The Issues, Conclusions, and Recommendations of the NATO Advanced
Research Workshop - Budapest, Hungary July 27 -31, 1997 TIlOMAS NAFF
University of Pennsylvania 847 Williams Hall Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
USA tna. /J"@sas. upenn. edu 1. The Issues Sharing data and infonnation
enables people to think together in solving problems, in building trust
essential for cooperative efforts toward sustaining shared vital natural
resources, and in avoiding conflict. It is axiomatic that all planning
and policy making, not least for environmental and resource
sustainability, depend for success on accmate data and infonnation
dispensed freely to all who need it, from farmers to heads of state.
These maxims are particularly apt when applied to water resources that
are international and transboundary. In those circumstances, the need
for cooperation and sharing are acute if the water source is to be
managed, distributed, and used equitably and efficiently. In many parts
of the world, the collection, management, reporting, and quality of
water and environmental data are often so poor and incomplete as to
render them useless, or they are treated as security issues and are
therefore classified. Either way, wherever those conditions exist,
essential planning and policy data and information of good quality are
relatively hard to come by. The consequences are high, particularly for
effective basin-wide river management and resource sustainability.