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Press Release No. L/10/2000, SG/SM/7326, OBV/134
15 March 2000

Message of United Nations Secretary-General  Kofi Annan
on World Water Day

22 March 2000

Clean accessible water is a unique commodity.  In this new century,  there is still no technology available that can manufacture  water.  It cannot  be replaced or duplicated. It must, therefore, be valued and safeguarded.

We cannot live without  water.  It is essential to every aspect of living. In  many  regions  of  the  world,  water  tables  are  falling, underground aquifers are  drying  out, rivers  and  lakes  are shrinking,  and  chemical pollution  from farming  threatens water  quality.  Lack  of access  to safe water supply and  water management contributes  to an estimated 80  per cent of disease and death in the developing world.

Spreading water  shortages due  to rapid  population growth,  urbanization and increasing urban poverty  have made the goal of water for all  seemingly unattainable, particularly  in developing  countries. In  many parts of  the world, the  main problem  will  continue to  be supplying  water to  growing populations  for   drinking  and   waste  disposal,   particularly  in   the megacities.

The international community must exercise its rights and  responsibilities to  provide  water  for  rich  and  poor alike,  for  all  competing  users, equitably,  reliably and affordably.   The challenge before  us is to manage human activity for the conservation of water  quality and quantity.   Women, as managers of families, have a central part to play.

Global awareness of the role that  water plays in sustainable  development is vital.   The peoples  of the  world must upgrade  their knowledge of  the water cycle  and  thereby increase  their  capacity  to better  manage  this scarce resource.  This can  be achieved by  drawing from the  well of  human wisdom  to  develop and  promote  a  culture of  conservation  and  a  "blue revolution".

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