UNESCO-Hydroresilience: Addressing Hydro-climatic vulnerability through Citizen Science and Open Science

Project Details

Start & end date

7/2024 - 12/2024

People

Collaborators

UNESCO-Hydroresilience: Addressing Hydro-climatic vulnerability through Citizen Science and Open Science

Natural disasters and extreme weather events are ranked as the second global risk by severity in the short term (two years) followed by failure to mitigate climate change and large-scale environmental damage incidents. In the long-term climate and environmental related risks will be the most severe and water is highlighted as one of the major issues to address. Water crisis and climate risks are both linked and have great impacts into subsistence sectors such as food and energy. Therefore, this project focuses on how to address the related challenges through the approaches of citizen and open science. Hydro-Resilience seeks to enhance the knowledge and skills of stakeholders and decision-makers concerning water and climate, notably in the regions of Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean. The project further draws from the achievements of the project “Addressing Water Security: Climate Impacts and Adaptation Responses in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean”, which was implemented from 2014 to 2021 by UNESCO-IHP with the support from the Flanders UNESCO Trust Fund. This water security project laid the foundation for engaging with local vulnerable communities through citizen science. Several workshops and seminars were organized to exchange and gather knowledge on how to incorporate citizen science in data collection, data analysis, and policy making, as well as on promoting it as a tool to progress on the SDG framework. Importantly, a collaboration with Imperial College London was established under the water security project, which will provide a solid basis for increased cooperation in the implementation of the proposed project.

The main objective of the project is to improve the ability to forecast hydro-climatic extremes, such as droughts and floods, and to develop, test and evaluate the use of citizen and open science methodologies to build water resilience against climate change and improve water management in pilot countries of Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America.