelle Houdret(2014)
in: Environmental Earth Sciences 72 (12), 4705-4726 - The institutionalization of river basin management as politics of scale: insights from Mongolia
Houdret, Annabelle / Ines Dombrowsky / Lena Horlemann(2014)
in: Journal of Hydrology 519, Part C, 2392-2404 - IWRM in Mongolia: cought between national aspirations and local realities
Houdret, Annabelle / Christian Schweitzer / Jörg Priess(2012)
in: Hartwig Streusloff (ed.), IWRM Karlsruhe 2012, Integrated Water Resources Management, international conference, 21-22. November 2012, conference proceedings, Karlsruhe, 72-79 - Institutionalizing IWRM in developing and transition countries: the case of Mongolia
Horlemann, Lena / Ines Dombrowsky(2010)
Leipzig: Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ (UFZ-Diskussionspapiere 09/2010)