: Maintaining water supply is linked to our daily routine and is a vital issue for every individual in Somalia and around the world. Sustainable water supply systems should provide an adequate quantity and quality of water for a given demand without compromising future capacity to expand that volume and superiority. Water frameworks in the realm of sustainable progress must not include exploitation of water in the strict sense, but must include frameworks in which the use of water is generally required. Water is accordingly at the center of climate change adaptation as it is the central link between the climate system, mortal society and the environment. For Somalia, water is the mainstay of social, economic, and environmental growth and component. Nevertheless, the increasing pressure on water and the associated disaster is a growing problem. Somalia is a water scarce country with just 411 cum of renewable freshwater per capita (as of 2017 [01]) (World Bank, 2020). This is a glaring decline over time from 2,087 cum in 1962 [2] (ibid.) and far below the initial figure of 1,000 cum per capita per time advocated by UN. In the face of rapid population growth, the deteriorating superiority of groundwater resources due to overexploitation, overpopulation, and pollution poses an additional challenge. In addition, these threats are exacerbated by climate change, which has manifested itself in alternating waterfalls and water scarcity. As the mean periodic water decline is projected to increase by 1%, 3%, and 4% by 2030, 2050, and 2080, respectively [3] (using the 1981-2000 reference period) (FGS, 2015), and combined with increasing variability, more severe failures and cataracts are expected in the coming years. Climate change, environmental degradation, and the increasing struggle for scarce water, strained rangelands, and other natural reserves are the main causes of insubstantiality, degradation, risky poverty, and food insecurity.