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The Nexus We Ignore: How Water Connects Energy, Health, and the Environment

byFeatured Expert: Dr Shweta Tyagi
April 17, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read

From the microscopic life it sustains to the megacities it powers, water remains the world’s most essential and dynamic resource. Yet, its role in shaping the interactions among energy, the environment, and human health is often underappreciated. As the global community grapples with the realities of climate change, resource scarcity, and widening socio-economic divides, understanding water’s transversality and its capacity to connect sectors and systems is central to achieving sustainable development.

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Water sits at the heart of the water–energy–environment–health (WEEH) nexus. Its management affects every facet of modern life: cooling power plants, irrigating crops, preserving ecosystems, and safeguarding communities from disease. Roughly 72% of all water withdrawals globally are used for agriculture, while energy production accounts for nearly 15% a share expected to rise as electricity generation expands to meet growing demand. 

Photo by mrjn Photography on Unsplash

This circular interdependence underscores water’s transversal role linking operational decisions in one domain to outcomes in another. An unsustainable hydropower plant, for instance, can degrade river ecosystems and local health, while poor water sanitation can impede labor productivity and economic resilience. The result is a complex system where trade-offs and synergies must be understood holistically, rather than through fragmented sectoral lenses.

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According to the World Bank, water scarcity, exacerbated by climate change, could cost some regions up to 6% of GDP by 2050 through impacts on agriculture, health, and income. Policymakers and planners must now account for cascading risks: how drought impacts hydropower reliability, how energy shortages undermine water purification, and how degraded water quality compounds public health crises. 

Geopolitics, Conflict, and the New Urgency of the Nexus

What makes the water–energy–environment–health nexus even more critical today is the rapidly evolving geopolitical landscape. Ongoing conflicts, supply chain disruptions, and strategic competition over energy and natural resources are reshaping global priorities. From tensions in energy-rich regions to conflicts impacting critical river basins, water is increasingly becoming both a casualty and a catalyst of geopolitical instability.

The energy crisis triggered by geopolitical tensions has also led many countries to revert to water-intensive fossil fuel systems or accelerate alternative energy pathways without fully accounting for water implications. Moreover, transboundary water resources are emerging as strategic assets. Shared rivers and aquifers, which sustain billions of people, are increasingly subject to competing national interests. 

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Water transversality provides a pathway for diplomacy through sustainability. By embedding water within broader energy, environmental, and health cooperation frameworks, countries can move from competition to co-management transforming shared vulnerabilities into shared opportunities.

Water’s intersection with environmental systems is equally profound. Aquatic ecosystems play a critical role in carbon cycling and biodiversity regulation, yet they are among the most sensitive to human interference. Unsustainable agricultural run-off, industrial effluents, and sewage discharge are jeopardizing freshwater bodies worldwide, threatening both ecological integrity and human health. The United Nations estimates that nearly 80% of wastewater globally is released back to the environment untreated.

Public health consequences are staggering. Unsafe water and poor sanitation cause millions of deaths annually, mostly from preventable diseases. These issues are not confined to low-income regions they also manifest through microplastics and pharmaceutical residues in water supplies, affecting health systems in wealthy nations. Strengthening the water–health link thus requires innovation in circular water management, nature-based solutions, and equitable access to clean water services.

A key barrier to progress lies in governance fragmentation. Water, energy, and environment ministries often operate in isolation, pursuing sector-specific objectives with limited coordination. The nexus approach promoted by global institutions including the United Nations advocates for policies that recognize the interconnectedness of resource systems. Effective water governance is also a matter of inclusion. Empowering local communities, especially women and marginalized groups, ensures that nexus solutions reflect real social needs.

Toward a New Paradigm of Transversality

Viewing water transversally reframes it from a single-sector commodity into a strategic enabler of systemic sustainability. It propels more efficient energy transitions, reinforces climate adaptation, protects ecosystems, and promotes public health. Integrating the WEEH nexus into development practice aligns directly with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) notably SDG 6 (clean water and sanitation), SDG 7 (affordable and clean energy), SDG 13 (climate action), and SDG 3 (good health and well-being). Addressing one goal in isolation is no longer viable; progress requires interlinked action across them all.

The future of sustainable growth depends on this shift in mindset. By adopting water transversality as a guiding principle, governments, industries, and citizens can move beyond reactive crisis management toward a proactive, resilient framework, one that harnesses the full potential of interconnected systems. In an era marked not only by climate risks but also geopolitical uncertainty, water stands as both a unifying force and a strategic imperative, our most reliable conduit of balance, cooperation, and life itself.

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Tags: EnergyEnvironmentHealthSustainable GrowthThe United NationsWater Transversality
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Featured Expert: Dr Shweta Tyagi

Featured Expert: Dr Shweta Tyagi

Dr. Shweta Tyagi is a development sector professional and the Chief Functionary at the India Water Foundation with over 22 years of professional experience in sustainable development. Her work spans key areas such as water and its interlinkages, climate change, social development, and livelihood generation.

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