All Concepts
Environment & Climate

Water — A Shared Resource

Why clean water is a human right, how water connects every community, what happens when water is shared unfairly or runs short, and what people can do to protect it.

Core Ideas
1 Water is something everyone needs
2 Clean water keeps us healthy
3 Water is shared — we should not waste it
4 Water comes from many places
5 We can all help look after water
Background for Teachers

Water is one of the first things children can understand about the wider world. Every child drinks water, washes with it, and sees it in the sky, in rivers, or in taps. At this age, the goal is simple. Children should learn that water is not endless. It is shared with other people, animals, and plants. Some children in the world do not have clean water, and this makes them sick. Children should also learn small habits of care — not wasting water, keeping it clean, and noticing where it comes from. These habits build the instinct that water is precious and belongs to everyone. You do not need any special materials for this topic. If you have a jug of water, a tap, or a well nearby, these are useful to point at. The key is to link the idea of 'water' to real things children see every day. Be careful in places where water is scarce or unsafe — handle the topic gently, and focus on care and hope, not fear.

Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — All the ways we use water
PurposeChildren notice how much water they use every day.
How to run itAsk the children: how do you use water? Collect answers. Help them think of many things. We drink water. We wash our hands. We wash our clothes. We cook food. We water plants. We clean the floor. We give water to animals. Ask: what would happen if there was no water for a day? Discuss: no drinking, no washing, no cooking, no clean clothes. We would feel very tired and very dirty very quickly. Water is not just something we want — it is something we need. Every person, every animal, and every plant needs water to live. Finish with a simple idea: because water is so important, we should not waste it.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed. If you have a cup of water, you can hold it up as you talk.
Activity 2 — Where does our water come from?
PurposeChildren begin to understand that water comes from the natural world, not from a tap.
How to run itAsk: where do you get your water at home? Answers might be: a tap, a well, a bucket from the river, a bottle. Then ask: but where does that water come from before it reaches us? Help children think. Water falls from the sky as rain. It fills rivers and lakes. It soaks into the ground and into wells. Some water comes from far away and travels through pipes. Draw a simple picture on the board if you can: a cloud, rain, a river, a well, a tap. Say: all the water we drink started as rain somewhere. When there is not enough rain, there is not enough water. When rivers get dirty, our water gets dirty too. So what happens far away matters to us here.
💡 Low-resource tipDraw the water journey on the ground with a stick if you have no board. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Little things that help
PurposeChildren learn small habits that protect water.
How to run itTell the children: water is precious. Even small children can help look after it. Go through simple habits together. Turn off the tap while you brush your teeth. Do not leave taps running. Tell a grown-up if a tap is dripping. Do not throw rubbish into rivers, ponds, or drains. Do not waste clean water on things that do not need it. Drink the water you pour — do not pour it away. Ask: which of these can you do this week? Pick one together as a class. Say: if every child in the world does one small thing, that is millions of small things. Small things added together become big things.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1What is your favourite thing to do with water?
  • Q2Where does the water in your home come from?
  • Q3What would your day be like with no water?
  • Q4Who else needs water apart from people?
  • Q5What is one thing you could do to waste less water?
Writing Tasks
Drawing task
Draw a picture of all the ways you use water in one day. Write or say: Water is important because ___________. I can help by ___________.
Skills: Noticing daily uses of water; building care for shared resources
Sentence completion
Water comes from ___________. We should not waste water because ___________.
Skills: Linking water to the natural world; understanding why care matters
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Water comes from the tap, so there will always be enough.

What to teach instead

The tap is only the end of a long journey. Before the water reaches the tap, it was rain, a river, or water in the ground. If there is no rain, or if the river dries up, or if someone uses too much, the tap can run dry. In many places in the world, taps do not work every day. Water is not endless. It has to come from somewhere.

Common misconception

All water is safe to drink.

What to teach instead

Not all water is safe. Water from a clean tap or a clean well is usually safe. But water from a dirty river, a puddle, or an old bucket can make people very sick. Clean water is one of the most important things in the world. Many people do not have it. We should treat clean water as something special and never pour it away for no reason.

