Full_Week_2017 Programme
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Sunday | 27 August | 09:00-10:30<br />
From practice to policy: Lessons from implementing sanitation safety<br />
plans<br />
Room:<br />
NL 357<br />
Convenors: CEWAS, GIZ, IWA, SDC, Swiss TPH and WHO<br />
This interactive session will share the experience of Philippines, Uganda, Peru, Jordan and Portugal on implementing risk<br />
assessment and management approaches (or sanitation safety planning) allowing participants to explore technical policy<br />
and perception challenges and response in faecal sludge management and wastewater use.<br />
Event<br />
09:00 Opening remarks<br />
Eileen Hofstetter, SDC<br />
09:10 Status of health risk based<br />
approached to sanitation and<br />
wastewater use globally –<br />
What’s going well, what are the<br />
challenges?<br />
Kate Medlicott, WHO<br />
09:45 Opening summary by each SSP<br />
example.<br />
09:50 Speed dating: Examples of<br />
sanitation safety planning<br />
implementation:<br />
• Jordan: Health risk based policy<br />
and implementation<br />
Ghada Kasib, Assistant Dean for<br />
Training Affairs, University of<br />
Jordan<br />
• India: SSP for faecal sludge<br />
management in small peri-urban<br />
towns<br />
Vishwanath Srikantaiah,<br />
BOIM environmental solutions,<br />
Karnataka<br />
• Finland<br />
Johanna Castrén, Helsinki<br />
Region Environmental Services<br />
Authority HSY<br />
• Philippines: Safe use of faecal<br />
sludge in Baliwag district<br />
tbd<br />
• Uganda: Towards city-wide<br />
regulations in Kampala informed<br />
by sanitation safety planning<br />
tbd<br />
10:20 Feedback of speed dating<br />
highlights<br />
10:25 Closing and outlook<br />
Kate Medlicott, WHO<br />
10.30 Close of session<br />
Monitoring wastewater treatment sustainability: Learning from South<br />
Asia’s small-scale systems<br />
Room:<br />
NL 353<br />
Convenors: Gates Foundation, BORDA and Eawag<br />
Showcase<br />
While mechanisms have been developed to measure global progress on wastewater treatment, sustainability monitoring<br />
is also required at national/local levels. Based on findings from small-scale sanitation systems in South Asia, this world<br />
café will discuss key questions around the development of local monitoring methods, adequate discharge standards and<br />
targeted investments.<br />
09:00 Welcome and introduction<br />
BMGF representative<br />
09:10 World Café<br />
• What monitoring frameworks<br />
should be used at national/<br />
regional/local levels to measure<br />
sustainability criteria of wastewater<br />
treatment services?<br />
Lukas Ulrich, Eawag and<br />
Alex Wolf, BORDA<br />
• What are adequate context-specific<br />
discharge and reuse standards to<br />
ensure safe treatment and promote<br />
viable solutions?<br />
Philippe Reymond, Eawag and<br />
TBD, UN<br />
• How can decision-makers make<br />
best use of cyclical learning and<br />
monitoring results to ensure propoor,<br />
inclusive and sustainable<br />
investments with optimised<br />
impacts?<br />
Stanzin Tsephel, BORDA and<br />
Christoph Lüthi, Eawag<br />
10:15 Synthesis and conclusions<br />
Rapporteurs, experts and<br />
moderator<br />
10:30 Close of session<br />
4 World Water <strong>Week</strong> <strong>2017</strong> Water and waste: Reduce and reuse programme.worldwaterweek.org