VEHA

VEHA

Guidance

Virtual Environmental and Humanitarian Adviser Tool – (VEHA Tool) is a tool
to easily integrate environmental considerations in humanitarian response. Field Implementation guidances are useful for the design and execution of humanitarian activities in the field.

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VEHA - Field Implementation Guidance

Welcome
Water supply, Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion (WASH)
Enabling activities - WASH
General WASH Assessment
Conducting surveys or research

WASH – Conducting surveys or research

Context

Overview
Environmental factors causing/contributing to the needs and affecting the humanitarian activity

Humanitarian operations have a high risk of negatively impacting the environment, the effects of which may be far-reaching and long-lasting. These can affect the physical environment and the health, well-being, and livelihoods of affected and host communities, and the health and viability of flora and fauna. They can increase the risk for secondary or future disasters. For this reason, WASH assistance should minimize as much as possible its negative impacts on the natural environment.

When conducting a WASH needs assessment survey, attention should be given to the most appropriate methods of information gathering based on the specifications of the response. Environmental impact assessments and mitigation strategies should accompany all WASH site planning activities throughout the program cycle. Assessments should always consist of some combination of community consultation, key informant interviews, and direct observation.

Implications
Gender, age, disability and HIV/AIDS implications

All assessments should be gender-sensitive taking particular account of the needs of women and girls, and beneficiaries with disabilities, cultural stigma, and marginalization. It is essential to understand the context and local economy to ensure whether an intervention will help to meet people’s needs or whether it will create additional vulnerabilities. In both rapid onset and protracted crises, the situation and markets will change, and so should be continually monitored and programmes adapted accordingly.

During the assessment phase, the following may be considered as tools and mechanisms to ensure protection against GBV and other minorities:
· Represent gender diversity, including age and disability.
· Train staff, partners, and service providers in Psychological First Aid (PFA) and Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse (PSEA)

Impacts

Environmental impact categories

Air pollution
Soil pollution
Water pollution
Deforestation
Desertification
Eutrophication
Climate Change
Loss of biodiversity and ecosystems
Natural Resource depletion
Soil erosion
Noise pollution
Visual Intrusion
Cultural acceptance
Impact on mental health

Summary of Impacts
Summary of potential environmental impacts

To understand the dynamics of a crisis and the potential environmental impacts, fragilities, and hazards related to WASH, it is essential to gather information to inform the sector assessment and the programmatic response. Inappropriately informed, designed, or implemented surveys and background research related to WASH programming can lead to, among other things: substantial waste and pollution; Creation of disease vectors; local or displaced unsustainable depletion of natural resources; land and soil degradation, loss of biodiversity and harm to fragile ecosystems.

Harm to the local environment from activities employed in data gathering.

Impact detail
Detailed potential environmental impact information

Accurate, reliable, and up-to-date information is the foundation on which a coordinated and effective humanitarian response, in accordance with international technical standards, including on the environment. To understand the dynamics of a crisis and the potential environmental impacts, fragilities, and hazards related to WASH, it is essential to gather a broad set of relevant information that will inform the sector-specific assessment and the programmatic response. Inappropriately informed, designed, or implemented surveys and background research related to WASH can lead to, among other things:

Substantial waste and pollution from lack of research/surveys regarding construction material source; source site environmental fragilities; material quantities; material quality; resource sustainability; cultural preferences; suitability of materials to local climates and ground conditions are not explored.

Risk of creation of disease vectors if the research fails to understand how construction materials may be stored and transported; how waste materials are stockpiled; local methods of site clearance and potential for stripping vegetation; drainage routes blocked; over compacting ground and reducing infiltration rates and groundwater recharge; destroying migration routes. Risk of unsustainable depletion of local or remote natural resources without proper research. This includes potential deforestation, loss of water resources; clay; peat; plants, and animals. Potential land and soil degradation, loss of biodiversity, and harm to fragile ecosystems if topography; soil quality; hydrology; biodiversity, and ecosystems are not researched.

Harm to the local environment from humans, vehicles, and material resources employed in the data and information gathering phase.

