Our solutions to the world's freshwater problems
Stop the loss of our most precious resource


We need to find new and long-lasting solutions and strategies if people and nature are to benefit from these natural resources in the next century.
Further degradation is not an option. There are alternatives at our disposal for meeting needs for energy, food, water and transport.
Solutions for managing water depend on:
- cooperation for managing rivers and wetlands,
- resisting harmful infrastructure,
- curbing water waste in agriculture and
- reducing poverty.
WWF's Global Freshwater Programme has therefore established the following global freshwater targets:
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| Ensure healthy environmental processes in the world's richest river basins and ecoregions, including some threatened by unsustainable infrastructure » Read more |
Protect and sustainably manage 250 million hectares of representative wetlands by 2010 » Read more |
Promote the adoption by government and industry of policies and techniques that conserve life in rivers and reduce poverty for dependent communities » Read more |
Conserving the source of life
WWF proposes alternative solutions to protect the future of our wetlands, lakes and rivers from common unsustainable practices.- Wetlands conservation and restoration instead of drainage for land development.
Protection and restoration of wetlands and improved management and use will allow them to provide rich goods and services including water supply. The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar, 1971) is a vital instrument for wetlands conservation worldwide. - Renewable Energy and Natural Gas instead of large dams.
Natural and bio-gas, solar and wind energy and decentralised power grids are proving to be better for the environment and more beneficial to rural communities. As the cost of these technologies comes down, they are proving competitive with conventional energy sources. - Natural flood damage reduction instead of dykes and dams.
Methods include floodplain restoration, watershed management and flood warning and evacuation systems. These all allow the rivers to continue to provide natural benefits; they are also generally much less expensive than dams and dykes. - Conservation agriculture instead of wasteful irrigation.
Practices and technologies that work with ecological processes are proving beneficial in drier parts of the world, including many that suffer from food shortages. Growing crops without ploughing the soil, harvesting rainwater, better crop selection, and fisheries management can result in large increases in food produced, without the need for wasteful, large-scale irrigation schemes. - Appreciation for rivers' natural riches instead of just their short-term economic potential.
Crucial to other practical measures will be building awareness among diverse communities - including decision-makers - of the range of natural functions and values of wetlands and river basins.

