Submitted:
18 September 2025
Posted:
22 September 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Case Studies
2.2. Institutional Framework for the Analysis of Water Funds
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Actors and Positions
3.2. Attributes of Community
3.3. Rules-in-Use
3.4. Outcomes
4. Discussion
4.1. Stakeholder Trust Sourcing from Rules-in-Use and Actors
4.2. Institutional Strength Influencing Water Funds’ Continuity
4.3. Collaboration with Environmental Authorities as a Prerequisite for Viable Water Funds
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| ACUACAR | Cartagena’s Water Utility |
| CAR | Regional Autonomous Corporation of Cundinamarca |
| CARDIQUE | Regional Autonomous Corporation of the Dique Canal |
| CORNARE | Regional Autonomous Corporation of the Negro and Nare River Basins |
| CORPAMAG | Magdalena Regional Autonomous Corporation |
| CVC | Regional Autonomous Corporation of Valle del Cauca |
| EAAB | Bogotá Aqueduct and Sewerage Company |
| EPM | Medellín’s public service company |
| FAVS | Water Fund for Life and Sustainability Foundation |
| FCD | Canal del Dique Foundation |
| IAD | Institutional Analysis and Development Framework |
| IDB | Inter-American Development |
| LAWFP | Latin American Water Funds Partnership |
| NbS | Nature-based solutions |
| NGO | Non-governmental organization |
| PES | Payment for Ecosystem Services |
| PWS | Payment for Watershed Services |
| TNC | The Nature Conservancy |
| WUA | Water Users Association |
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| Water Fund | City | Department | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agua Somos | Bogotá | Cundinamarca | 2009 |
| Fundación Fondo Agua por la Vida y la Sostenibilidad (FAVS) | Cali | Valle del Cauca | 2009 |
| Cuenca Verde | Medellín | Antioquia | 2013 |
| Cartagena water fund | Cartagena | Bolívar | 2016 |
| Santa Marta and Ciénaga water fund | Santa Marta | Magdalena | 2018 |
| Dimension of the analytical framework | Guiding questions | Analytical variables |
|---|---|---|
| Actors and positions | Who are the internal and external actors that interact with the Water Fund? | Key actors |
| What are the motivations that determine the behavior of the actors? | Actors’ interests, expectations, and values | |
| What synergies and conflicts exist between relevant actors? Coalitions? | Synergies and conflicts | |
| How much had these actors interacted before the creation of the Water Fund? | Prior organizational experiences | |
| What are the deliberation mechanisms within the water fund? | Deliberation processes | |
| Attributes of Community | How has the water fund included other institutions in its design and implementation? | levels of interaction (vertical, horizontal) |
| What are the effects of these interactions? Influence on fund design and performance | symmetry of institutional interactions | |
| Rules-in-Use | What are the financing mechanisms of the Water Fund? | Development phase |
| When a contract is breached, or disputes arise, what are the resolution mechanisms? | Conflict resolution mechanisms | |
| What is the scale of implementation of the Water Fund? | Institution’s implementation scale | |
| What is the planned duration of the water fund? | Water Fund’s temporal scale | |
| What is your opinion on the ease of application of the rules? | Ease on the rule’s enforcement | |
| Outcomes | Is the Fund currently operating? | Activity of the Fund |
| How has the Water Fund dealt with changing conditions? e.g., actors, agreements, external conditions | Internal flexibility (i.e., capacity to adjust to external changes in environmental, economic, technological, or social conditions) | |
| What and how are the environmental impacts of the Fund measured and monitored? | Perceived impact of the mechanism | |
| What are the information and communication channels available about the instrument? | Participation |
| Water Fund | Interviewee’s position/role | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Board member | Coordinator | Director | Environmental authority | Landowners’ representative | Water Fund developer | TOTAL | |
| Agua Somos | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |||
| Cartagena water fund | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| Cuenca Verde | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |||
| FAVS | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |||
| Santa Marta and Ciénaga water fund | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| TOTAL | 1 | 2 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 15 |
| % over TOTAL | 7% | 13% | 33% | 7% | 7% | 33% | 100% |
| Type of actor | Agua Somos | FAVS | Cuenca Verde | Cartagena water fund | Santa Marta and Ciénaga water fund |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private organizations | TNC and Bavaria (beer company) provided seed capital and funding for specific projects | Main funding comes from the Colombian Sugarcane Growers Association (Asocaña) Contributions from other private companies (e.g., Fundación Celsia) |
Private organizations such as Nutresa and Postobón provide funding for specific projects related to corporate social responsibility | Private actors such as TNC and Argos Foundation provided seed capital and funding for specific pilot projects | Private actors such as TNC and Santo Domingo Foundation provided seed capital and funding for specific pilot projects |
| Public sector (i.e., water utilities) | Bogota Aqueduct and Sewerage Company (EAAB) provided seed capital at the Fund’s launch but has not been much involved since then | Not currently engaged with public utilities or municipalities | Medellín’s public service company (EPM) is the main funder and partner of the Water Fund | The local water utility (ACUACAR) became founding partner but did not provide the expected funding | Mayors of Santa Marta and Ciénaga and the Regional government of Magdalena became founding partners but did not provide the expected funding |
| Environmental authorities | The Fund approached the Regional Sustainable Development Corporation (CAR) and the National Parks Authority with limited success | The Valle del Cauca Regional Autonomous Corporation (CVC) is one of the Fund’s main partners | Involvement of the environmental authority (CORNARE) | The environmental authority (CARDIQUE) became founding partner but did not provide the expected funding | The environmental authority (CORPAMAG) became founding partner but did not provide the expected funding |
| Landowners | Interactions with landowners as beneficiaries of the Fund but not as decision makers | Landowners represented within the Board of Directors by Water Users Associations | Interactions with landowners as beneficiaries of the Fund but not as decision makers | Interactions with landowners as beneficiaries of the Fund but not as decision makers | Interactions with landowners as beneficiaries of the Fund but not as decision makers |
| Institutional design | Agua Somos | FAVS | Cuenca Verde | Cartagena water fund | Santa Marta and Ciénaga water fund |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Institutional arrangement | Operated by an existing organization and board member: Fundación Fondo Patrimonio Natural | Operated by a Foundation created for the Water Fund’s scope | Operated by a Nonprofit Corporation created for the Water Fund’s scope | Operated by an existing organization and board member: Canal del Dique Foundation (FCD) | Operated by an existing organization and board member: Prosierra Foundation |
| Development stage | Design/Pilot | Active | Active | Design/Pilot | Design/Pilot |
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