An independent environmental data & earth-observation projectData reviewed July 2026
Eye on EarthEnvironmental Data · Earth Observation

Four billion people face water scarcity

About four billion people — nearly two-thirds of humanity — experience severe water scarcity for at least one month a year, and agriculture accounts for roughly 72% of all freshwater withdrawals.

Four billion people face water scarcity
Water data combines national withdrawal statistics from FAO AQUASTAT with UN-Water assessments of stress and scarcity.
Global freshwater withdrawals by sector
Agriculture72%Industry16%Municipal12%
Source: FAO AQUASTAT; UN-Water.

Fresh water is renewable but unevenly distributed, and demand keeps rising. UN-Water estimates that around 4 billion people face severe water scarcity for at least a month each year, while about 720 million live in countries under high or critical water stress.

Agriculture dominates demand

By far the largest user is farming. Irrigation accounts for roughly 72% of global freshwater withdrawals, with industry around 16% and household (municipal) use about 12%. That makes food production both the biggest driver of water stress and the biggest opportunity to relieve it, through efficient irrigation and less wasteful crops.

Pressure from several directions

Water stress is intensifying because of:

  • Population and economic growth raising demand.
  • Climate change shifting rainfall, shrinking snowpack and glaciers, and intensifying droughts.
  • Pollution removing otherwise usable supplies.

An indicator of resilience

Because water connects food, energy, health and ecosystems, it is a revealing gauge of environmental resilience. Freshwater wildlife has declined faster than any other group — about 85% since 1970 — a warning that rivers, lakes and wetlands are among the most stressed systems on Earth. Monitoring withdrawals, groundwater and river flows from space and on the ground is central to managing the squeeze.

Sources
  • UN-Water, Water Scarcity facts; UN World Water Development Report 2024.
  • FAO AQUASTAT global water statistics.
  • WRI Aqueduct Water Risk Atlas.

Key indicators

Severe scarcity
~4 billion people
High water stress
~720 million
Agriculture share
~72%
Industry
~16%
Municipal
~12%

Scarcity vs stress

‘Scarcity’ is periodic shortage experienced by people; ‘stress’ is the ratio of withdrawals to available supply.

Related

Water and food link directly to material and resource use.