Presentación de Miguel Saravia en la Sesión especial: Montains under review,que tuvo lugar en Pakista el 12 de Marzo de 2013 como parte del International Workshop on Integrated Use of Space Technologies for Food and Water Security, organized by United Nations Office in Pakistan, United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs and the Inter-Islamic Network on Space Science and Technology, hosted by Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) on behalf of the Government of Pakistan.
4. Important drivers in Andes
Urbanization: drastic increase in urban population, rural
population more or less stable. Causes geographical
concentration of water demand
Source: Presentation “Water Management and Climate
Change”, by Axel Dourojeanni, Lima 2010.
Source: Estrategia Andina para GIRH, CAN 2010.
5. Free trade agreements boost agroindustry for export, but
large differences between countries
6. Land degradation: loss of regulation capacity in mountain
catchments
Source: Wouter Buytaert, 2010.
10. Andean Monitoring
22 sites: Venezuela to Argentina
Covering more than 30 grades
latitude (11N to 29S)
More of 7000 km with social and
environmental gradients
Producing information to facilitate
analysis from the local (micro) to
the regional(macro)
2 integral sites
* Tiquipaya (Cochabamba,Bolivia)
* Pichincha - Lloa/Nono
(Quito,Ecuador).
11. Our activities mobilize more than 100
researchers from natural and social science;
and articulate more than 60 organizations all
over the Andes, with local and national
governments and regional entities (Andean
Community)
• Biodiversity monitoring
• Carbon Monitoring
• Hydrological monitoring
• Land use and cover change monitoring
• Livelihoods monitoring
12. We are promoting new cooperation
agreements between governmental programs
and regional/national research centers
We are experimenting new ways to make the
information available for all interested parties:
CHMs, Geoportals:
http://paramo.cc.ic.ac.uk/espa/
www.condesan.org/gloria
13. We are generating different protocols for the
monitoring activities:
•Andean Forest monitoring: biodiversity,
productivity: carbon
•Monitoring Carbon in different gradients
•Hydrological Monitoring in several
subcatchments based on a set of minimal
indicators.
•Livelihood: Human vulnerability
14. CONDESAN is actively promoting the policy
dialogue,knowledge exchange and the
capacity building of all parties involved in the
monitoring activities:
•Policy dialogues
•Producing papers
•Regional and national technical workshops
•Site visits
16. Final remarks
• Monitoring is not just an academic exercise. We
do it to take decisions on how better manage our
natural resources.
• Monitoring is a long term process that require to
start delivering results very quickly. It is the only
way to show the relevance and to receive
continual political support and to get recognition
from all stakeholders.
17. Final remarks
• Monitoring cannot be done in isolation, it require a
collaborative effort between several stakeholders.
To develop collaborative mechanisms between
civil society, independent research centers and
governmental agencies require a dedicated and
well planned effort. It is essential to jointly identify
minimum methodological agreements as a pre
requisite to complement, and to ensure greater
sustainability of monitoring systems.
18. Final remarks
• Collecting data is just the beginning. Pay more
serious attention on how to deliver and use it.
Collecting data with the agreed protocols is just
the beginning of a long process. We need to pay
even more attention to how to deliver the data
collected to the different stakeholders needing it
and how the can better use it to manage the
natural resources.
19. Final remarks
• Trust not come form the solid hightech used but
by a verifiable infield results. There is no trust in a
monitoring system that not have a verifiable in
field component. We need to go beyond the
technology,the software applications and the
models behind and be in the field with the people
who is requiring the information.
20. GRACIAS
آپ کا شکریہ Construyendo
soluciones juntos,
desde nuestra
Miguel.saravia@condesan.org
http://www.condesan.org diversidad,
http://www.infoandina.org
desde nuestro saber,
en armonía con el ambiente.
Notas do Editor
In CONDESAN, we are committed with a sustainable management of natural resources, which contributes to overcome poverty of Andean populations and secures their well-being. For that we promote research processes focused on obtaining a regional view of how the populations of the Andean countries access and manage their natural resources. Our institutional mandate implies generating inputs to be used for decision making, incidence, capacity building, and policy. For that reason, CONDESAN is working with its partners and donors (like SDC and AECID) to establish monitoring systems that assess the impacts of social and environmental changes in the region. We apply an integrative approach, linking dynamics of land use and climate change to ecosystem processes that secure the societal benefits derived from the persistence of biodiversity, the provision of water and the maintenance of carbon stocks in the Andes. Concurrently, we aim to monitoring resource use patterns and its contribution to local livelihoods. During today presentation I have the intention to provide you with a quick overview of the Andes and the monitoring activities we are leading.
