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Tag: aquifer

  • ‘Water bankruptcy’ — U.N. scientists say much of the world is irreversibly depleting water

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    Dozens of the world’s major rivers are so heavily tapped, they often run dry before reaching the sea. More than half of all large lakes are shrinking, and most of the world’s major underground sources are declining irreversibly as agricultural pumping drains water that took centuries or even thousands of years to accumulate.

    In a report this week, U.N. scientists warn that the world has entered a new era of “global water bankruptcy” — a term that starkly underlines the urgency of efforts needed to protect what remains.

    “For too long, we have been living beyond our hydrological means,” said lead author Kaveh Madani, director of the U.N. University’s Institute for Water, Environment and Health.

    Drawing on extensive research, the report says more and more regions of the world are effectively overspending from all their water accounts, and their reserves are dropping. The term “water crisis” is often used locally and globally, but the scientists said that denotes a temporary emergency from which a region can recover, whereas many parts of the world are depleting water beyond safe limits and are now bankrupt or approaching bankruptcy.

    Many rivers, lakes, aquifers and wetlands have been pushed past “tipping points” and cannot bounce back, the report says.

    “Millions of farmers are trying to grow more food from shrinking, polluted or disappearing water sources,” Madani said.

    An estimated 70% of water globally is used for agriculture. Where water resources are exhausted, it can mean collapsing economies, displacement and conflict. The report says about 3 billion people, and more than half of global food production, are concentrated in areas where water resources are in decline.

    The scientists said more than half of the world’s large lakes have shrunk since the 1990s. About 35% of the planet’s natural wetlands, nearly the size of the European Union in total, have been wiped out since the 1970s.

    Excessive pumping of groundwater has led to long-term declines in about 70% of the world’s major aquifers, and in many areas these declines are causing the land to sink. Land subsidence linked to groundwater overpumping, the report says, is occurring across more than 2.3 million square miles, nearly 5% of the global land area. This permanently reduces what the aquifers can hold and also worsens the risk of flooding.

    About 4 billion people endure severe water scarcity at least one month each year.

    Water bankruptcy is not only a problem in the world’s dry regions, Madani said. “Like financial bankruptcy, it’s not about how rich or poor you are. What matters is how you manage your budget.”

    And in many regions, the water people are using perpetually outstrips the supply year after year, effectively breaking the budget.

    The report points to the Colorado River and its depleted reservoirs, on which California and other western states depend, as symbols of over-promised water. Other hotspots of chronic overuse include parts of South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa.

    “We must prioritize prevention of further damage to our remaining savings,” Madani said. “By acknowledging the reality of water bankruptcy, we can finally make the hard choices that will protect people, economies and ecosystems. The longer we delay, the deeper the deficit grows.”

    Water bankruptcy also is caused by deforestation, loss of wetlands and pollution, the researchers said. These problems are compounded by climate change, which is upending the water cycle and bringing more severe droughts and floods.

    The report was released ahead of a U.N. water conference in the United Arab Emirates in December.

    Madani also authored a peer-reviewed article this week that presents a definition of water bankruptcy, saying the term is a diagnosis to “communicate the severity of the problem and the urgency of a transformative fresh start.”

    The banking analogy used throughout the report, he said, points to solutions that are similar to managing a financial bankruptcy — preserving remaining capital while cutting spending.

    Solutions for dealing with exhausted water resources will vary by region, Madani said, and will need to account for the reality that “simply taking water away from farmers can mean unemployment, immediate tension, chaotic situations,” and that farmers and others need assistance to use less water and adapt.

    In a related study published last year, scientists analyzed more than two decades of satellite data and found that vast areas of the world are losing fresh water and getting drier.

    In a recent World Bank report, researchers said global water use “increased by 25 percent from 2000 to 2019, with about a third of this increase occurring in regions already drying out.”

    Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist and professor at Arizona State University, said embracing the term water bankruptcy “is a brilliant way to convey that the water resources have been mismanaged, excessively utilized, and are no longer available for current and future generations.”

    He said water experts struggle to find the right “hook” to convey the severity and urgency of the problem, and calling it water bankruptcy promises to catch on.

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    Ian James

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  • Humanity is rapidly depleting water and much of the world is getting drier

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    For more than two decades, satellites have tracked the total amounts of water held in glaciers, ice sheets, lakes, rivers, soil and the world’s vast natural reservoirs underground — aquifers. An extensive global analysis of that data now reveals fresh water is rapidly disappearing beneath much of humanity’s feet, and large swaths of the Earth are drying out.

