Water scarcity has profound environmental and social implications. These include the degradation of freshwater ecosystems and the loss of the goods and services these ecosystems provide, such as drinking water and biodiversity. Water scarcity is predicted to be one of the key factors limiting development in the 21st century. Yet development agencies, national planners, and policy-makers often lack basic information needed to address water resource management problems. For example indicators at the basin scale on water flow, water use, water quality, dams, or biodiversity are lacking for most of the watersheds in the world.
Clean freshwater is essential for sustaining both people and species. While it is globally recognized that freshwater management must balance development and environment needs, efforts to implement a more integrated approach have seen limited success. Most visibly lacking is the incorporation of ecosystem needs into water allocation measures and the valuation of other goods and services that freshwater ecosystems provide. In order to reverse the status quo and manage water for people and nature we will need:
There is an increasing need for this information from policy makers, water resource managers, NGOs, and the private sector, who are struggling to allocate water to competitive uses, while maintaining functioning ecosystems. However, this information, when it exists, is dispersed among different agencies, not standardized, and usually unavailable to a broad range of stakeholders.
WRI's goal is to catalyze action to address the water scarcity problem and its environmental and social implications and stimulate policy action by: