The world has moved beyond a water crisis and into a state of global water bankruptcy, says a new flagship report released on ...
The world has entered what United Nations scientists describe as an era of global “water bankruptcy,” with 6.1 billion people ...
Over-allocation of water, chronic groundwater depletion, pollution and climate change have pushed the world into a drastic ...
For decades, we have heard many warnings about a global water crisis. However, a new UN-supported report states that these ...
The world can be flooded one year and still be running out of water. A new UN report explains why our water problem can’t be ...
United Nations water experts are calling for the formal recognition of a new era of global water “bankruptcy”, arguing that ...
Life around the world has been feeling the effects of climate change, land degradation, deforestation, pollution and the overuse of water. Ultimately, most regions are using too much of their ...
Some of the impacts to water systems are irreversible, according to the report.
Amid chronic groundwater depletion, water overallocation, land and soil degradation, deforestation, and pollution, all ...
Water systems are being depleted faster than nature can replenish them, and many can no longer return to their historical ...
UN report has declared a "era of global water bankruptcy," a post-crisis reality where critical water systems have suffered irreversible damage ...