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Home / Environment / UN: Earth is Living Beyond Its Hydrological Means

UN: Earth is Living Beyond Its Hydrological Means

21 Jan

•

Summary

  • The world is entering an era of 'water bankruptcy'.
  • Groundwater depletion, pollution, and warming worsen water scarcity.
  • Global water systems are already in states of failure.
UN: Earth is Living Beyond Its Hydrological Means

A United Nations report warns that the world has entered an era of "water bankruptcy," living beyond its hydrological means. This crisis is characterized by the chronic depletion of groundwater, over-allocation of water resources, and significant land and soil degradation.

Compounded by deforestation, pollution, and the escalating impacts of global warming, many global water systems are now in a state of failure. Societies have consistently extracted more water than renewable flows and stored reserves can sustain, reducing the amount of safely usable water available.

Consequences are visible globally, with rivers failing to reach the sea, shrinking lakes and glaciers, and expanding deserts. Regions like the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia, and the American Southwest are highlighted as particularly vulnerable to severe water stress and its cascading effects.

This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
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Disclaimer:
The UN report defines 'water bankruptcy' as a state where societies consistently extract more water than is sustainably available, depleting both renewable resources and stored reserves.
The report identifies chronic groundwater depletion, over-allocation of water, land degradation, deforestation, pollution, and compounded effects of global warming as key causes.
The report highlights impacts across all continents, with specific mentions of the Middle East, North Africa, South Asia, and the American Southwest facing severe water stress.

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