{"id":31337,"date":"2026-02-24T10:34:20","date_gmt":"2026-02-24T09:34:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/planbleu.org\/?post_type=offre-emploi-liste&p=31337"},"modified":"2026-02-24T10:34:20","modified_gmt":"2026-02-24T09:34:20","slug":"water-investment-gap-call-2026","status":"publish","type":"offre-emploi-liste","link":"https:\/\/planbleu.org\/en\/offre-emploi-liste\/water-investment-gap-call-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"Call for Papers: Bridging the Water Investment Gap in the Mediterranean Region"},"content":{"rendered":"

ABOUT PLAN BLEU<\/b><\/h3>\n

In 1976, Mediterranean countries and the European Community adopted the Barcelona Convention to protect the marine and coastal environment, placing sustainability at the heart of regional cooperation. Established by France in 1977, Plan Bleu is a Regional Activity Centre of UNEP\u2019s Mediterranean Action Plan. Its biennial programme is approved by the Contracting Parties and reflects shared priorities for the region\u2019s sustainable future. Plan Bleu\u2019s mission is to produce forward-looking studies, scenarios and policy recommendations that inform Mediterranean decision-makers on key environment and development challenges. Its work supports the region\u2019s transition to sustainability, in line with global and regional frameworks such as the SDGs, the Mediterranean Strategy for Sustainable Development, OECD guidance and the European Union’s taxonomy for sustainable activities.<\/span><\/p>\n

In recent years, Plan Bleu has launched a series of Calls for Papers to stimulate rigorous analysis and innovative policy thinking on the most pressing sustainability issues facing the Mediterranean. This new Call focuses on one of the Mediterranean\u2019s most critical resource constraints: <\/span>water<\/b>. It aims to assess the region\u2019s water-related investment gap and to identify the institutional, regulatory, financial and political barriers that prevent adequate financing of water infrastructure, management and conservation.<\/span><\/p>\n

The Call is closely linked to the <\/span>Euro-Mediterranean Water Forum, to be held in Rome from 29 September to 2 October 2026.<\/b> Authors of selected papers will be invited to present their draft findings at the Forum, allowing research to directly inform high-level policy dialogue and benefit from expert feedback. Finalised papers will then be published in Plan Bleu\u2019s research series, contributing to concrete solutions for Mediterranean water security.<\/span><\/p>\n

INTRODUCTION<\/b><\/h3>\n

Water scarcity is intensifying across the Mediterranean as climate change, population growth, unsustainable use and aging infrastructure combine to strain already limited resources. Declining rainfall, rising temperatures, groundwater over-extraction, pollution and inadequate wastewater treatment threaten public health, food security, ecosystems and economic stability. Although these risks are widely recognised, investment in water infrastructure and management remains far below what is needed. A growing water investment gap separates required financing from what is mobilised through public budgets, development finance and private capital.<\/span><\/p>\n

Beyond these pressures, the Mediterranean itself constitutes a unique climate laboratory, in particular through the work carried out by IME (Mediterranean Water Institute) for over 40 years. From arid and semi-arid zones to wetlands, deltas, volcanic islands and high mountain catchments, the region concentrates an exceptional diversity of hydrological, ecological and climatic conditions. This diversity magnifies water risks, increases the complexity of management, and makes the Mediterranean a testing ground for adaptation strategies that will be relevant far beyond the region.<\/span><\/p>\n

This investment gap reflects more than a lack of funding. It stems from fragmented governance, weak or unclear regulation, limited cost recovery including OyM and permanent capacity building, political sensitivity around water pricing, and the difficulty of attracting private investors to a sector marked by long payback periods and high risk. At the same time, there is a growing recognition that water resources are not infinite and that they must be properly valued and integrated into economic and financial models. Ignoring scarcity, environmental degradation and climate risks increasingly undermines the long-term viability of infrastructure, agriculture, industry, tourism and urban development across the basin.<\/span><\/p>\n

The social and economic returns to water investment are, however, substantial. Access to safe water and sanitation improves public health, reduces disease and healthcare costs, and frees up time, particularly for women and girls, enabling greater participation in education and the workforce. Evidence from regions, such as Africa, shows that every dollar invested in water supply and sanitation can generate up to seven dollars in economic and social benefits, underlining the strong value for money of such investments cf. World Bank report 2025.<\/span><\/p>\n

Needs also differ sharply across the Mediterranean. Northern countries must modernise aging systems and adapt to climate change, while Southern and Eastern countries face urgent challenges in expanding access to water and sanitation, developing desalination and water reuse, and improving irrigation efficiency. Transboundary basins further increase the need for coordinated approaches. These challenges call for a shift toward a \u201cOne-Water\u201d or whole-cycle approach that integrates water supply, wastewater, stormwater, reuse and ecosystem services into a single, coherent management and investment framework.<\/span><\/p>\n

While international institutions have repeatedly highlighted the scale of water investment needs, practical strategies to mobilise finance and overcome institutional barriers remain limited in the Mediterranean context. There is also a risk that funding continues to favour large-scale infrastructure at the expense of demand management, nature-based solutions and ecosystem restoration.<\/span><\/p>\n

This Call for Papers therefore seeks rigorous, policy-relevant analysis that goes beyond estimating financing needs. We invite contributions that examine the drivers of investment gaps, assess financing and governance models, and propose actionable pathways to scale up sustainable, climate-resilient and inclusive water investment across the Mediterranean.<\/span><\/p>\n

THEME OF THE CALL FOR PAPERS<\/b><\/h3>\n

This Call seeks to explore the water investment gap in the Mediterranean region, examining both the quantitative dimensions of unmet financing needs and the qualitative barriers\u2014institutional, regulatory, financial, political, and social\u2014that prevent adequate investment in water security. Submissions should present evidence-based analysis, innovative approaches, and pragmatic policy recommendations tailored to the Mediterranean context. Papers with different focuses are welcome, including:<\/span><\/p>\n