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Alpacas trump sheep in bid for Andean water security

by Sophie Hares | @SophieHares | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 8 February 2017 17:00 GMT

A herd of alpacas graze in the Andean highlands of Puno, Peru, in this July 2010 file photo. REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil

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Water funds are gaining traction around the world as a way of channelling public and private investment into conservation of water resources

By Sophie Hares

TEPIC, Mexico, Feb 8 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - High on Ecuador's Andean plains, the Comuna Espejo co-operative is counting on a recent delivery of 20 woolly alpacas to keep its moist grasslands in better shape than the sheep that normally graze there - and in turn help secure water supplies to the nearby capital city of Quito.

“Little by little, we're going to see the impact the alpacas have, but they're easier to manage than sheep and the degradation is less,” said Henry Carrera, vice president of Comuna Espejo, now home to 18 female and two male alpacas.

Besides selling wool, and eventually meat from the camelids, Comuna Espejo hopes to attract tourists with the alpaca project, which forms part of the Quito Water Fund’s plans to conserve the watersheds around the city some 30 km (19 miles) away.

Quito’s fund, the first to be set up under the auspices of U.S.-based environmental group The Nature Conservancy (TNC) in 2000, has provided a model for nearly 60 cities around the world to boost water security from the source to the sink.

The funds combine scientific expertise with public and private-sector investment from water authorities, banks and large water users such as bottlers and brewers.

Now TNC has 20 funds active in Latin America. It plans to double these by 2020 in the region where 80 percent of the population lives in cities, putting huge pressure on water supplies.

“Being able to protect the water sources for the cities is very important for the population, to reduce risks for water quality and quantity,” said Silvia Benitez, TNC’s Quito-based fresh water manager for Latin America.

The problem cannot be solved by any one organisation, but must be addressed through collective action involving different water users, she added.

Each city’s water fund has to be tailored to suit the specific issues facing residents and watersheds.

In the industrial Mexican city of Monterrey, which is susceptible to both droughts and floods, the city’s water fund is working to reduce water stress and increase the amount of water sucked up by watersheds in the surrounding areas.

In São Paulo, whose population of over 20 million already consumes 4 percent more water than comes from its rivers, forest restoration and sediment reduction in waterways around the megacity are part of its fund’s plan to boost water security, together with efforts to cut water use and invest in critical infrastructure.

MIXING GREEN AND GREY

Bert de Bièvre, head of the water fund for Quito - which now has 100 percent potable water - said the concept was to achieve water security through a combination of “grey and green infrastructure”. “The grey infrastructure must be combined with the conservation of these (water) catchments,” he explained.

Estimating that some 40 percent of land around the world’s water sources has suffered degradation from deforestation, development and agriculture, TNC argues that investing in watersheds helps reduce environmental damage and soil erosion. It can also cut the risk of fires and promote biodiversity.

But persuading rural communities to change their practices in order to ensure water supplies for city dwellers many miles away often demands novel solutions.

“We're looking for win-win situations without cash transactions,” said de Bièvre.

In the areas around Quito, that might involve a shift in grazing methods on the sponge-like paramos plains that are vital to water supplies - such as Comuna Espejo’s alpacas.

Elsewhere, the fund could offer free water supplies to remote properties or tax incentives to encourage larger landowners to cooperate, de Bièvre said.

With many water funds in the region now well established, monitoring and quantifying their impact is key, said TNC's Benitez. That could encourage greater involvement of private-sector companies, which are paying closer attention to the issue of water security.

“The idea of reducing their business risk is very important to them. They’re aware of the risk related to water,” Benitez said, listing Mexican bottler and retailer Fomento Economico Mexicano (FEMSA) among businesses involved in water funds in the region.

TNC is now developing a “toolbox” with manuals and training programmes to enable cities around the world to develop their own funds specific to the local environment and needs, she said.

“There is a lot of demand and we need to provide the tools for other people,” she added. “We cannot be working everywhere.”

(Reporting by Sophie Hares; editing by Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/)

The Thomson Reuters Foundation is reporting on resilience as part of its work on zilient.org, an online platform building a global network of people interested in resilience, in partnership with the Rockefeller Foundation.

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