Following on from the Kigali Wetlands Forum held in Kigali in July 2013, a subsequent meeting focussing on the valuation of wetlands was held in Kampala between 25 and 27th November. The meeting was organised by UNESCO-IHE in collaboration with the local host, the Ramsar Centre for East Africa (RAMCEA), and UNEP-TEEB Office, the International Union for Nature Conservation (IUCN) Netherlands Committee and the Institute for European Environmental Policy (IEEP). The workshop was built around the Ramsar and UNEP TEEB for water and wetlands report (Russi et al., 2013). Globally wetlands are declining, facing pressures of conversion for agriculture, encroachment from informal settlements, poor landscape planning and piecemeal degradation, the services wetlands provide are being overlooked. The TEEB for water and wetlands report has highlighted not only the value of wetlands, but how to assess their value. It is a milestone for wise planning for wetland management.
The Kampala workshop brought about 50 participants from 15 African countries. Geographical spread focused on East Africa, but also included key partners from Southern and Western Africa. Potential participants were nominated by UNESCO-IHE, RAMSAR, RAMCEA, UNEP, NBCBN and Cap-Net. Participation was based on a selection process that focussed on the potential for further dissemination of material and concepts of wetland valuation and wise use. Two places were reserved for “future wetlands managers” and awarded to deserving students from Makerere University

IWMI mourns the passing of David Seckler (1935–2026). David served as Director General of IWMI from 1995 to 2000.
From local rivers to transboundary basins, IWMI's 25-year journey reflects the power of science and cooperation in addressing Central Asia's water challenges.
As climate change threatens the world’s robusta coffee supply, nature-based solutions help smallholder farmers in Viet Nam build resilience — and keep your coffee cup full!
Nature-based water management solutions in humanitarian settlements create co-benefits for public health, camp economies, collective well-being and biodiversity.
A partnership with Strathmore Energy Research Centre will develop solar-in-agriculture training curricula for farmers, agri-businesses and policymakers in Kenya and Ethiopia.