    Scientists are seeing “mega-drying” regions that are immense and expanding — one stretching from the western United States through Mexico to Central America, and another from Morocco to France, across the entire Middle East to northern China.

    There are two primary causes of the desiccation: rising temperatures unleashed by using oil and gas, and widespread overpumping of water that took millennia to accumulate underground.

    “These findings send perhaps the most alarming message yet about the impact of climate change on our water resources,” said Jay Famiglietti, a hydrologist and professor at Arizona State University who co-authored the study. “The rapid water cycle change that the planet has experienced over the last decade has unleashed a wave of rapid drying.”

    Since 2002, satellites have measured changes in the Earth’s gravity field to track shifts in water, both frozen and liquid. What they sent back shows that nearly 6 billion people — three-fourths of humanity — live in the 101 countries that have been losing water.

    Each year, these drying areas have been expanding by an area roughly twice the size of California.

    Canada and Russia, where large amounts of ice and permafrost are melting, are losing the most fresh water. The United States, Iran and India also rank near the top, with rising temperatures and chronic overuse of groundwater.

    Farms and cities are pulling up so much water using high-capacity pumps that much of the water evaporates and eventually ends up as rain falling over the ocean, measurably increasing sea level rise.

    Water flows from a well to irrigate an orchard in Visalia.

    Water flows from a well to irrigate an orchard in Visalia.

    (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

    The study, published in the journal Science Advances, found that these water losses now contribute more to sea level rise than the more widely understood melting of mountain glaciers or the Antarctic or Greenland ice sheets.

    The staggeringly rapid expansion of the drying regions was surprising even for the scientists. Famiglietti said it is set to worsen in many areas, leading to “widespread aridification and desertification.”

    “We found tremendous growth in the world’s land areas that are experiencing extreme drought,” Famiglietti said. “Only the tropics are getting wetter. The rest of the world’s land areas are drying.”

    The wave of drying has prompted many people across the world’s food-growing regions to drill more wells and rely more heavily on pumping groundwater.

    The researchers estimate that 68% of the water the continents are losing, not including melting glaciers, is from groundwater depletion. And much of that water is to irrigate crops.

    Where aquifer levels decline, wells and faucets increasingly sputter and run dry, people drill deeper and the land can sink as underground spaces collapse.

    The loss may be irreversible, leaving current and future generations with less water.

    Famiglietti said the potential long-term consequences are dire: Farmers will struggle to grow as much food, economic growth will be threatened, increasing numbers of people will flee drying regions, conflicts over water are already increasing, and more governments will be destabilized in countries that aren’t prepared.

    The researchers estimated that the world’s drying regions have been losing 368 billion metric tons of water per year. That’s more than double the volume of Lake Tahoe, or 10 times Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States.

    All that water, year after year, has become a major contributor to sea level rise, which is projected to cause worsening damages in the coming decades.

    Previous studies have shown dropping groundwater levels, dry regions getting drier and these water losses contributing to sea level rise. But the new study shows these changes are happening faster and on a larger scale than previously known.

    “It is quite alarming,” said Hrishikesh Chandanpurkar, an Arizona State research scientist who co-authored the study. “Water touches everything in life. The effects of its irreversible decline are bound to trickle into everything.”

    He likened the global situation to a family overspending and drawing down their savings accounts.

    “Our bank balance is consistently decreasing. This is inherently unsustainable,” Chandanpurkar said.

    The draining of groundwater, often invisible, hides how much arid regions are drawing down their reserve accounts, he said. “Once these trust funds dry out, water bankruptcy is imminent.”

    The researchers examined data from two U.S.-German satellite missions, called Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and GRACE-Follow On.

    The scientists ranked California’s Central Valley as the region where the fastest groundwater depletion is occurring, followed by parts of Russia, India and Pakistan.

    In other research, scientists have found that the last 25 years have probably been the driest in at least 1,200 years in western North America.

    Over the last decade, groundwater losses have accelerated across the Colorado River Basin.

    And farming areas that a decade ago appeared in the satellite data as hot spots of drought and groundwater depletion, such as California’s Central Valley and the Ogallala Aquifer beneath the High Plains, have expanded across the Southwest, through Mexico and into Central America.

