With urgent action needed on mitigation and adaptation, the International Water Association is calling on utilities around the world, regardless of their size or location, to endorse a shared vision to build momentum for greater progress.
Utilities are urged to increase their resilience to the impacts of climate change to maintain and improve their service levels. The emissions reported by water and wastewater utilities in various countries vary from 3 to 7% of total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (Nature 2020, Environmental Research 2020). Taking a holistic water cycle approach that encompasses emissions from unconnected residential areas, discharge of untreated sewage into rivers, and industrial treatment facilities would significantly amplify the contribution of GHG emissions. Therefore, utilities are critical to the cities’ successful climate adaptation and should act towards global decarbonisation.
IWA invites you, as a water and sanitation professional and/or as a utility leader, to endorse the Climate Smart Utilities Vision. By endorsing the vision, will be part of an initiative aimed at building a community of leaders that can inspire utilities and their governance structures, regulators, and urban planners to become increasingly Climate Smart, deliver innovation, tools and knowledge exchange to support the green transition. By endorsing the vision, you act as a Climate Smart player, providing inspiration and momentum for all utilities worldwide to achieve the cultural shift needed on three interconnected pillars:
The IWA Climate Smart Utilities Initiative has been launched to support all utilities worldwide to act collectively and share knowledge.
Climate Smart Utilities are water, sanitation, and urban drainage service providers that are improving their climate resilience by adapting to a changing climate while contributing to a significant and sustainable reduction of carbon emissions. The initiative is structured around four components:
This programme aims to inspire utilities to become increasingly Climate Smart and embrace the cultural shift required for a water-wise future
The programme is built around a vision endorsement and the submission of applications to take part in the Recognition Programme in conjunction with the IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition (WWCE) and IWA Water and Development Congress & Exhibition (WDCE).
Through their applications, utilities can reflect on their progress on the Climate Smart journey and compare themselves against several indicators and criteria describing an ideal Climate-Smart Utility under each pillar.
The inaugural edition of the Recognition Programme was launched in 2022 at the IWA WWCE in Copenhagen, Denmark. The second edition took place during the 2023 IWA WDCE, in Kigali, Rwanda. In 2024, the third edition took place during the IWA WWCE, in Toronto, Canada on 11-15 August 2024.
For 2024, 28 of the applications have been recognised as Climate Smart. Out of the 28 applications, 16 were considered for the Entrant category and 12 were considered for the Achiever category. Also, a total of 15 of the applications are being acknowledged as ‘Most Inspiring’ by the jury as they are particularly inspiring and ambitious considering their local context.
The results of the 2024 Climate Smart Utilities Recognition Programme under the Entrant category are:
The results of the 2024 Climate Smart Utilities Recognition Programme under the Achiever category are:
For a comprehensive and up to date list of Climate Smart Resources, head to the climatesmartwater.org website and check out the library!
Climate Smart Utilities plan to anticipate future threats from climate change impacts. Investments to increase resilience contribute to reducing GHG emissions when possible. This translates into:
The transition towards a smart water future requires a reduction in the utility’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, with well-defined and strategically planned reduction targets implemented throughout the entire service chain. This translates into:
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and the International Water Association (IWA) have been working together with their partners from Mexico, Peru, Jordan and Thailand on the Water and Wastewater Companies for Climate Mitigation project (WaCCliM). The aim has been to use GHG emission-reducing technologies to improve the carbon balance of water and wastewater companies while maintaining or even improving service levels and improving these companies cost effectiveness.
Climate Smart Utilities are leaders driving the transition through the exchange of knowledge and the development of innovative, equitable solutions for climate adaptation and the reduction of GHG emissions. This translates into a robust culture of learning and sharing on local, national, and international levels.
Low-carbon, low-energy solutions in the water sector make economic sense. Utilities can now be guided towards water and energy efficiency, as well as mitigating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions through the Roadmap to a Low-Carbon Urban Water Utility and a website with all a utility needs to successfully transition to a low-carbon urban water utility.
The Roadmap guides utilities to:
A tool to transition towards carbon neutrality in the water sector from IWA on Vimeo (video also available in Spanish here).
IWA members have established a group on Low Energy Low-Carbon Utilities. Join the group and participate in discussions on IWA Connect Plus.