Marking World Water Day 2003, United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan today called for a "blue revolution"
of improved water management and sharing so that instead of igniting armed
conflict, water scarcity and crises united the people of the world.
"It is often said that water crises
and scarcities will at some point lead to armed conflict," Mr. Annan
said in a message delivered by Klaus Toepfer, Executive-Director of the
UN Environment Programme (UNEP) to the Third World Water Forum currently
underway in Kyoto, Japan. "But this need not be the case. Water problems
have also been a catalyst for cooperation among peoples and nations."
In his message, Mr. Annan noted that while poor countries overwhelmingly suffer the most - from a lack of access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation - but countries with expertise in "drip irrigation" or the management of watersheds are beginning to share that knowledge and technology.
"Scientists, local authorities, non-governmental organizations, private businesses and international organizations are pooling their efforts in the hopes of bringing about a much needed 'blue revolution' and to improve management of this vital resource," the Secretary-General said. "Whatever else divides the human community, whether we live upstream or downstream, in cities or in rural areas, water issues - the global water cycle itself - should link us in a common effort to protect and share it equitably, sustainably and peacefully."
Warning that under present trends two out of every three people on Earth will suffer moderate to severe water shortages in little more than two decades, Mr. Annan said: "This year, the International Year of Freshwater, we must move from promises to practice, from commitments to concrete projects, from intent to implementation."