By Farhad Mukhtarov and Des Gasper


Since the end of WWII, the global freshwater governance regime has focused on institution-building through multilateral organisations within the United Nations and Bretton-Woods systems (see e.g., Conca, 2006). It produced a patchy and fragmented governance landscape with imperfect international law, misaligned national-level regulation practices, and a broad range of initiatives that contributed only modestly to resolving water justice challenges (Molle and Blanchard, 2022; Varady et al., 2022). Nevertheless, this patchy governance ecosystem has been accepted as legitimate within the multilateral world order. This world order is now challenged by powerful newcomers, who have entered the global stage and claim legitimacy by high-volume knowledge production and networking. Below, we identify three such newcomers, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Global Water Intelligence (GWI) and the Government of the Netherlands and suggest that more research and policy attention is needed to examine their work and claims to legitimacy.

In our recent Water Alternatives article, we looked at the OECD, which has positioned itself since 2009 as a central node and authority in water governance (Mukhtarov et al., 2026). Based on computer-assisted quantitative and qualitative analysis of 55 large OECD reports (2009-2022) amounting to more than 8,000 pages, we identified major topics, actors and their relationships. In this Dissensus piece, we present unpublished data from network analysis to support our arguments; for more details we direct readers to our published paper and the project dataset (Mukhtarov, 2022).

First, a simple count of named organisations in the whole corpus showed that the mainstream actors still dominate in the texts. The OECD is the most prominent one, followed by the World Bank (WB), the European Commission (EC), the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), and the World Health Organisation (WHO). Secondly, we clustered the 100 most frequently named organisations in the corpus based on their embeddedness in the text (Figure 1). In a nutshell, the computer model keeps track of hundreds of collocates of particular terms (i.e., habitually juxtaposed words, in our case, key organisations), and when those collocates are similar, the organisations are placed close to each other in a 2-dimensional graph. Axes X and Y do not have a meaning; it is the distance between the nodes that matters.

A clear divide emerges between International Organisations (IOs) and regional players (e.g., the European Commission, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, United Nations, The Association of Southeast Asian Nations) in the top-left corner and national level players (e.g., Korean, Japanese) in the bottom-right corner. It means that these actors are embedded in texts with different vocabulary (i.e., topics, word choices, locations). As an illustration, IOs are likely to appear in the vicinity of words such as "finance", "governance", and "efficiency", whereas national level water utilities may be associated with words such as "leakage" and "non-revenue water". Such findings do not make conclusive claims but point to interesting associations to investigate further.

Thirdly, and most revealingly, we investigated who are the top-5 organisations mentioned for each of the eight topic clusters that we identified in our published article (these are in sequence of importance: good water governance; financing water; water supply and sanitation; agriculture; water quality; disaster risk management; climate change; and The Netherlands). We found that the OECD and Global Water Intellingence (GWI) appear in 6 out of 8 major topics. This suggests the broad roles of the OECD and GWI in the subject matters of the documents. In addition, The Netherlands is the only country that formed a topic of its own, one of eight, in our topic modelling exercise (see Mukhtarov et al., 2026), which suggests its importance in the corpus.

To validate these findings, we further looked at the sub-corpuses of, respectively, 19 and 14 OECD reports that are representative of the two most prominent topics in the corpus ("good water governance" and "financing"). The results corroborate the importance of Global Water Intelligence and The Netherlands as actors that are both frequently mentioned and with the mentions spread across various documents. GWI surveys, reports and newsletters are regularly referred to in the graphs and calculations of the OECD. In one instance, the OECD acknowledges that its survey was designed to be compatable with the GWI data (OECD, 2009: 94). GWI has been carrying surveys on water utilities' performance since 2003; it is not surprising that the OECD relies heavily on their databases. Nine of GWI reports are cited in the OECD (2010) flagship report on innovative financing models for water, an organisation that is second only to the World Bank as a source of evidence (Mukhtarov et al., 2026).

Our network analysis of organisations in the OECD corpus thus points to three organisations that are important in the corpus: the Government of The Netherlands, GWI and, more expectedly, the OECD itself. We have discussed the OECD (Mukhtarov et al., 2026) and The Netherlands (e.g., Mukhtarov et al., 2021) as aspiring global forces in earlier papers. We would like now to focus on the other organisation, Global Water Intelligence, an Oxford-based consulting and research firm that has escaped any attention in research on water governance. Such lack of attention is true for the private sector consultancy world as a whole; we know too little about how they work and the source of their legitimacy, despite the sizeable role they play in both policy implementation and policy knowledge production (e.g., Burchard-Levine et al., 2024). This is a serious gap.

On its website, GWI introduces itself as "the leading publisher and events organiser serving the international water industry. Over the last 20 years we have built our business around being a trusted interface between our clients and their markets, providing our customers with high-level intelligence that enables them to make the most informed strategic decisions for their business" (GWI, 2026). Its owner and publisher is active in global water networks, but the organisation has escaped any scrutiny or analysis despite its influence on how public and private funding flow in the water world.

A trend is clear and raises concerns: actors such as the OECD, the GWI and The Netherlands Government are not mandated to set the global water agenda. The OECD's legitimacy is based on its hugely prolific knowledge production practices; we found those practices to be self-referential and flawed (Mukhtarov et al., 2026). GWI provides business analytics for private investors and bankers, as well as to international organisations, but their reports are hidden behind the paywalls and no single academic study sheds light on how they operate. And The Netherlands Government is preoccupied with promoting its own interests and those of Dutch private sector companies, in the first place, before solving global water challenges.

To make their self-assigned leadership even more notable, The Netherlands Government and the OECD teamed-up in 2022 to convene what is now an increasingly an influential elitist actor -- the Global Commission on the Economics of Water (GCEW) that, in its own words, aspires to create "a sea change in how we value, manage and use water" (GCEW, 2023: 4). The messages it spreads and its legitimacy have been questioned by many commentators (Heller et al., 2023; Puy and Lankford, 2024; Linton and Saade, 2024).

How has the growing influence of these elite actors in global water agenda setting been formed? What are their legitimising strategies? What are the safeguards that global public interests won't be downplayed in pursuit of specific vested interests? How do we ensure accountability in the complex but essential processes of knoweldge production? These questions remain without answers, but are rather urgent, for example in the context of the upcoming 2026 UN Conference on Water in the United Arab Emirates.


References

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Global Water Intelligence (GWI). (2026). About GWI. Online: About GWI | GWI (accessed on 6 March, 2026).

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