The world has entered an era of ‘global water bankruptcy’, UN warns. What does it actually mean?

    21 Jan 2026

    Decades of human activity have left “irreversible damage” to the planet’s water supply, a new report warns.

    Human activity has pushed the world into an era of “global water bankruptcy”, as experts call for an urgent, science-based transformation.

    A new report from the United Nations University (UNU) warns that decades of deforestation, pollution, soil degradation, water overallocation, and chronic groundwater depletion – compounded by global heating – have caused “irreversible damage” to the planet’s water supply and its ability to bounce back.

    It argues that terms such as ‘water stress’ and ‘water crisis’ no longer accurately reflect today’s stark reality, which is driving “fragility, displacement, and conflict” worldwide.

    What does ‘water bankruptcy’ mean?

    The UNU report defines water bankruptcy as a “persistent over-withdrawal from surface and groundwater relative to renewable inflows and safe levels of depletion”. The term also requires “irreversible or prohibitively costly loss of water-related natural capital”.

    This differs from water stress which reflects high-pressure situations that remain reversible or a water crisis, which is used to describe acute shocks that can be overcome.