This article highlights the important work that has been done in this area by Professors Jasecchko and Perrone of U.C, Santa Barabara and has been excerpted from the research of the study cited below. All footnotes for the statement of facts can be found in the original article.
Jasechko, S., Seybold, H., Perrone, D. et al. Rapid
groundwater decline and some cases of recovery in aquifers globally. Nature 625,
715–721 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06879-8
In many parts of the world groundwater serves as the primary
or a significant source of water for many homes, farms, industries and cities.
Unsustainable groundwater use and changes in rainfall can cause groundwater
levels to fall, indicating depletion of groundwater resources. Groundwater
depletion can threaten ecosystems and economies. Specifically, groundwater
depletion can damage infrastructure through land subsidence, impair ecosystems
through streamflow depletion, jeopardize agricultural productivity, and
compromise water supplies as wells run dry. Groundwater is both used for
water supply and serves to support steam flow between rain storms. Groundwater
comes from rainwater and snow melt percolating into the ground.
The authors analyzed groundwater-level trends for 170,000
monitoring wells and 1,693 aquifer systems in countries that encompass
approximately 75% of global groundwater withdrawals. (Note that our own Virginia aquifer systems were comparatively stable over the time period.) The authors
complemented measurements from monitoring wells with data from the Gravity
Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE). The GRACE mission consists of twin
satellites that precisely measure the distance between them as they orbit the
Earth. In this way, the satellites detect small fluctuations in the planet’s
gravity, which can at large scales be translated to changes in aquifers.
The authors findings provide the most comprehensive analysis
of global groundwater levels to date. The work revealed that groundwater is
dropping in 71% of the aquifers. And this depletion is accelerating in many
places: the rates of groundwater decline in the 1980s and ’90s has increased since
2000 to the present. The accelerating
declines are occurring in nearly three times as many places as they would
expect by chance.
They found that rapid groundwater-level declines (>0.5 meter
per year) are widespread in the twenty-first century, especially in dry regions
with extensive croplands. Though I should note that irrigation is only
necessary to make food for people. Critically, they found that groundwater-level
declines have accelerated over the past four decades in 30% of the world’s
regional aquifers. This widespread acceleration in groundwater-level deepening
highlights an urgent need for more effective measures to address groundwater
depletion.
Their analysis also reveals specific cases in which
depletion trends have been reversed following policy changes, managed aquifer
recharge and surface-water diversions, demonstrating the potential for depleted
aquifer systems to recover if appropriate action is taken. This should serve as
a warning that our groundwater resources need to be managed sustainability. The
Trends in groundwater levels were found to differ from well to well, and groundwater
decline can be found even in regions in which nearby groundwater levels are
stable or rising, and vice versa. This
observation highlights the importance of analyzing groundwater-level trends at
the scales defined by the boundaries of individual aquifer systems.
The authors also analyzed precipitation variability over the
past four decades for almost a third of the aquifers. Within this group they
found that 90% of aquifers where declines were accelerating are in places where
conditions have gotten drier over the last 40 years. These trends have likely
reduced groundwater recharge and increased demand. They state that on the other
hand, climate variability can also enable groundwater to rebound where
conditions become wetter.
Their work indicates that climatic trends, hydrogeologic
conditions, groundwater withdrawal rates, land uses and management approaches have
resulted in widespread, rapid and accelerating groundwater-level declines.
Nevertheless, the compiled in situ observations also capture numerous cases in
which declines in groundwater levels have slowed, stopped or reversed following
intervention. They found that in 265 of the aquifer systems in the analysis,
groundwater-level declines have slowed or reversed, or groundwater levels have risen.
In general, rates of groundwater-level increasing are much
slower than rates of groundwater-level decline. Of the aquifer systems with
rising twenty-first century groundwater levels, only 6% are rising faster than
−0.2 meters per year. By contrast, of the aquifer systems with deepening
twenty-first century groundwater levels, 25% are falling faster than 0.2 meters
per year. Furthermore, across these aquifer systems, the average rate of
twenty-first century deepening exceeds the average rate of shallowing by a
factor of four. Thus, rapidly rising groundwater levels are rare, but they
demonstrate that aquifer recovery is possible, especially following policy
changes, managed aquifer recharge, and inter-basin surface water-transfers.
What this study says is we need to actively manage the groundwater (in
conjunction with surface water) for a sustainable future. Remember, Of all the
water on earth only about 3% is fresh;
however, only ½% of the water on earth is available for mankind to use. The rest
of the fresh water is locked away in ice, super deep groundwater or polluted
beyond redemption.
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