The World Economic Forum (WEF) has come up with a new approach for imposing its globalist agenda on the world: leveraging the global water crisis. It’s an idea the United Nations appears to be fully on board with, as both groups have held conferences on the matter recently at which they made their intentions clear to anyone who was actually paying attention.

Earlier this year, the UN held its first Water Conference in 46 years. Writing about the conference on the WEF’s website, Dutch Special Envoy for International Water Affairs Henk Ovik and Tajikistan’s Special Envoy of the President to the Water and Climate Coalition Leaders Sulton Rahimzoda stated: “We hope it could result in a ‘Paris moment’ for water – with outcomes as critical for water as the Paris Agreement has been for climate action.”

They shared some shocking statistics, with an infographic proclaiming that 1.6 billion people around the world will lack “safely managed drinking water” by the year 2030. The group says it is hoping to use the water crisis to raise awareness and determine actions that can help achieve water-related goals that the world can agree on.

On the website for the conference outlining the “Uniting the world for water” project, the UN said: “Water is a dealmaker for the Sustainable Development Goals … But our progress on water related goals and targets remains alarmingly off track, jeopardizing the entire sustainable development agenda.”

However, the aforementioned WEF article hinted at the real reason water is suddenly such a big focus.

“The Global Commission on the Economics of Water, launched at the WEF’s Annual Meeting in 2022, will report on game-changing ways to value and manage water as a common good,” Ovik and Rahimzoda wrote.

The part of that quote that should be setting off alarm bells is “common good,” which is a term that is often used to denote collectivism and social control.