An "unprecedented" rise in the demand for food as the population grows,
rapid urbanization and climate change are the drivers of increasing
global water stress.
"If we fail today to make water an
instrument of peace, it might become tomorrow a major source of
conflict," warns UNESCO director-general Irina Bokova in her foreword to
the UN World Water Development Report released today at the opening of
the World Water Forum in Marseilles. "Freshwater is a core issue for
sustainable development - and it is slipping through the cracks."
An
"unprecedented" rise in the demand for food as the population grows,
rapid urbanization and climate change are the drivers of increasing
global water stress, finds the report, "Managing Water Under Uncertainty
and Risk."
Issued every three
years since 2003 at the triennial World Water Forum, the UN World Water
Development Report offers an overview of the state of the world's
freshwater resources and aims to provide decision makers with the tools
to make sustainable use of water a reality.
"No
water users, anywhere in the world, can be guaranteed they will have
uninterrupted access to the water supplies they need or want or to the
water-derived benefits from key developmental sectors such as
agriculture, energy and health," the report warns.
While
UNICEF and the World Health Organization issued a separate report last
week showing that the world has achieved the Millennium Development Goal
of halving the proportion of people without access to safe drinking
water in advance of the 2015 deadline, water scarcity is still a big
problem for millions of people.
The
new World Water Development Report shows that despite projected
increases in demand for water, there are still nearly one billion people
without such access, and this number is growing in cities.
The world's urban population is
forecast to grow to 6.3 billion people in 2050, from 3.4 billion in
2009, increasing problems of adequate water supply, sanitation and
drainage, especially in urban slums already faced with a backlog of
unserved populations.
Sanitation
infrastructure is not keeping pace with the world's urban population,
and more than 80 percent of the world's wastewater is neither collected
nor treated, according to the report.
"We
have much to do before all people have the access to the water and
sanitation they need to lead lives of dignity and well-being," said UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in a video message to the World Water
Forum.
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