Amid conflicts and climate change, U.N. puts focus on 'deep trouble' in water worldwide - L.A. Times
For the first time in 46 years, the United Nations convened a global conference on water, creating new impetus for wide-ranging efforts to manage water more sustainably, adapt to worsening droughts and floods with climate change, and accelerate solutions for the estimated 2 billion people around the world who live without access to clean drinking water.
The conference this week in New York brought together about 10,000 participants, including national leaders and scientists, with a focus on addressing the worlds many water problems and making progress toward a goal of ensuring clean drinking water and sanitation for all people.
Water is humanitys lifeblood, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said. But water is in deep trouble. We are draining humanitys lifeblood through vampiric overconsumption and unsustainable use, and evaporating it through global heating. Weve broken the water cycle, destroyed ecosystems and contaminated groundwater.
Governments, nonprofit groups, businesses and other entities made hundreds of commitments in what the U.N. called a Water Action Agenda, with pledges as diverse as addressing scarcity in water-stressed regions and cleaning up lead-contaminated drinking water. Countries from the United States to Japan pledged to spend billions of dollars helping to improve water infrastructure.
The conference also prominently featured discussions about nature-based solutions, such as restoring river floodplains and coastal wetlands, and dismantling concrete flood-control channels to allow stormwater to recharge aquifers.
Read more: https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2023-03-25/un-puts-focus-on-deep-trouble-in-water-worldwide