The company Monterrey Water and Sewerage will participate in the UN Conference on Water 2023, which will take place from March 22 to 24 in New York.
According to information from SAyDM, José Mario Esparza Hernández, deputy director of Monterrey Water and Drainage Services, who has managed a series of meetings with different sector leaders in other participating countries, He will give a conference on water pollution and social inclusion in Mexico, topics in which he has a great reference, having led efforts from the general sub-directorate of AyD and Sanitation in the With waterand in the management of the Rio Bravo Basin Council.
At the 2023 UN Water Conference, the Governor is also expected to attend Samuel Alejandro Garcia SepulvedaHowever, his presence has been confirmed only for the closing of the event.
The state-owned company said that the members of the technical team will hold prior management meetings on different topics of interest, such as:
- The use and recognition of new technologies for the efficiency of water and sanitation.
- The strategic management of treated wastewater; Mechanisms for optimizing water resources.
- Environmental conditions of supply sources
- The impact of climate change on future water management, among other topics.
“José Mario Esparza, has managed a series of meetings with different leaders of the sector in other participating countries to address the issues with the greatest impact in the state of New Lionin addition to being invited to give a presentation within the framework of one of the strategic objectives of the event and that has to do with water pollution and social inclusion in Mexico”, indicated AyD.
It should be noted that the AyD deputy management is responsible for managing joint actions from a strategic perspective and with a purely technical vision; Therefore, the different areas that report to it are the Operations, Engineering, Sanitation and Technology departments.
It was also highlighted that since 2015 in this forum (Conference of the UN on Water 2023) a global commitment was made to comply with the so-called “Sustainable Development Goal (SDG6)” as part of the 2030 agenda, with the promise that by that year all the inhabitants of the planet would have safely managed water and sanitation by 2030; condition that today looks really complicated.
In fact, it is expected that with current data, governments would have to work four times faster to achieve that goal.
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