World Water Day 2026 highlights water and gender, showing how inequality impacts access, economies and resilience while ...
Colorado’s water supply is strained by climate change, a growing population and the demands of new technologies like AI data ...
In developed economies, water has become a victim of its own social success. For those with universal access to it, a form of ...
Climate change has many signals—rising sea levels, melting glaciers, stronger storms—but the first and most immediate sign for most people on the planet is water. Not too much of it. Not too little.
On World Water Day, PM Shehbaz Sharif emphasized clean water as a basic human right while addressing severe water scarcity in ...
The global water system is showing its fragility, and water resilience is fast becoming a defining challenge for economies and investors. UN-Water estimates two-thirds of the world’s population faces ...
World Water Day highlights the importance of freshwater, its conservation, and global efforts to ensure safe water access for ...
The world’s three most populous countries include China, India and the United States and these nations alone account for 41 percent of the global population, 49 percent of blue water demand—defined as ...
On World Water Day, Pakistan’s leadership highlights water scarcity, gender inequality and dam projects to secure future ...
The latest available data on the state of Europe's water network, recently published by Eurostat, has revealed worrying trends regarding the future resilience of the continent's water supplies. The ...
Water is absolutely crucial to food production. It is used for irrigation in agriculture, for cleaning and sanitation in factories, and even as an ingredient in food products. Agriculture alone ...
A second, more mundane challenge for Europe’s potable water supply is the longstanding failure to invest in aging pipe networks, which cause the continent to lose an astonishing 25 percent of its ...