 Colleagues, friends, water is our life force. For each and every one of us, our communities, our planet. Refreshing, nourishing, healing. But for over 2 billion people, accessing safe and clean water is a struggle, if not an impossibility. And increasingly, water challenges are intensifying tension and conflict. A threat to peace, water security risks worsening as the triple planetary crisis continues to unfold and poor management of water persists. On World Water Day, let us resolve to see water instead as a tool for peace, reaffirming access to safe drinking water and sanitation as human rights and recognizing the power that water has as such a valued and shared need to bring people together. We must place human rights at the center of water governance, ensuring the rights of all including women and girls, marginalized groups and water defenders, empowering people and communities so that their lived experiences and insights inform the ways in which water resources and ecosystems are managed. Governments need to accelerate action on eliminating discrimination and inequalities when it comes to access to water and sanitation. They must bring renewed energy to the task of building sustainable cooperation on water resources between communities and neighbors. In conflicts, civilian water infrastructure and resources must be protected without fail. And we need to grasp just how crucial it is to the delicate process of peacebuilding that water governance structures are developed in an inclusive way and with equality at their core. On World Water Day, I recognize with deep gratitude the efforts of all those working tirelessly to ensure the rights to water and sanitation are realized. Let us move together forward to shape a future where water unites rather than divides us.