The tropical Andes are the longest and widest cool region in the tropics, as they extend over 1.5 million km2, from 11º N to 23º S, occupying an elevation range from around 600-800 m up to some 6,000 m above sea level.
Besides the characteristic Andean features of steep slopes, deep gorges, and wide valleys, a vast mountain plain, the Altiplano, extends at elevations above 3,500 m across much of southern Peru and western Bolivia. A large number of snow-capped peaks are found throughout the tropical Andes. The treeline occurs between 3,800–4,500 m near the equator and above 4,500 m from 15º S to the southern limit of the region Josse et al. 2011). Further, the tropical Andes top the list of worldwide hotspots for endemism and the number of species/ area ratio (Myers et al. 2000). Like the mountains in this part of the world, the Andes have been inhabited for millennia by people who have adapted to climatic and eco-geographical characteristics of these mountains, and their impacts. Extremely variable conditions People, cities at high and low altitudes …
In the Andean region, mountains are the habitat for more than 40 million people,concentrated in big cities that are growing exponentially. This drastic increase in urban population, causes geographical concentration of water demands. Urbanization is considered today a more serious threat forwater availability than climate change in the Andes.
Free trade agreements: the clearest case is the export agriculture in the deserts of Peruvian coast.
Free trade agreements: the clearest case is the export agriculture in the deserts of Peruvian coast.
Mining is another important driver affecting the mountains in the Andes, morethat 80% of their territory is already demanded for mining exploration. The images presente the actual mining projects activies in 3 andes Countries.
Climate change: vertical moves clearest driver, much clearer than changes in total rainfall, or precipitation patterns
Most information available in the Andean countries is based on simulations and modeling, rather than observed data. For instance, the density of hydrometeorological monitoring stations above 3.000 meters above sea level in the region is insufficient to allow an understanding of basic ecological processes in Andean ecosystems, and less so, to predict future trends linked to climate change. With this background, CONDESAN is currently leading different monitoring initiatives all over the mountain regions of the Andes. From Venezuela to Argentina. The objective is to lay the social, scientific and technological foundations for establishing monitoring systems that can assess the impacts of social and environmental changes in the region.
CONDESAN with the kind support of donors like SDC, supports the implementation of observation and monitoring systems in more than 20 sites along the Andes, ranging from Merida, Venezuela in the north, to Cumbres Chalchaquies, Argentina in the south. Among them, two have been chosen as integrated sites –Pichincha in Ecuador, and Tiquipaya in Bolivia– where an integrative approach is being employed, linking dynamics of land use and climate change to ecosystem processes expected to ensure the societal benefits of maintaining biodiversity, carbon stocks and water sources in the Andes.
Recognizing that timely and robust information is critical for natural resource management in the region, CONDESAN seeks to integrate the monitoring system with decision-making processes at multiple levels (e.g. local, regional) as a way to strengthen capacities and foster adaptive management. Even though decision makers require continuously relevant information to support the design of public policies, the generation of scientific information in the Andean region, in addition to being scarce and not replicated in time, has often been unarticulated from the needs and priorities of decision makers.
In order to have comparable and suitable results, the project is designing simple and replicable methods and protocols in each thematic area, which are discussed and agreed upon among scientists working in the region, including The Global Observation Research Initiative In Alpine Environments (GLORIA) programme, and the Regional Initiative of Hydrological Monitoring in Andean Ecosystems (MHEA).
CONDESAN is aiming to articulate the on-going efforts of researchers with policymakers’ information needs to support decision making at regional, national and local levels. While local stakeholders, such as communities and local governments, are being engaged within the design and implementation of monitoring systems, at the national and regional level CONDESAN seeks to share its monitoring protocols with environmental authorities to complement governments’ on-going efforts in the Andes. In that vein, CONDESAN is promoting the exchange among researchers in the region and technical representatives and policymakers, as a basis for mutual learning and building bridges between policy and science. With the support of the General Secretariat of the Andean Community (SGCAN), UNESCO,UNEP,SDC and many other relevant actores we have been able to organize several activities in that direction.
Most information available in the Andean countries is based on simulations and modeling, rather than observed data. For instance, the density of hydrometeorological monitoring stations above 3.000 meters above sea level in the region is insufficient to allow an understanding of basic ecological processes in Andean ecosystems, and less so, to predict future trends linked to climate change. With this background, CONDESAN is currently leading different monitoring initiatives all over the mountain regions of the Andes. From Venezuela to Argentina. The objective is to lay the social, scientific and technological foundations for establishing monitoring systems that can assess the impacts of social and environmental changes in the region.
