The Institute operates entirely on extra budgetary funds and as such represents a new and unique model within UNESCO that implicitly requires an innovative and entrepreneurial approach to ensuring its funding. The Institute is the largest water education facility in the world and the only institution in the UN system authorized to confer accredited MSc degrees.
UNESCO-IHE is instrumental to the strengthening of efforts by other universities and research centres in increasing knowledge and skills of professionals working in the water sector. The Member States of UNESCO will have access to the knowledge and services of UNESCO-IHE in human and institutional capacity-building, which is vital to their efforts in the achievement of [[Millennium Development Goals]], the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation ([[Agenda 21]]) and other global water objectives.
'''UNESCO-IHE's functions are defined as follows:'''
The third pillar is the World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP), a joint initiative of 24 bodies of the United Nations system. The UN WWAP, hosted by UNESCO, issued the World Water Development Report in 2003, the first global assessment of the world's water resources. A second report was issued in 2006, as part of a tri-annual programme.
==External links=Links===
*[http://www.unesco-ihe.org UNESCO-IHE website]
*[http://www.unesco.org/water UNESCO Water Portal]
=== Acknowledgements ===
This material is derived from the [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=UNESCO-IHE | UNESCO-IHE] article in [http://www.wikipedia.org/ Wikipedia]