Core Ideas
1 Access to clean water as a human right
2 How water connects us to nature and to each other
3 What happens when water is shared unfairly
4 Pollution and how it harms water
5 Climate change and water shortage
6 How people can protect water
Background for Teachers

Water is a basic human need and, since 2010, a recognised human right. In that year, the United Nations General Assembly declared that access to clean drinking water and sanitation is essential for human life and dignity. Despite this, about two billion people in the world still do not have safely managed drinking water at home. Around 3.5 billion do not have safe sanitation. Every day, hundreds of children die from diseases linked to dirty water. These are not natural disasters — they are failures of sharing and of care.

Water connects every community

Rivers cross borders. Rain that falls on one country flows through another. Factories that pollute a river harm people far downstream. Farms that use too much water reduce what is left for towns. For this reason, water is always a shared resource.

No one owns rain

No one owns the sea. Even a well usually draws from water that moves underground across a wide area. This makes water a test of whether people can share well. Water also links to climate. A warmer world has a wilder water cycle. Some places get too little water, and droughts get worse. Other places get too much water, and floods get worse. Glaciers that have fed rivers for thousands of years are shrinking. Many crops that feed millions of people depend on water in ways that are now less certain. For children, water should be taught as both a gift and a responsibility. A gift because clean water is the foundation of health and life. A responsibility because water does not reach everyone fairly, and because the way we use water affects others, now and in the future. Small actions at home — not wasting, not polluting, supporting good policies — matter. So does caring about people in other places who do not have what we have.

Teaching note

Be sensitive in places where water is scarce, where children carry water long distances, or where water quality is a current crisis. In such contexts, these topics are not abstract. Focus on dignity, shared effort, and hope, not on blame or fear.

Key Vocabulary
Clean water
Water that is safe to drink, cook with, and wash with. It has no harmful germs, chemicals, or dirt.
Sanitation
The systems that keep us clean and safe — especially toilets, drains, and ways to treat waste so it does not make people sick.
Water cycle
The way water moves around the earth — from the sea and the land, up into clouds as vapour, down again as rain, and back through rivers to the sea.
Drought
A long period with much less rain than normal. Droughts make rivers, wells, and crops dry up.
Pollution
Harmful things added to water, air, or land that make them dirty or dangerous. Water pollution includes chemicals, plastic, and waste.
Human right
Something every person needs and deserves, just because they are human. In 2010, the United Nations said that clean water and sanitation are human rights.
Shared resource
Something that belongs to everyone and that no one person should own. Rivers, rain, and groundwater are shared resources.
Conservation
Taking care of a resource — like water, forests, or wild animals — so that it is still there for other people and for the future.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — A day without water
PurposeStudents understand how much daily life depends on water and how this is different for different people.
How to run itAsk students to list everything they use water for in one day. Build a long list on the board. Drinking. Washing hands. Washing clothes. Cooking. Cleaning the house. Flushing the toilet. Watering plants. Keeping animals alive. Growing food. Making things in factories. Putting out fires. Now explain: in many parts of the world, water does not come from a tap inside the house. It comes from a well, a river, or a shared tap far away. Someone — often a woman or a girl — has to walk to collect it and carry it home. This can take hours every day. A girl who spends three hours a day carrying water cannot easily go to school. Ask: how is your day different from hers? What would you have to give up if you had to collect your water by walking? Discuss: water is not just about having enough — it is also about who has to work to get it. In fair communities and fair countries, everyone has easy access to clean water. In unfair ones, the hardest work falls on the poorest people.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. Use examples from students' own lives or from your local context. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — The journey of a river
PurposeStudents understand that water crosses borders and connects communities.
How to run itDraw a simple river on the board. It begins in the mountains. It flows through farms. It passes through a small town. It flows past a factory. It passes through a big city. It reaches the sea. Ask at each stage: what happens to the water here? At the mountains: clean water flows from melted snow and rain. At the farms: some water is used for crops; sometimes fertilisers wash into the river. At the small town: people drink it, wash with it, and waste water goes back in. At the factory: sometimes waste is added to the river. At the big city: huge amounts are used and the water is often more dirty at this point. At the sea: whatever has been added to the river now reaches the ocean. Ask: who is affected by each stage? Answer: everyone downstream. People in the big city drink the same water that farmers, small towns, and factories have already used. If anyone harms the water, they harm the people below them. Discuss: rivers do not care about borders between villages, regions, or countries. A river often flows through many places. This is why taking care of water is a shared job. We cannot protect only 'our part' of the river. We have to care about the whole river, including the parts we cannot see.
💡 Low-resource tipDraw the river on the ground with a stick if there is no board. Ask students to stand in a line to represent the river if you want to make it active.
Activity 3 — What makes water dirty, and what we can do
PurposeStudents learn the main causes of water pollution and what ordinary people can do about them.
How to run itAsk: what makes water dirty? Collect ideas. Then explain the main causes. (1) Rubbish. Plastic bottles, plastic bags, and other waste thrown into rivers and drains. Plastic in water does not go away — it breaks into tiny pieces and stays. (2) Chemicals from farms. Fertilisers and pesticides used on crops can wash into rivers when it rains. Too much of these chemicals kills fish and other living things. (3) Waste from factories. Some factories let dirty water flow into rivers without cleaning it first. (4) Human and animal waste. Without good toilets and drains, waste can end up in drinking water. This causes diseases like diarrhoea and cholera, which still kill many children. (5) Chemicals at home. Cleaning liquids, oils, and paints poured down drains can harm water. Ask: what can ordinary people do? (1) Never throw rubbish into rivers, drains, or streams. (2) Use less plastic where possible, and recycle what you do use. (3) Support farmers who use fewer chemicals, if you can choose. (4) Do not pour oils, paint, or harsh cleaners down the drain. (5) Speak up — if a factory is polluting a river, it is right to report it. (6) Support leaders who take water seriously. Discuss: individual actions matter, but so does acting together. A single person cannot clean a river alone. Communities working together — and governments doing their job — can protect water for everyone.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. Use local examples of pollution or clean water efforts if you have them. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1How much of your day depends on having clean water? What would change if you had to collect your own water from far away?
  • Q2Is it fair that some people have water in their homes and others walk for hours to get it?
  • Q3Why should people in one village or town care about what happens to a river many miles away?
  • Q4Who do you think is responsible when a river becomes polluted — individuals, companies, or governments?
  • Q5The United Nations says clean water is a human right. What does 'a right' mean here, and what should happen when this right is not met?
  • Q6What is one habit in your home or school that could save water? What would it take to change it?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Explain and give an example
Explain why water is a 'shared resource' and give ONE example of what can go wrong when it is not shared well. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Explaining a concept, giving examples, understanding shared responsibility
Task 2 — Persuasive writing
Write a short letter to your school or community (4 to 6 sentences) arguing that saving water is everyone's responsibility, not just the government's.
Skills: Persuasive writing, giving reasons, writing to a real audience
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Water is free, so saving it does not really matter.

What to teach instead

Clean water may feel free when it comes from a tap, but it is not free. Someone paid for the pipes, the cleaning, and the delivery. More importantly, the amount of clean water in the world is limited. Only a small part of the world's water is fresh and safe to drink. When one person wastes water, there is less for others — especially during droughts and in dry places. Saving water is not about saving money alone. It is about sharing a limited resource with everyone, including people we do not know.

Common misconception

Water pollution is caused mostly by ordinary people throwing rubbish.

What to teach instead

Ordinary people throwing rubbish is a real problem, but it is not the biggest cause. Most water pollution comes from farms (chemicals running off fields), factories (waste dumped into rivers), and poor sanitation (waste from homes and cities not properly treated). This does not mean individual actions do not matter — they do. But it does mean we should not only blame individuals. Governments and companies have much bigger effects on water quality, and they must be held responsible for what they do.

Common misconception

If a country has a lot of rain, it cannot have a water problem.

What to teach instead

Rain alone does not solve a water problem. Water also needs to be clean. It needs to reach homes through working pipes or wells. It needs to be shared fairly between farms, factories, and families. Many countries with plenty of rain still have serious water problems because the water is polluted, because the pipes are broken, because the rain falls in the wrong season, or because some groups are cut off from the water that exists. Having water and having safe water for everyone are two different things.

Core Ideas
1 Water and sanitation as recognised human rights
2 The global water crisis — two billion without safe water
3 Water as a shared resource — rivers, aquifers, and cooperation
4 Agriculture, industry, and household water use
5 Climate change and the changing water cycle
6 Water conflict and water cooperation
7 Water justice — who bears the cost of scarcity and pollution
8 Individual action, collective action, and policy
Background for Teachers

Water is one of the clearest examples of a shared resource, and also one of the clearest examples of how the world fails to share. Understanding it well requires grasping the human rights framework, the global scale of scarcity and pollution, and the links to climate, agriculture, industry, and political power. The human rights framework. In July 2010, the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 64/292, recognising the human right to water and sanitation. The UN Human Rights Council later clarified that this right is legally binding under existing human rights law. The right has several parts: water must be available (enough of it), accessible (reachable without excessive effort), safe (free from dangers to health), acceptable (culturally and socially appropriate), and affordable (not so expensive that people have to choose between water and other basic needs). The right belongs to every person, regardless of income, gender, location, or nationality. The global scale. The most recent WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme estimates that about 2.2 billion people do not have safely managed drinking water at home, and about 3.5 billion lack safely managed sanitation. Around a quarter of the world's population drinks water contaminated with faecal matter. Diseases linked to unsafe water — diarrhoea, cholera, typhoid, dysentery — still kill over a million people a year, most of them children under five. These are not abstract statistics. They represent huge suffering that could be prevented. Progress has been real but uneven. Between 2000 and 2022, 2.1 billion people gained access to safely managed drinking water. But progress has slowed, and hundreds of millions still have no improvement in sight. Some regions are falling behind — sub-Saharan Africa in particular. Water as a shared resource.

Most freshwater lives in two forms

Surface water (rivers, lakes) and groundwater (aquifers below the earth).

Both cross human boundaries

About 150 large international river basins are shared between two or more countries. About 300 major aquifers cross borders. This means water is almost always a political question, not just a technical one. A river starting in country A and flowing through country B creates difficult choices: how much water can A use before B is affected? If A pollutes the river, B suffers. If B builds a dam, A may lose water upstream. Similar questions apply within countries — between farms and cities, between regions, between poor and rich neighbourhoods. Agricultural, industrial, and household use. Globally, agriculture uses about 70% of freshwater, industry about 20%, and households about 10%. This changes the framing. Household conservation matters, but focusing only on household habits misses most of the picture. The biggest water question is how food and industrial goods are produced. Beef and dairy use much more water per calorie than grains and vegetables. Cotton, chocolate, coffee, and many other goods take huge amounts of water. Fossil fuel production uses vast quantities. A fair discussion of water must include food choices and economic systems, not only turning off the tap. Climate change and the water cycle. A warmer atmosphere holds more water vapour. This makes the water cycle more intense — wet places get wetter, dry places get drier, and extreme events become more common. Droughts in east Africa, the western United States, southern Europe, and many other regions have worsened in recent decades. Floods have also grown more damaging in many parts of the world. Glaciers in the Himalayas, the Andes, and elsewhere are shrinking, which will reduce river flows for hundreds of millions of people over the coming decades. The link between climate change and water is not coming — it is already here.

Water conflict and cooperation

Water disputes have existed for thousands of years, but serious shared water conflicts are less common than often claimed. Most countries sharing river basins have found ways to cooperate, sometimes reluctantly. Long-running agreements exist on the Rhine, the Mekong, the Nile (partial), the Indus (between India and Pakistan, still holding despite wars), and many others. Cooperation is possible because the alternative — open conflict over water — harms everyone. However, tensions are rising. Ethiopia's Grand Renaissance Dam on the Nile has caused serious friction with Egypt and Sudan. Water has been weaponised in several recent conflicts (Syria, Ukraine, Gaza). Internal water disputes between regions within countries (for example in India, Pakistan, China, and the US) are intensifying.

Water justice

The costs of water problems fall hardest on the poorest.

Women and girls are disproportionately affected

In many communities, they walk hours each day to collect water, with major effects on education, work, and safety. Poor communities in rich countries also suffer — Flint, Michigan, in the USA is a famous example, where a mainly Black community was exposed to lead-contaminated water for years. The communities least responsible for climate-driven water stress are often the most affected. Water justice connects to gender justice, economic justice, and racial justice. Individual, collective, and policy action. Individuals can save water, avoid polluting, and make informed food and product choices. But the scale of the problem means individual action is not enough. Collective action — community organising, civic campaigning, voting — is essential. Policy action — good laws, good institutions, investment in water infrastructure, international cooperation — makes the biggest difference. These levels work together. Individual awareness leads to civic action; civic action leads to better policies.

Teaching note

Water topics can be emotionally heavy, especially in contexts where students face real scarcity or pollution.

Handle with care

Focus on the practical fact that water problems can be solved — many countries and cities have transformed their water situation within a generation. Despair is not a useful response. Honest understanding combined with a sense of what is possible is.

