The study by hydrologists from Utrecht University and the Dutch research institute Deltares noted that the rate at which these critical groundwater aquifers are being sucked dry doubled between 1960 and 2000. The trend, which contributes to the rise of sea levels, at the same time threatens the fresh water supplies around the globe.
“Both the magnitude and the severity of the phenomenon are severe,” said water expert Dr. Peter H. Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Society.
“Forty percent of our groundwater withdrawals are coming from unsustainable sources of water,” Dr. Gleick added. “This water provides a lot of our food. And we’re basically drawing down the bank account.”
Worldwide, groundwater depletion rose from 126 cubic kilometers in 1960 to 283 cubic kilometers in 2000, according to the study. China, northern India, Iran, Mexico and the American West were particularly affected.
About one quarter of the rise in global sea levels can be attributed to this transfer of fresh water into the oceans, according to the study, as much of the groundwater used for irrigation is running off into ocean-bound rivers, or evaporating into the clouds and then raining into the ocean. Melting glaciers and polar ice caps contribute to another quarter of the sea level rise, with the rest due to the expansion of warming sea water.
The study follows up on a 2005 report in the Hydrogeology Journal that found groundwater depletion to be a global problem, particularly in North Africa, the Middle East, South and Central Asia, North China, North America and Australia.
The studies point out that the easy access to pumped wells has led to a surge of groundwater use for municipal, industrial and agricultural purposes over the past 50 years. While the surge has created economic gains, it has led to declining groundwater levels, lower pump yields, increased pumping costs, deteriorating water quality and damaged aquatic ecosystems.
Source: Circle of Blue
Often landowners smugly state that they have no concern about the rising cost of municipal or water or its deterioration in quality because they have ‘good boreholes’. Fifty years ago the amount of groundwater available must have seemed endless but the growing number of boreholes running dry in recent times is extremely worrying. Another problem is groundwater pollution; we cannot assume that borehole water is safe to drink, especially if the borehole is in an urban area or near areas where acid mine drainage is a problem. An environmentally friendly solution is to collect rain water for household use.
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