Pacific Institute launches Water and Climate Equity Strategy

July 14, 2022
The work will provide collaborative research to assess how climate change will impact water security for communities and will find solutions for equitable water resilience.

The Pacific Institute, a global nonpartisan water think tank working to catalyze the transformation to water resilience by 2030, has launched its Water and Climate Equity strategy.

Through research and outreach, institute hopes that this long-term strategy will address the impacts of climate change on water security for frontline communities, including rural communities, low-income communities, and communities of color, across the United States.

The work will provide rigorous evidence-based research and climate-resilient strategies for frontline communities. Research will focus on the lack of fulfillment of the Human Right to Water across the United States. More than 2.2 billion people globally lack access to safely managed drinking water. While the Human Right to Water is formally recognized by the United Nations and the State of California, the United States has not formalized water as a human right at the federal level.

“Millions of people in the United States still lack access to clean water, lack basic plumbing, or rely on water systems with safety violations. Frontline communities often endure the worst of this water insecurity, with disproportionate impacts to low-income communities, communities of color, Indigenous communities, and rural areas,” said Shannon McNeeley, senior researcher and water and climate equity lead for the Pacific Institute. “Working collaboratively, this work will focus attention on how to ensure the Human Right to Water is attained equitably and by all across the country, with a specific focus on how climate change will impact water security for the most marginalized and overburdened communities.”

To implement the strategy, the Pacific Institute is working closely with the Rural Community Assistance Partnership (RCAP), the Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Network (LiKEN), and DigDeep.

“Our hope is to highlight stories of rural communities and their water systems’ experiences with climate change,” said Bobby Cochran, chief strategy and knowledge officer for RCAP. “Through this work, we really want to understand all of the challenges the communities and rural water systems face, what they do every day to overcome these challenges, and their successes.”

Co-designed research conducted in collaboration with partnering communities and organizations will analyze how climate change, as a risk multiplier, will intensify water-related risks for marginalized communities; the impacts of climate change specifically on small and medium water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) systems; the distributional effects and equity of related environmental policy; and water-related climate change preparedness.

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