A herd of sheep walk over cracked earth at al-Massira dam in Ouled Essi Masseoud village, some 140 kilometers (85 miles) south from Morocco’s economic capital Casablanca, amidst the country’s worst drought in at least four decades, August 8, 2022, A herd of sheep walk over cracked earth at al-Massira dam in Ouled Essi Masseoud village, some 140 kilometers (85 miles) south from Morocco’s economic capital Casablanca, amidst the country’s worst drought in at least four decades, August 8, 2022, Humanity’s “lifeblood” — water — is increasingly at risk around the world due to “vampiric overconsumption and overdevelopment,” the UN warned in a report, published hours ahead of a major summit on the issue was set to begin Wednesday. The world is “blindly traveling a dangerous path” as “unsustainable water use, pollution and unchecked global warming are draining humanity’s lifeblood,” United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres said in a foreword to the report, released hours ahead of the first major UN meeting on water resources in nearly half a century. Co-hosted by the governments of Tajikistan and the Netherlands, the UN Water Conference will gather some 6,500 participants, including a hundred ministers and a dozen heads of state and government Wednesday through Friday in New York.
At the UN conference, governments and actors in the public and private sectors are invited to present proposals for a so-called water action agenda to reverse that trend and help meet the development goal, set in 2015, of ensuring “access to water and sanitation for all by 2030.” The last conference at this high level on the issue, which lacks a global treaty or a dedicated UN agency, was held in 1977 in Mar del Plata, Argentina.
Some observers have already voiced concerns about the scope of these commitments and the availability of funding to implement them. “There is much to do and time is not on our side,” said Gilbert Houngbo, chair of UN-Water, a forum for coordinating work on the topic. The report, published by UN-Water and UNESCO, warns that “scarcity is becoming endemic” due to overconsumption and pollution, while global warming will increase seasonal water shortages in both areas with abundant water as well as those already strained. “About 10% of the world’s population lives in a country where water stress has reached a high or critical level,” the report says. According to the most recent UN climate report, published Monday by the IPCC expert panel, “roughly half of the world’s population currently experience severe water scarcity for at least part of the year.” Those shortages have the most significant impact on the poor.The report notes the particular impact of existing water supplies becoming contaminated due to underperforming or nonexistent sanitation systems. “At least 2 billion people (globally) use a drinking water source contaminated with feces, putting them at risk of contracting cholera, dysentery, typhoid and polio,” it said. That high number does not even take into account pollution from pharmaceuticals, chemicals, pesticides, microplastics and nanomaterials. To ensure access to safe drinking water for all by 2030, current levels of investment would have to be tripled, the report says. Freshwater ecosystems — which in addition to water, provide life-sustaining economic resources and help combat global warming — “are among the most threatened in the world,” the report warns. “We have to act now because water insecurity is undermining food security, health security, energy security or urban development and societal issues,” Henk Ovink, the Dutch special envoy for water, told .