News: 0180628264

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Era of 'Global Water Bankruptcy' Is Here, UN Report Says (theguardian.com)

(Tuesday January 20, 2026 @10:30PM (BeauHD) from the uncomfortable-truths dept.)


An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:

> The world has [1]entered an era of "global water bankruptcy " that is harming billions of people, a UN report has declared. The overuse and pollution of water must be tackled urgently, the report's lead author said, because no one knew when the whole system could collapse, with implications for peace and social cohesion. All life depends on water but the report found many societies had long been using water faster than it could be replenished annually in rivers and soils, as well as over-exploiting or destroying long-term stores of water in aquifers and wetlands. This had led to water bankruptcy, the report said, with many human water systems past the point at which they could be restored to former levels. The climate crisis was exacerbating the problem by melting glaciers, which store water, and causing whiplashes between extremely dry and wet weather.

>

> Prof Kaveh Madani, who led the report, said while not every basin and country was water bankrupt, the world was interconnected by trade and migration, and enough critical systems had crossed this threshold to fundamentally alter global water risk. The result was a world in which 75% of people lived in countries classified as water-insecure or critically water-insecure and 2 billion people lived on ground that is sinking as groundwater aquifers collapse. Conflicts over water had risen sharply since 2010, the report said, while major rivers, such as the Colorado, in the US, and the Murray-Darling system, in Australia, were failing to reach the sea, and "day zero" emergencies -- when cities run out of water, such as in Chennai, India -- were escalating. Half of the world's large lakes had shrunk since the early 1990s, the report noted. Even damp nations, such as the UK, were at risk because of reliance on imports of water-dependent food and other products. "This report tells an uncomfortable truth: many critical water systems are already bankrupt," said Madani, of the UN University's Institute for Water, Environment and Health. "It's extremely urgent [because] no one knows exactly when the whole system would collapse."

>

> About 70% of fresh water taken by human withdrawals was used for agriculture, but Madani said: "Millions of farmers are trying to grow more food from shrinking, polluted or disappearing water sources. Water bankruptcy in India or Pakistan, for example, also means an impact on rice exports to a lot of places around the world." More than half of global food was grown in areas where water storage was declining or unstable, the report said. Madani said action to deal with water bankruptcy offered a chance to bring countries together in an increasingly fragmented world. "Water is a strategic, untapped opportunity to the world to create unity within and between nations. It is one of the very rare topics that left and right and north and south all agree on its importance." The [2]UN report , which is based on a forthcoming paper in the peer-reviewed journal Water Resources Management, sets out how population growth, urbanization and economic growth have increased water demand for agriculture, industry, energy and cities. "These pressures have produced a global pattern that is now unmistakable," it said.



[1] https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jan/20/era-of-global-water-bankruptcy-is-here-un-report-says

[2] https://unu.edu/inweh/collection/global-water-bankruptcy



This is the story of Man. (Score:3)

by fredrated ( 639554 )

Nothing will be done until we are dying of thirst.

Well, as it was predicted in 1974... (Score:3)

by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 )

If you want to know what will happen in the next 10 years, it is still a good read.

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Limits_to_Growth#Conclusions

They're so selfish (Score:1)

by liqu1d ( 4349325 )

Won't someone think of the AI!

Put a price on water - tragedy of the commons (Score:4, Insightful)

by FeelGood314 ( 2516288 )

This is a tragedy of the commons. In California most of the fresh water is used by farmers to grow food for pennies on the cubic meter. So California passed laws saying the farmers had to use their water or lose it. So farmers use it. If we instead allowed the farmers to sell the water then the most efficient users of water would buy it. I can flush my toilet, have a lot of showers and even water my plants for the water needed to grow a bag of almonds. The idea that the water is too valuable to have a price means that water has almost no value and is wasted.

Yes we gave away the rights to more water than there typically is in the various rivers but we as a society made a deal with the people who we gave those rights to. We can't say, oh, we all made a mistake, we want to take your water rights away. Ground water is even worse in many places. If you don't take as much water out as possible your neighbors will take it out anyway.

We have this bizarre idea that people will on their own decide how much of a common good they can take and cumulatively people won't take more than is sustainable. How many fish stocks have been depleted when we knew they would be gone? How much CO2 have we put into the atmosphere while arguing it's the Chinese, the Americans, the rich, the 100 biggest oil companies, etc that should be cutting back? It's not my greed it's everyone else's.

Re: (Score:2)

by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

The farmers absolutely are selling the water, a truckload at a time to weed farmers.

We shouldn't allow them to sell it, but we also shouldn't force them to use it. We could just do neither thing!

A wise man once said (Score:1, Troll)

by diffract ( 7165501 )

I don't care what the UN says. The UN doesn't know what they're talking about.

Global Warming makes more rain (Score:2)

by evanh ( 627108 )

But it's delivered as storms and floods, so making the situation even worse.

Romance, like alcohol, should be enjoyed, but should not be allowed to
become necessary.
-- Edgar Friedenberg