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Almacen - Apuntes 23, Apuntes de Ciencias

Mapa conceptual de los tipos de conteo de inventarios.

Tipo: Apuntes

2020/2021

Subido el 23/03/2021

isaac-zavalija
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UNIVERSIDAD TECNOLÓGICA DE NUEVO LAREDO
SUBJECT:
Cultural formation
Formation
NAME:
Daniel Isaac Niño Zavalija
MATRICULA:
5420100399
Valeria Vega Villareal
GROUP
:
1-
C
Monday, March 8th, 2021
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UNIVERSIDAD TECNOLÓGICA DE NUEVO LAREDO

SUBJECT:

Cultural formation

Formation

NAME:

Daniel Isaac Niño Zavalija

MATRICULA:

Teacher's name:

Valeria Vega Villareal

GROUP:

1 - C

Monday, March 8 th, 2021

Action plan for sustainable water development

Water connects public health, food security, livable cities, energy for all, environmental wellbeing, and climate action. Water and sanitation are necessary for human dignity and economic growth. Yet, as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) make clear, the world needs to transform the way it manages its water resources, as well as improve water and sanitation related services for billions of people. Pressure on water is rising, and action is urgent. Growing populations, more water-intensive patterns of growth, increasing rainfall variability, and pollution are combining in many places to make water one of the greatest risks to poverty eradication and sustainable development. Floods and droughts already impose huge social and economic costs around the world, and climate variability will make water extremes worse. If the world continues on its current path, projections suggest that the world may face a 40% shortfall in water availability by 2030. e consequences of such stress are local, transboundary and global in todays interconnected world. Achieving the SDGs will require governments, societies, and the private sector to change the way they use and manage water. To accelerate this transformation the UN Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon and World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim have convened a High Level Panel on Water. e Panel (HLPW), at the Heads of State and Government level, will provide the leadership required to champion a comprehensive, inclusive and collaborative way of developing and managing water resources, and improving water and sanitation related services. Motivate Effective Action – by changing the way that the world thinks about water, and by shining a light on examples of policies, institutions, and programs that could help the world onto a more sustainable pathway, the HLPW can help motivate e-ective action across governments, civil society, and the private sector Advocate on Financing and Implementation – by promoting e-orts to mobilize and target financial resources, scale-up investment, and encourage innovation and partnerships, the HLPW can help the world improve water and sanitation related services, as well as build more sustainable and resilient societies and economies.

MORE ACTIONS

Reducing the impact of water-related disasters is critical to achieve sustainable development Water-related disasters can disrupt the lives of citizens, wipe away many years of development gains and cause political unrest. Water- related disaster risk reduction requires preventive investments and e-ective emergency response measures weaved into long-term planning. Solutions, policies and tools to address water-related disasters need to be considered in and integrated into sustainable development strategies. 1 - Encourage the UN to create a platform where states can share and exchange lessons and good practices for addressing water-related disasters and translate them into solutions that can be promoted globally 2 - Encourage states and organizations to focus on measures to improve water use efficiency for resilient economies (agriculture, energy, industry), climate action and human settlement, by encouraging and including new technologies and policy reforms. Initiate/launch a Challenge inviting the international community to present innovative solutions to improve the efficiency of water use. 1 - Initiate/launch a Challenge inviting the international community to present innovative solutions to provide access to safe and clean drinking water and adequate sanitation to women and girls in the “most remote dwelling” in a village (could be expanded to other categories: refugee camps, rural, peri-urban, access for people with disability etc.). 2 - Encourage the development and deployment of public awareness and education campaigns for civil society, businesses and government representatives around water quality, sanitation, gender and health. 3 - Catalyze actions and activate solutions aimed at reducing the economic and human costs of poor water quality and poor sanitation, including those that will reverse the degradation of aquatic ecosystems. 4 - Encourage the recycling of wastewater and ensuring quality prior to human consumption (irrigation or otherwise). 5 - Encourage the participation of local communities in improving water and sanitation management.

CONCLUSION

It is necessary to strengthen public policies oriented to the SDGs and the implementation of SBN in order to sustain equitably a natural water capital for the normal functioning of natural systems, and on the other hand, carry out extractive water tasks adjusted to the needs of the society. We can also realize that, despite having natural systems that are vigorously sustained to provide an important uptake of water resources, it is necessary to abate the conflicts that arise due to the increasingly abundant requirements of water for productive and consumption activities. in social groups. The challenge is to find adequate water management to protect the natural complexity and resilience of these ecosystems to regenerate the hydrological resource. Undoubtedly, the use of knowledge, both technical and scientific, makes it possible to foresee that it is feasible to draw in comprehensive terms a water balance between the demands of quantity and adequate quality for the management of channels and bodies of water, considering by supposed the SBN as fundamental instrumentations. Finally, effective and sustainable water management demands that all social figures cooperate in the protection and increase of the resource, which together with the social and biophysical support of the environment, water management will be more economically feasible and achievable. However, for this it is necessary to promote the preparation of human resources, otherwise, no public policy, no matter how innovative, can be effective. Based on the above, we can see that the SBN approach offers a systematic and analytical way in which advances in science and technology can be articulated with the essential functions of nature itself. Which makes the SBN a very special instrument since it allows the interaction between different techno-scientific and natural factors to act and evade prevention and compensation to embrace sustainability.