UN report warns of water bankruptcy risks from climate change

A recent UN report warns of looming 'water bankruptcy' globally, worsened by climate change. It advocates for transparent water accounting and equitable distribution. In India, Himalayan regions are experiencing snow droughts that impact water supplies.

A United Nations report released earlier this week underscores the risks to water security from pollution and unsustainable usage patterns. Climate change has intensified the crisis. Rising temperatures disrupt rainfall patterns, affect the water cycle, and retreating glaciers render river flows erratic, leading to 'whiplash' shifts between floods and dry spells. Droughts, shortages, and pollution incidents, once seeming temporary, are turning chronic in many areas, termed 'water bankruptcy' by the report.

Titled Global Water Bankruptcy, the study notes that not all basins and countries are equally impacted. Yet it aptly stresses that 'basins are interconnected through trade, migration, weather, and other key elements of nature. Water bankruptcy in one area will put more pressure on others and can heighten local and international tensions.'

The current Himalayan winter exemplifies climate-driven precipitation irregularities. Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, and Jammu and Kashmir are grappling with snow droughts. Meteorologists attribute the dry spell to weakening western disturbances. The latter part of the season might be less arid, but snowfall in late January or early February offers limited benefits. Late snow melts rapidly, depriving soils of maximum moisture replenishment. In contrast, early snow melts gradually, supplying rivers with steady water. An IIT-Mandi study from last year highlighted that erratic precipitation—intensified over the past five years—affects agriculture, hydropower, and river flow timing.

Water management efforts worldwide, including in India, have historically prioritized steady supplies to households, farmers, and industry. Today, discussions increasingly cover aquifer recharging, rainwater harvesting, and water-efficient crops. Even so, prudent usage measures lag behind supply-side approaches. The UN report urges transparent water accounting, aquifer protection, enforceable extraction limits, and equity in water distribution.

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Dried-up reservoir near Tehran with officials and residents amid worsening water crisis, highlighting potential rationing and evacuation risks.
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Tehran faces possible rationing — and even evacuation — as reservoirs hit historic lows

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Iran’s capital is confronting a worsening water crisis after officials warned the main reservoir has roughly two weeks of supply left. President Masoud Pezeshkian said that if rains do not arrive soon, Tehran will begin water rationing and, if drought persists, could be forced to evacuate parts of the city.

A United Nations report warns that Earth has entered an era of water bankruptcy, driven by overconsumption and global warming. Three in four people live in countries facing water shortages, contamination or drought, as regions deplete groundwater reserves that take thousands of years to replenish. Urgent better management is needed to address the economic, social and environmental fallout.

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A new UN report states that humanity has caused permanent damage to the planet's water systems. Groundwater reservoirs are emptying and lakes are drying up, endangering food supplies for billions of people. Sweden will also be affected by the crisis.

Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have found that the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) synchronizes extreme wet and dry conditions across continents. Their study, based on satellite data from 2002 to 2024, reveals how these climate patterns drive simultaneous water crises worldwide. The findings highlight a shift toward more frequent dry extremes since around 2012.

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A new study reveals that repeated long droughts likely contributed to the slow fade of the Indus Valley Civilization around 5,000 to 3,500 years ago. Researchers reconstructed ancient climate patterns showing temperature rises and reduced rainfall that shifted settlements and led to deurbanization. The findings highlight how environmental pressures shaped one of the world's earliest urban societies.

An analysis of satellite data reveals that subsidence in the world's major river deltas poses a greater flooding risk to populations than sea-level rise alone. Up to half a billion people, including residents of ten megacities, live in these vulnerable low-lying areas. Groundwater extraction emerges as the primary driver of this sinking land.

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