Key Vocabulary
The right to water and sanitation
A human right recognised by the UN General Assembly in 2010. It means every person has the right to water that is available, safe, accessible, affordable, and acceptable — and to a proper toilet and hygiene.
Freshwater
Water with very little salt — the kind that humans, most animals, and most plants can use. Only about 2.5% of all the water on earth is freshwater, and most of that is locked in ice.
Aquifer
A layer of rock or soil underground that holds water. Wells and boreholes draw from aquifers. Many aquifers take hundreds or thousands of years to refill.
Transboundary water
A river, lake, or aquifer shared between two or more countries. About 150 major river basins in the world are transboundary.
Virtual water
The hidden water used to produce food and goods. A kilo of beef, for example, takes thousands of litres of water to produce. When we import goods, we import the water that was used to make them.
Water stress
A situation where the demand for water is close to, or higher than, the supply. Countries or regions under water stress face frequent shortages.
Water security
Having enough safe water, now and in the future, for people's needs, for farming, for the economy, and for nature.
Eutrophication
When too many nutrients — often from farm fertilisers — flow into a river, lake, or sea. This causes too much plant growth, which uses up the oxygen and kills fish and other life.
Water privatisation
When water services are run by private companies instead of by the government. A contested issue — some argue it brings efficiency, others argue it reduces fair access.
Water cooperation
Agreements and shared institutions that allow countries or communities to manage shared water peacefully. The most common outcome of transboundary water relations, despite the attention given to water conflict.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — The water right in practice
PurposeStudents engage with what the human right to water actually means and where it is still failing.
How to run itExplain the UN's 2010 recognition of the human right to water and sanitation. Walk through the five parts: availability, accessibility, safety, acceptability, and affordability. Then test the right against real situations. (1) A village where the nearest clean water is a four-hour walk. Which parts of the right are being violated? (Accessibility and availability.) (2) A city neighbourhood where water comes out of the tap but is full of lead. (Safety.) (3) A country where water bills have become so expensive that poor families must choose between water and food. (Affordability.) (4) A refugee camp where the water available is technically safe but insufficient for cooking or washing. (Availability.) (5) A community where women avoid a shared tap because of harassment, so they cannot collect water safely. (Accessibility and acceptability.) Ask: in each case, whose duty is it to fix the problem? Discuss: the human right to water imposes duties on states first — but states often fail, especially for poor and marginalised groups. When states fail, civil society, international bodies, and communities themselves push for change. Recognising water as a right does not solve the problem. But it changes the conversation. It means lack of water is not just bad luck — it is a failure of duty that someone should answer for.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents cases verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Sharing a river
PurposeStudents engage with the politics and practice of shared water through a real case.
How to run itPresent the case of the Nile. The Nile is the longest river in the world. It flows through eleven countries and ends in Egypt, before reaching the Mediterranean. For most of history, Egypt has used the largest share of Nile water. Old agreements from the colonial period gave Egypt and Sudan nearly all the rights. Ethiopia and other upstream countries were barely included. In 2011, Ethiopia began building the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on the Blue Nile, which supplies about 85% of the Nile's water. The dam is one of Africa's largest infrastructure projects. For Ethiopia, it is essential for electricity and development. Many Ethiopians contributed money to build it. For Egypt, it is a threat. Almost all of Egypt's water comes from the Nile. A large new dam upstream could reduce that flow, especially during the filling period. Egypt has said it would consider military action to protect its water supply. Ethiopia has insisted the dam is its right. Years of negotiations have produced little agreement. Ask students to consider the different viewpoints. From Ethiopia: why should a poor country not have the right to use its own river? From Egypt: how can a country accept a threat to its basic survival? From Sudan (in the middle): what is best for us? From the wider region: what happens if two major countries go to war over water? Discuss possible solutions. A binding agreement on how fast the dam is filled and how much water is released each year. Shared operation of the dam. Regional cooperation on water, energy, and climate. Monitoring systems to build trust. Acceptance by all sides that the old colonial agreements are no longer fair. Ask: what lessons does this case teach about sharing water generally? Old agreements often do not match present realities. Power matters — strong countries get more. But conflict destroys everyone. Real cooperation is possible, but it is hard and slow. The Nile case is still unresolved — and its outcome will shape millions of lives for decades.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher tells the story verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Who is really using the water?
PurposeStudents engage critically with how water use is distributed and what this means for individual versus collective action.
How to run itPresent the global figures. Agriculture uses about 70% of the world's freshwater. Industry uses about 20%. Households — all the taps, toilets, showers, and kitchens in every home in the world — use about 10%. Ask students: if you heard a campaign telling people to save water by shorter showers, would you expect it to make a big difference? Explain: it helps a little, but most water is not used in homes. Next, introduce the idea of 'virtual water'. A kilo of beef takes around 15,000 litres of water to produce (for the animal's drinking, for the crops it eats, for processing). A kilo of chicken takes about 4,000 litres. A kilo of wheat about 1,300 litres. A cotton T-shirt takes around 2,500 litres to produce. A cup of coffee around 140 litres. When we buy these things, we are using water that was used far away. Ask: what does this mean for water fairness? Rich countries often import food and goods from dry countries that cannot afford to lose the water. This is sometimes called 'exporting water' — a dry country may be sending its water abroad in the form of crops. Who decides what gets grown and exported? Usually markets and companies, not the people living near the water. Discuss the implications for action. Individual household actions: useful but small in the total picture. Food choices: much larger effect, especially reducing meat consumption. Consumer choices: supporting products that use water responsibly. Civic and policy action: the biggest effects come from laws on agriculture, industry, and trade. This shifts the conversation from 'turn off your tap' to 'what kind of economy do we want, and who pays the water cost?' Ask: is it fair to focus public campaigns on household saving when most water is used elsewhere? Does it distract people from the real issues? Or is it still useful because it builds awareness? Discuss: both individual action and systemic action matter. But pretending that household habits alone can solve the global water crisis is dishonest. A serious response must include how food is grown, what industries produce, and how trade is shaped.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents figures verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1The UN recognised water as a human right in 2010. More than a decade later, billions still lack safe water. What does this tell us about what 'recognising' a right actually achieves?
  • Q2Most water disputes between countries have been resolved cooperatively rather than through conflict. What conditions make cooperation possible, and are those conditions becoming weaker or stronger?
  • Q3Agriculture uses 70% of the world's freshwater. How should this shape public debate about water — and why do most public campaigns still focus on household use?
  • Q4Some argue water should be treated as a commodity that can be bought and sold; others argue it must remain a public good. Where is the right balance, and why?
  • Q5Women and girls bear most of the burden of water collection in many parts of the world. How does water justice connect to gender justice, and what follows from this?
  • Q6Climate change is making water more extreme — more droughts and more floods. How should countries prepare, and how much of this cost should fall on the countries that have emitted the most?
  • Q7Water privatisation has had mixed results — sometimes improving service, sometimes reducing fair access. What conditions tend to produce good outcomes, and what protections are essential?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Extended essay
'Water is the clearest test of whether humanity can share.' To what extent do you agree? Write 400 to 600 words.
Skills: Thesis-driven argument, engaging with rights and politics, balanced analysis
Task 2 — Analytical response
Explain how climate change is reshaping the global water situation, and what this means for countries that have contributed least to climate change. Write 200 to 300 words.
Skills: Explaining a complex system, analysing justice implications
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The global water crisis is mainly about not enough water in dry countries.