Guidance

Summary
Summary of environmental activities

1. Research available construction materials; potential sources; site fragilities; required quantities and quality/performance; sustainability; cultural preferences; suitability of materials to local climates and ground conditions

2. Research local approaches to construction materials storage and transport; waste materials management and disposal; local methods of site clearance; drainage routes; risks of over compacting ground or destroying migration routes

3. Research the risk of unsustainable depletion of local or remote natural resources

4. Research potential land and soil degradation, loss of biodiversity, and harm to fragile ecosystems

5. Research potential harm your research activities could cause to the environment

Detail
Detailed guidance for implementing suggested environmental activities

It is important to gather accurate, reliable, and up-to-date information on the environment as it affects all aspects of WASH assistance:

1. Research and surveys can help you explore available construction materials; where they can be sourced from and any fragilities associated with those sources; research will help you assess required material quantities and quality/performance; research helps you assess resource sustainability; cultural preferences; suitability of materials to local climates and ground conditions. This information will help you design a stronger more sustainable WASH response. Research should include details of the affected population, what risks and threats they encounter, and local uses for land and environmental coping mechanisms in times of stress or crisis

2. Research can help you understand how construction materials may be stored and transported; how waste materials are stockpiled; local methods of site clearance and potential for stripping vegetation; whether drainage routes may be blocked and the impacts of doing so; the likelihood and impact of over compacting ground and reducing infiltration rates and groundwater recharge; the likelihood and impact of destroying migration routes. This information can help you plan sustainably and reduce the likelihood of pollution and creating disease vectors

3. Research can be designed to assess the risk of and prevent or mitigate unsustainable depletion of local or remote natural resources including forests, water resources; clay; peat; plants, and animals. The principle of ‘prevention before cure’ should be applied to every environmental situation in a camp or settlement

Substantial waste and pollution from lack of research/surveys regarding construction material source; source site environmental fragilities; material quantities; material quality; resource sustainability; cultural preferences; suitability of materials to local climates and ground conditions are not explored. Risk of creation of disease vectors if the research fails to understand how construction materials may be stored and transported; how waste materials are stockpiled; local methods of site clearance and potential for stripping vegetation; drainage routes blocked; over compacting ground and reducing infiltration rates and groundwater recharge; destroying migration routes. Risk of unsustainable depletion of local or remote natural resources without proper research. This includes potential deforestation, loss of water resources; clay; peat; plants, and animals. Potential land and soil degradation, loss of biodiversity, and harm to fragile ecosystems if topography; soil quality; hydrology; biodiversity, and ecosystems are not researched.

Harm to the local environment from humans, vehicles, and material resources employed in the data and information gathering phase.

4. Research can identify potential for land and soil degradation, loss of biodiversity and harm to fragile ecosystems if topography; soil quality; hydrology; biodiversity, and ecosystems are not well understood and planned to be protected

5. Research can help you understand the potential harm your research activities could cause to the environment from the activities of your researchers, their vehicles, and material resources employed in the data and information gathering.

Guidance on using MIRA with a Strategic Environmental Assessment to inform your research:
MIRA is intended to facilitate a common understanding of overall humanitarian needs and provide decision-makers with adequate, accurate, and reliable information. Integrating SEA considerations into an existing MIRA Framework will likely happen across all the stages of the research.

The Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) for example, provides a framework for evaluating the environmental implications of a proposed policy, plan, or programmer and provides means for looking at cumulative effects and enables the managing agency to address these effects at the earliest stage of the decision-making process, alongside economic and social considerations.

The research could be as such:

Step 1) Secondary data review, the revision of publications, and existing reports on WASH infrastructure and environmental assessments should enable you to define the environmental baseline for your project (3.1 SEA).
Simultaneously, it should enable you to identify the environmental and climate change-related constraints and opportunities which your activities will undoubtedly cause (SEA 3.2). Based on the information you already have, an analysis of your organization’s capacities (3.4 SEA) should allow for the identification of gaps in knowledge and shortcomings, which can inform Step 2 of MIRA, Primary Data Collection.

