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Green Infrastructure in Monterrey

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Green Infrastructure in Monterrey

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Amazon
Area: 5888268 km2
Countries:
Brazil; Peru; Suriname; France; Colombia; Guyana; Bolivia; Venezuela; Ecuador
Cities:
Santa Cruz; Manaus; La Paz
PFAF ID:
HydroBasin Level:
Baseline Water Stress:
Water Quality Stress:
Sanitation Access Stress:
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Quick Info

Countries: India
Basins: Ganges, Yamuna
Project SDGs:
Includes Sustainable Development Goals from the project and its locations.
Water Quality (SDG 6.3)
Project Tags:
Includes tags from the project and its locations.
Leaving No One Behind
Progress to Date: NA Number of tress planted
Services Needed: Other
Desired Partner: NGO / Civil Society
Language: English
Start & End Dates: Jan. 01, 2021  »  Dec. 31, 2026
Project Website: www.fondosdeagua.org/es/los-fondos-de-agua/mapa-de-los-fondo...
Contextual Condition(s): Quality
Additional Benefits: Long-term partnership(s) created
Beneficiaries: Local communities / domestic users
Planning & Implementation Time: More than 3 years
Primary Funding Source: pool
Project Challenges: RESOURCES: Lack of financial resources
Project Source: Other
Profile Completion: 87%

Project Overview

Trees are a key part of citiesÕ green infrastructure. They provide many environmental services like storm water reduction, air pollution removal (CO, PM2.5, PM10, SO2, NO2), increase in biodiversity and habitat, etc. However, in the Metropolitan Area of Monterrey there is a clear lag in terms of urban tree canopy, and there is no tree census nor any kind of robust estimation of it. The Environmental Fund of Monterrey (FAMM) established a program to plant 5,000 middle aged tr…

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Trees are a key part of citiesÕ green infrastructure. They provide many environmental services like storm water reduction, air pollution removal (CO, PM2.5, PM10, SO2, NO2), increase in biodiversity and habitat, etc. However, in the Metropolitan Area of Monterrey there is a clear lag in terms of urban tree canopy, and there is no tree census nor any kind of robust estimation of it. The Environmental Fund of Monterrey (FAMM) established a program to plant 5,000 middle aged trees in 1.5 years, and in one less than a year there are already around 3,000 trees planted in the Metropolitan Area of Monterrey. While this program is just a starting step for FAMM«s planting objectives, before going forward in this effort, FAMM identifies the need of developing a strategic plan which clearly estimates the environmental services that actual canopy provides to the city, the goals in terms of flooding reduction, water quality improvements, etc., and to prioritize locations, species, and planting efforts. In this context FAMM is planning to develop a tree census in Monterrey, and to use i-Tree software, a series of state-of-the art methodologies, to prioritize and optimize the planting program. i-Tree is a series of methodologies and software developed by the USDA Forest Service that provide urban and rural forestry analysis and benefits assessment tools. The USDA Forest Service has already adapted i-Tree models for Mexico.
Basin and/or Contextual Conditions: Quality
Project Benefits: Long-term partnership(s) created
Indirect or Direct Beneficiaries: Local communities / domestic users
Months & Implementing: More than 3 years
Primary Funding Source: Pool funding (i.e., joint funding of several partners)
Challenges: RESOURCES: Lack of financial resources

Project Narrative

1. Ensure effective governance of water conservation, distribution and usage through active institutional arrangements and locally evolved regulatory measures 1.1 Promote participatory assessment of current water availability, functionality of sources, water use pattern. Assessing water availability and water budgeting. 1.2 Work with GPs and Village Water and Sanitation Committees to prepare Drinking Water Security Plans, taking into account source sustainability, water quality (both bacteriological and chemical), operations and maintenance (O&M) issues, and provisions for replacement and expansion. 1.3 Build rainwater harvesting and groundwater recharge structures and restore additional drinking water sources such as dug-wells, to enhance water availability. 1.4 Promote water quality monitoring and mitigation measures; contamination prevention measures at the source, system and household level monitoring using field testing kits as well as district or sub-divisional water quality laboratory testing. 2. Demonstrate community-led liquid waste management (grey and black water) systems 2.1 Demonstrate household based treatment, community-based collection and disposal systems 2.2 Involve community-based groups (for example, youth clubs, self-help groups (SHGs), mahila mandals) in waste management operations; 2.3 Scale up demonstration models with the help of government department. 3. Address water quality issue with participation from community, local institutions and government departments 3.1 Engage community members and local institutions in water quality monitoring by building their capacities on water quality treatment.

Partner Organizations


The Monterrey Metropolitan Water Fund (FAMM) was established by a multi-stakeholder consortium in September 2013. The main objective of FAMM is to preserve the watershed of the San Juan River, which supplies more than 60% of the water used and … Learn More

The Water Resilience Coalition, founded in 2020, is an industry-driven, CEO-led coalition of the UN Global Compact's CEO Water Mandate that aims to elevate global water stress to the top of the corporate agenda and preserve the world's freshwater resources … Learn More

Sarah Hauck
Primary Contact  

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