guidance pack: how to find & use our tools and resources
The Water for Tomorrow Guidance Pack lists all of the tools and resources partners have developed to help us all understand and adapt to a future with less water. This document details some of the methods used to engage stakeholders
LOCAL PROJECT REPORT: THE RIVER LARK CATCHMENT PARTNERSHIP
Water for Tomorrow funded local projects across the 3 English pilot sites, working with local organisations to build on and develop partnerships between different stakeholders at the local scale. This local project took place in the Cam and Ely Ouse
Local Project report : Granta catchment
Water for Tomorrow funded local projects across the 3 English pilot sites, working with local organisations to build on and develop partnerships between different stakeholders at the local scale. On the Cam and Ely Ouse pilot site, local partners came together
AV Diaries : CAM & Ely Ouse archive
Watch all AV diaries highlighting the work and projects supported by the Interreg Water for Tomorrow project in the Cam & Ely Ouse pilot site. Local projects have been able to run feasibility studies for river level monitoring, engaged local
sustained heat and dry weather highlight the need to prepare for water shortages
Europe is experiencing its hottest heatwave on record, with sustained above-average temperatures being felt in some northern-most parts and a UK high temperature record of 40.3°C in Lincolnshire. This weather trend is becoming increasingly familiar and is likely to continue –
water for tomorrow joins ukia summer conference
Is water for food still the ‘missing link’ in water resources planning ? We will be joining specialists from the food, farming and water management sectors to try and answer this question on Wednesday 6th July. Harri Condie is the
supporting work on the ground through local projects
Water for Tomorrow (WfT) is supporting four local projects across East Anglia: Wensum (Broadland catchment), Lark and Granta (CamEO catchment), and East Suffolk (East Suffolk catchment). Each local project is supporting and participating in the co-design of our innovative participatory
Participatory models now Live & open for comments & feedback
Water for Tomorrow's first set of participatory models is now live! These show an initial shared representation of water use and management across a catchment for four sectors: agriculture, ecology, industry and water companies. These prototype models have been developed
Stakeholder Workshop update: follow-up notes from the day & next steps
The first stakeholder workshop for Water for Tomorrow took place online earlier this summer in June. Over 80 people from 60 different organisations took part in the conversation which aimed to gather and promote a shared understanding of sector water
New Project to Increase Resilience of Water Stressed Areas in England and France
A new €4m cross-border project between England and France will help to improve how local areas mitigate and adapt to the threats of increased future water scarcity and drought in England and France. Water for Tomorrow is an EU Interreg France