Step 2) Primary data review – Upon completing the review of secondary data and identifying key gaps to focus the primary data collection, you can establish quantitative and qualitative indicators for your performance. These indicators should also inform the types of questions, surveys, or interviews you conduct in the primary data collection phase. Choosing the most appropriate method of information gathering, whether in-person surveys, virtual surveys, household or community level, Focused Group Discussions (FGDs) will depend on the specifics of your current shelter and settlement response plan.

For the Primary Data Collection phase, the level of detail and questions asked during primary data collection will largely depend on information gaps identified during the secondary data review.

Steps 3) and 4): Data collection can be carried out using the following methodologies
a) Community Observation;
b) Community Key Informants;
c) Focus Group Discussions;
d) Household Key Informant,
e) Infrastructure/Facilities Visits.
By incorporating questions or concerns raised during the Secondary Data Review (MIRA Step 1 and SEA Stage 3), the information collected will influence the development of a shelter and settlement strategy which will structure and phase a sectoral response (Shelter, WASH, Protection, Nutrition, etc) to address the needs of the affected population, in light of the constraints and restrictions of resources and personnel.

Step 5) Analysis. Some suggested actions include:
·  Involve the host government from an early stage;
·  Involve the corresponding ministries of migration, water, housing, and environment as sources of information, mobilization capacity, and promotion of the program and implementing partner;
· liaise with and consider local partnerships with national or local environmental partnerships;
· include environment and climate change specific questions in your surveys, interviews, and direct observation activities;
· Coordinate with donors and sell the SEA as a beneficial step to better manage the programme’s resources and their contribution;
· Ensure that gaps identified through the Secondary Data review address the concerns of the government delegations as part of your response;
· Establish a priority scale for environmental impacts and effects, do not try to cover and solve everything;
· Establish a time-scale for the information gathering and upon direct observation and interviews, address medium and long-term problems and concerns;
· Include environmental aspects in the training of shelter managers, and establish a checklist to look at the impacts during the operation and maintenance.

Lessons Learnt
Lessons from past experiences

Resource mobilization and fundraising does not have to be restricted to the financial assets determined in your RM strategy. The case study below shows an example of how in-kind contributions after the Indian Ocean earthquake of 26 December 2004 fulfilled the goal of Build Back Better.

“The earthquake reached a 9.3 on the Richter scale and the ensuing Tsunami affected about a dozen nations and resulted in hundreds of thousands of casualties, jeopardized livelihoods of the survivors, and destroyed their source of income, fishing. After an intensive process of identifying recipients and with international donations, FAO delivered a variety of fishing equipment to help restructure damaged fishing vessels and enable fishermen to go back out to sea, return to their craft and ensure food security in many communities. By providing in-kind contributions, FAO was able to enable the local population to conduct their own recovery activities and even reach productivity levels superior to those prior to the tsunami.”

Refer to –
http://www.fao.org/3/i2699e/i2699e00.pdf
https://eecentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/factsheet_IKI_Nov2019.pdf

Major findings of the research are:
SEA allows finding completely new solutions
SEA allows avoiding errors
SEA allows avoiding conflicts

https://unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/env/eia/documents/SEA_CBNA/Georgia_manual_en.pdf

Activity Measurement
Environmental indicators/monitoring examples

# of environmental impact assessments conducted addressing WASH issues

# of community engagement meetings for environmental assessments

Priority
Activity status
High
Main Focus
Focus of suggested activities

Prevention of environmental damage

Mitigation of environmental damage

Environmental enhancement

Implications
Resource implications (physical assets, time, effort)

Specific focus groups during assessment for women, men, and children

Involve national and local environmental actors in needs assessment planning and analysis. Ask for their help in identifying parameters to assess for each context;

Include environmental actors and community organisations with environment-related interests in key informant interviews and organisations involved in natural resource management in community consultations and focus group discussions;

Seek advice from global sector environment communities of practice, where these exist.

Ensure training of local data collectors (on data collection and feedback)

Recruit local researchers team

Next guidance:

WASH – Coordination
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