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Transboundary Waters Refocus Africa The project to Refocus Africa’s Environmental Information Management and Networking continues to strengthen its networks in Africa. Through the website africaein.net, the project profiled in detail the state of the environment and trends in 21 out of Africa’s 54 countries. The profiles provide quick environmental overviews of the countries and the web site provides access to copies of recent national state of environment reports (where they are available). The goal is to build a single environmental information portal for Africa. The project was financed by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and received in-kind and technical support from UNEP’s Regional

With nearly 90 per cent of the world’s population living in countries where freshwater resources

cross borders, the peaceful cooperation and sustainable use of shared waters is critically important.

In Africa alone there are 63 shared river basins – important hubs for economic development and

regional integration. Last year GRID-Arendal’s Transboundary Waters Programme focused on three

water basins in Africa – Lake Victoria, Okavango and Limpopo – and the Caspian Sea basin in Eurasia.

GRID-Arendal also continued to support the Interim Secretariat of the Tehran Convention,

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which is

the first legally binding regional agreement between all five Caspian littoral States.

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The convention

lays out the general requirements and the institutional mechanism for environmental protection in

the Caspian region.

Office for Africa where a Junior Professional Officer

seconded by Norway to UNEP had activities under the

project as part of her tasks.

The 15th session of the Africa Ministerial Conference on

the Environment held in March acknowledged the positive

impact of Refocusing Africa’s Environmental Information

Management and Networking through its decision 15/7.

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It

called upon UNEP and its collaborating partners (including

GRID-Arendal) to support African countries in building

and strengthening national and regional capacities in

environmental information management through the

Africa Environment Information Network.

Congo River Basin’s dense forests in Dzanga-

Ndoki National Park. Photo: Peter Prokosch

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