What to teach instead

Scarcity is real, but it is only part of the problem. Many water crises happen in countries with plenty of rain. The real issues are usually about infrastructure (broken or absent pipes and treatment), inequality (some groups cut off while others have plenty), pollution (making water unusable), and governance (decisions made badly or unfairly). A country with less rainfall but good governance can provide water well. A country with lots of rain but poor governance can still leave millions without safe water. Framing the crisis as 'dry countries have problems' misses the political and economic roots.

Common misconception

Water wars will be the main conflicts of the 21st century.

What to teach instead

This claim is repeated often, but the evidence does not support it. Most countries sharing rivers have found ways to cooperate, even reluctantly, and open wars fought over water are very rare in recent history. Water tensions are real and growing, and water can be weaponised in conflicts that have other causes. But treating water as an inevitable driver of war can encourage defensive, zero-sum thinking. The evidence suggests that cooperation over water is more common than conflict, and good institutions can keep that pattern going even under strain.

Common misconception

Household water saving can solve the water crisis.

What to teach instead

Household use accounts for about 10% of global freshwater use. Agriculture uses 70%, industry 20%. This means that even if every household in the world cut its water use dramatically, most of the problem would remain untouched. Household saving is a genuine good — it reduces pressure on local systems and builds awareness. But treating it as the main answer misleads people. Serious responses must engage with how food is grown, what industries produce, and how trade and policy shape water use. Focusing only on households can let the biggest users off the hook.

Common misconception

Water privatisation is always harmful, because water should not be a commodity.

What to teach instead

The debate is more complex than slogans suggest. Water privatisation has produced mixed results. In some places, private operators have improved efficiency, reduced losses, and extended service. In others, they have raised prices beyond what poor households can afford, cut corners on quality, and reduced democratic accountability. What matters most is not private versus public in principle, but the design: strong regulation, clear affordability protections, transparent contracts, accountability mechanisms, and recognition of water as a right that cannot be denied for inability to pay. Public systems can be bad too, and private systems can work well, depending on these conditions.

Further Information

Key texts accessible to students: Steven Solomon, 'Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization' (2010) — history of water and power. Maude Barlow, 'Blue Covenant' (2007) — the case for water as a human right. Giulio Boccaletti, 'Water: A Biography' (2021) — accessible global history. For current research and reports: the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (washdata.org) — authoritative data on global water and sanitation access. The UN World Water Development Report (published annually by UNESCO). The World Resources Institute's Aqueduct tool (wri.org/aqueduct) — interactive maps of global water stress. Water.org — organisation focused on access. WaterAid — advocacy and implementation. The Pacific Institute (pacinst.org) — research on water issues, including the Water Conflict Chronology. For law and rights: the UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation publishes accessible reports. For climate and water: the IPCC's chapters on water in its Assessment Reports. For teaching: the UNESCO Water Education programme offers curriculum resources.