10 percent of humanity lives with a lack of water

Dhe global shortage of drinking water will be reflected in a study by the United Nations (U.N.) according to further strengthen. This is a consequence of increasing environmental problems and economic difficulties in connection with increased freshwater pollution, according to the world water report published by the cultural organization Unesco at the start of the UN water conference in New York on Wednesday.
“Depending on the season, water will become scarce as a result of climate change, both where it is plentiful today—like Central Africa, East Asia and parts of South America—and worsening where it is already scarce—like the Middle East and in the Sahel.” On an annual average, 10 percent of the world’s population lived in countries at high or critical risk of water scarcity problems.
Wednesday was the start of the UN Water Conference in New York. It is the first major UN meeting since 1977 to deal exclusively with the topic of water. An interim balance at the halfway point of the so-called International Water Action Decade from 2018 to 2028 will be drawn by Friday. A particular focus is on the extent to which internationally agreed goals, including the UN Sustainable Development Goal on access for all people to clean water, can be achieved.
The UN study describes the progress in achieving the sustainability goal and its sub-goals as insufficient. “In order to achieve some goals, an implementation speed that is at least four times faster is now required,” it says. Two billion people worldwide – around one in four – do not have access to clean water.
According to the report, global water consumption is projected to increase by around 1 percent annually through 2050, similar to the rate it has been in the past 40 years. In poorer countries, there is a risk above all due to poor water quality, in industrialized countries consumption by agriculture is problematic. Due to the climate crisis, certain regions are increasingly exposed to extreme and prolonged droughts, which have serious consequences for flora and fauna.