During this presentation we have briefly described the Andean context with special focus on the Andean mountain regions. We have also described the initiatives we are pursuing in the Andes. I want to take this final minute to share with you some learnings: 1. Monitoring is not just an academic exercise. We do it to take decisions on how better manage our natural resources. 2. Monitoring is a long term process that require to start delivering results very quickly. It is the only way to show the relevance and to receive continual political support and to get recognition from all stakeholders. 3. Monitoring cannot be done in isolation, it require a collaborative effort between several stakeholders. To develop collaborative mechanisms between civil society, independent research centers and governmental agencies require a dedicated and well planned effort. It is essential to jointly identify minimum methodological agreements as a prerequisite to complement, and to ensure greater sustainability of monitoring systems. 4. Collecting data is just the beginning. Pay more serious attention on how to deliver and use it. Collecting data with the agreed protocols is just the beginning of a long process. We need to pay even more attention to how to deliver the data collected to the different stakeholders needing it and how the can better use it to manage the natural resources. 5. Trust not come form the solid high-tech used but by a verifiable in-field results. There is no trust in a monitoring system that not have a verifiable in-field component. We need to go beyond the technology,the software applications and the models behind and be in the field with the people who is requiring the information .
During this presentation we have briefly described the Andean context with special focus on the Andean mountain regions. We have also described the initiatives we are pursuing in the Andes. I want to take this final minute to share with you some learnings: 1. Monitoring is not just an academic exercise. We do it to take decisions on how better manage our natural resources. 2. Monitoring is a long term process that require to start delivering results very quickly. It is the only way to show the relevance and to receive continual political support and to get recognition from all stakeholders. 3. Monitoring cannot be done in isolation, it require a collaborative effort between several stakeholders. To develop collaborative mechanisms between civil society, independent research centers and governmental agencies require a dedicated and well planned effort. It is essential to jointly identify minimum methodological agreements as a prerequisite to complement, and to ensure greater sustainability of monitoring systems. 4. Collecting data is just the beginning. Pay more serious attention on how to deliver and use it. Collecting data with the agreed protocols is just the beginning of a long process. We need to pay even more attention to how to deliver the data collected to the different stakeholders needing it and how the can better use it to manage the natural resources. 5. Trust not come form the solid high-tech used but by a verifiable in-field results. There is no trust in a monitoring system that not have a verifiable in-field component. We need to go beyond the technology,the software applications and the models behind and be in the field with the people who is requiring the information .
During this presentation we have briefly described the Andean context with special focus on the Andean mountain regions. We have also described the initiatives we are pursuing in the Andes. I want to take this final minute to share with you some learnings: 1. Monitoring is not just an academic exercise. We do it to take decisions on how better manage our natural resources. 2. Monitoring is a long term process that require to start delivering results very quickly. It is the only way to show the relevance and to receive continual political support and to get recognition from all stakeholders. 3. Monitoring cannot be done in isolation, it require a collaborative effort between several stakeholders. To develop collaborative mechanisms between civil society, independent research centers and governmental agencies require a dedicated and well planned effort. It is essential to jointly identify minimum methodological agreements as a prerequisite to complement, and to ensure greater sustainability of monitoring systems. 4. Collecting data is just the beginning. Pay more serious attention on how to deliver and use it. Collecting data with the agreed protocols is just the beginning of a long process. We need to pay even more attention to how to deliver the data collected to the different stakeholders needing it and how the can better use it to manage the natural resources. 5. Trust not come form the solid high-tech used but by a verifiable in-field results. There is no trust in a monitoring system that not have a verifiable in-field component. We need to go beyond the technology,the software applications and the models behind and be in the field with the people who is requiring the information .
During this presentation we have briefly described the Andean context with special focus on the Andean mountain regions. We have also described the initiatives we are pursuing in the Andes. I want to take this final minute to share with you some learnings: 1. Monitoring is not just an academic exercise. We do it to take decisions on how better manage our natural resources. 2. Monitoring is a long term process that require to start delivering results very quickly. It is the only way to show the relevance and to receive continual political support and to get recognition from all stakeholders. 3. Monitoring cannot be done in isolation, it require a collaborative effort between several stakeholders. To develop collaborative mechanisms between civil society, independent research centers and governmental agencies require a dedicated and well planned effort. It is essential to jointly identify minimum methodological agreements as a prerequisite to complement, and to ensure greater sustainability of monitoring systems. 4. Collecting data is just the beginning. Pay more serious attention on how to deliver and use it. Collecting data with the agreed protocols is just the beginning of a long process. We need to pay even more attention to how to deliver the data collected to the different stakeholders needing it and how the can better use it to manage the natural resources. 5. Trust not come form the solid high-tech used but by a verifiable in-field results. There is no trust in a monitoring system that not have a verifiable in-field component. We need to go beyond the technology,the software applications and the models behind and be in the field with the people who is requiring the information .