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What UN report, released on January 20, 2026, formally declared the dawn of an 'era of global water bankruptcy'?

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Global Water Bankruptcy - current events illustration
Global Water Bankruptcy — current events

The United Nations University (UNU) Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) released a significant report on January 20, 2026, that formally declared the world has entered an "era of global water bankruptcy." This declaration marked a crucial shift in understanding the planet's water challenges, moving beyond the previously used terms of "water stress" or "water crisis" to highlight a more severe and often irreversible condition. The report, titled "Global Water Bankruptcy: Living Beyond Our Hydrological Means in the Post (Review)-Crisis Era," emphasizes that many regions are no longer facing temporary shortages but rather a permanent failure of water systems to return to their historical baselines.

This dire assessment stems from decades of unsustainable practices, including chronic groundwater depletion, the over-allocation of water resources, widespread land and soil degradation, deforestation, and rampant pollution, all exacerbated by global heating. The report likens the situation to financial ruin, explaining that societies have not only exhausted their annual renewable water "income" from sources like rivers and snowpack but have also depleted their long-term "savings" stored in vital natural reservoirs such as aquifers, glaciers, and wetlands. This overconsumption and degradation have led to irreversible losses of natural water capital, making it increasingly difficult for water systems to recover.

The consequences of this global water bankruptcy are profound and widespread. Billions of people worldwide are grappling with chronic water insecurity, with staggering numbers lacking access to safely managed drinking water and sanitation. Significant indicators of this crisis include the shrinking (Review) of over half of the world's large lakes and a long-term decline in roughly 70% of underground aquifers. The UNU-INWEH report urges a fundamental shift from merely reacting to emergencies to actively managing this "bankruptcy," calling for honest, science-based adaptation, transparent water accounting, enforceable limits, and the protection of remaining water-related natural capital.