imagine going to get a drink of water and discovering that the faucet is dry ; or jumping into the of shower to cool off on a steamy hot day and discovering that there's no water... take water for granted. We think there's plenty of it oceans, lakes, rivers, and streams. But this is not the case. The water we are using now is the very same water that the dinosaurs used millions of years ago. It is simply recycled over and over again. There will never be any more B. on Earth than there is now. Most of the water on our planet (97%) is salt water stored in oceans. The remaining 3 percent is freshwater- and most of that is locked up in ice caps and glaciers. In fact, less than 1 percent freshwater. It's alarming that at the projected rate of population of the planet's water is usable growth, humanity will use up more than 70 percent of all accessible freshwater by 2025. to people in more ways than we might think. We need water for cooking, and recreation. We eat aquatic plants and fish. We use water to irrigate Water is transportation, products. Water is indispensable bathing, power, and to manufacture our crops, to produce hydroelectric for human health and well-being. People can live for two months without food, but will die in less than a week without water. One of the greatest challenges facing the world in the twenty-first century is to preserve our population more proclaimed the years percent Assembly water the natural reserves and to provide that currently lacks easy access to it. The United Nations General Decade for Action "Water for Life." from 2005 to 2015 as the International