WASHINGTON: The World Bank Group has launched Water Forward, a global platform designed to improve water security for more than 1 billion people by 2030, marking a broad push to link policy reform, financing and project delivery in a sector that development lenders say is central to growth, health and jobs. Announced on April 15, the initiative brings together governments, multilateral development banks, development finance institutions and other partners around country-led plans intended to expand reliable water services and strengthen resilience to droughts and floods.

The launch comes against a backdrop of widening global water stress. The World Bank Group says water underpins health systems, food production, energy supply and an estimated 1.7 billion jobs worldwide, while 4 billion people experience water scarcity. Its water strategy implementation plan also says 2.1 billion people lack safe drinking water and 3.4 billion lack safely managed sanitation, underscoring the scale of service gaps that continue to weigh on households, agriculture, cities and investment across developing economies.
At the center of Water Forward are national water compacts, under which governments set reform priorities, commit to strengthening institutions and identify investment pathways for the water sector. Fourteen countries announced national compacts at launch, with more in development, according to the World Bank. The model is intended to move beyond isolated projects by tying together policy and regulation, utility and institutional performance, and investment planning in a single framework that lenders and other partners can support at scale.
Water security and financing push
The World Bank said its own contribution under the broader platform is to deliver water security for 400 million people by 2030, while commitments from partner institutions are meant to lift the overall reach beyond 1 billion people. Institutions listed by the bank include the Asian Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Islamic Development Bank and the New Development Bank, among others, reflecting an effort to pool financing capacity and technical support across multiple lenders rather than rely on one institution alone.
Water Forward is structured to support both service expansion and system reform. World Bank materials say the platform is designed to help countries strengthen institutions, improve financial performance and develop investment-ready projects, while also drawing in governments, philanthropies and private sector actors. The approach places country ownership at the center, with each compact tailored to national priorities even as the broader framework seeks to create more predictable conditions for long-term water investment and implementation.
Scale of the global challenge
In its water strategy implementation plan for 2026 to 2030, the World Bank set out seven scalable solution areas, including urban water and sanitation service optimization, wastewater management, reuse and desalination, irrigation improvements, flood and drought risk reduction, and restoration and protection of rivers and aquifers. The strategy document says meeting clients’ water security needs would require more than $1 trillion a year, a figure that highlights the gap between current public investment and the level of spending needed to address mounting demand and climate-related stress.
The launch adds a new financing and coordination platform to a problem the bank has framed as both a development and economic priority. With more than 1.2 billion young people expected to enter the workforce in developing countries over the next 10 to 15 years, the World Bank says dependable water systems will be essential to productivity, livelihoods and the ability of economies to attract investment. The World Bank Group said Water Forward is intended to help turn water into a foundation for jobs, resilience and growth by 2030. – By Content Syndication Services.
