Ghana became the 3rd African country (44th Party) to accede to the Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes (Water Convention) serviced by UNECE; and the 37th Party to the Convention on the Law of Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (Watercourses Convention).
Ghana’s transboundary river basins, namely the Volta River basin (shared with Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali and Togo – home to over 23 million people, with a population projected to more than double by 2050); Bia and Tano Rivers (shared with Côte d’Ivoire); and Todzie-Aka basin (shared with Togo) cover over 75% of the country’s land surface and generate around 80% of freshwater flow.
These shared water resources provide water for drinking, sanitation, agriculture (which accounts for between 54 and 85% of employment in Volta basin countries), hydropower, and industrial needs. The basins link the populations across borders, creating socioeconomic interdependencies between the riparian countries.
Transboundary cooperation in these shared basins is therefore critical to ensure sustainable development and preserve regional stability, especially in the context of rising water stress linked to climate change; and to ensure access to safe water and sanitation, which is vital for hygiene in the face of COVID-19.
Ms. Cecilia Abena Dapaah, Minister for Sanitation and Water Resources stated: “Ghana promotes transboundary cooperation as a key means of ensuring pragmatic solutions anchored on negotiations and dialogue with its riparian neighbours.
“The growing effects of climate change and pressure on water resources call for urgent action to deepen existing cooperation. Ghana encourages the other riparian countries to also accede to both key global Conventions (1992 Water Convention and 1997 Watercourses Convention) in order to strengthen our international cooperation and national measures for the sound utilisation, management and development of transboundary surface waters and groundwater resources.”
UNECE Executive Secretary Ms. Olga Algayerova said: “I warmly congratulate Ghana on its accession to the two global water conventions. This important step signals the mounting political momentum for water cooperation in Africa, harnessing the two United Nations Water Conventions as a foundation for sustainable development, conflict prevention, and climate change adaptation. UNECE will continue its collaboration with countries, regional and sub-regional organisations to promote and implement the two global Water Conventions. I call on all UN member-states sharing water resources to join and make full use of these instruments”.
An increasing number of countries are seizing the institutional and legal frameworks of the global Water Conventions to facilitate concrete efforts for cooperation on shared water resources. Ghana’s accession to the Water Convention follows that of Chad and Senegal in 2018, which became the first countries outside the pan-European region to join. Côte d’Ivoire and Togo – with which Ghana shares its basins, Cameroon and the Central African Republic are in advanced stages of the national accession process to the Convention, while numerous other African nations are among the around-20 countries worldwide taking steps toward joining.
Ghana’s accession to the two Conventions – supported by UNECE, Green Cross International, WWF and others since 2018, also follows recommendations the Council of Ministers of the Volta Basin Authority made at its 7th session held in Accra (Ghana) on 10 May 2019. This also shows the important role played by regional organisations, notably basin organisations, in promoting the Global Water Conventions.
Ghana’s accession to the Water Convention will enter into force within the next 90 days (on 21st September 2020).