    The satellite data show that these and other regions are not only shifting to drier conditions on average, but are also failing to “live within the means” of the water they have available, Chandanpurkar said.

    “The truth is, water is not being valued and the long-term reserves are exploited for short-term profits,” he said.

    He said he hopes the findings will prompt action to address the chronic overuse of water.

    In the study, the researchers wrote that “while efforts to slow climate change may be sputtering,” people urgently need to take steps to preserve groundwater. They called for national and global efforts to manage groundwater and “help preserve this precious resource for generations to come.”

    In many areas where groundwater levels are dropping, there are no limits on well-drilling or how much a landowner can pump, and there is no charge for the water. Often, well owners don’t even need to have a meter installed or report how much water they’re using.

    In California, farms producing vast quantities of nuts, fruits and other crops have drawn down aquifers so heavily that several thousand rural households have had their wells run dry over the last decade, and the ground has been sinking as much as 1 foot per year, damaging canals, bridges and levees.

    The state in 2014 adopted a landmark groundwater law that requires local agencies to curb widespread overpumping. But it gives many areas until 2040 to address their depletion problems, and in the meantime water levels have continued to fall.

    State officials and local agencies have begun investing in projects to capture more stormwater and replenish aquifers.

    Arizona has sought to preserve groundwater in urban areas through a 1980 law, but in much of the state, there are still no limits on how many wells can be drilled or how much water can be pumped. Over the last decade, out-of-state companies and investors have drilled deep wells and expanded large-scale farming operations in the desert to grow hay and other crops.

    Famiglietti, who was previously a senior water scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has extensively studied groundwater depletion around the world. He said he doesn’t think the leaders of most countries are aware of, or preparing for, the worsening crisis.

    “Of all the troubling findings we revealed in the study, the one thing where humanity can really make a difference quickly is the decision to better manage groundwater and protect it for future generations,” Famiglietti said. “Groundwater will become the most important natural resource in the world’s drying regions. We need to carefully protect it.”

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    Ian James, Sean Greene

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  • The innovative ways California is improving its underground water storage

    The innovative ways California is improving its underground water storage

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    As of mid-February, the Sacramento area has now received more than a foot of rain in the current water season. 

    The rain and snowfall from this winter’s storms have been swelling rivers, adding to the Sierra Nevada snowpack and hopefully replenishing reservoirs. 

    Water experts say if we don’t change the way we store and use the water we will be in trouble in the future, likely facing higher water bills and laws that seriously restrict water use. 

    There could be another way, however, if we look beneath our feet. 

    When massive storms bring lots of water to California, bodies of water like Folsom Lake have to release water to make room for more water.   

    All that water that is released heads out to sea unused. A lot of storm runoff also goes unused.   

    But what if there was a way to capture a good chunk of that unused water and store it for a drought that we know is possible? 

    That is exactly what state officials are trying to do by putting excess water underground.  

    For decades hydrogeologist Tim Godwin has been studying groundwater.  

    “This is fundamentally changing the way we look at how we manage water in the state,” Godwin said.   

    He says the state’s Dept. of Water Resources is now looking at the whole water picture. 

    “Notice I am not distinguishing groundwater from surface water… it is one resource, and they are connected, and now we are starting to manage the basins, the bottom of our system,” he said.  

    So how much water can be stored underground? 

    Imagine a standard bucket. That bucket can represent all the water in California’s lakes and rivers in one year, about 40 to 50 million acre-feet of water. 

    Four standard garbage bins —the ones that you set out on the curb every week— represent the capacity of how much water can be stored underground. 

    Even though the aquifers are not empty, they can still take two to four times the amount of water California gets in a normal year.  

    Scientists have found two main ways to get all of that water underground. 

    Roseville has been implementing one of the ways for almost two decades through the use of a reversible water pump.   

    “Roseville was key in sort of pioneering the process really from the start,” Sean Bigley with Environmental Utilities of Roseville said.  

    The massive pumps can withdraw groundwater, but when we aren’t in a drought, these pumps can put large amounts of treated water back into the ground. 

    “This past year we were able to recharge about 2000-acre feet of water.  That is 6-thousand households worth of water (in an entire year),” Bigley said.  

    It’s hard to visualize where all the water goes underground.  

    They send water hundreds of feet down, saturating layers of rock, dirt, sand and silt, replenishing the aquifers that have been slowly shrinking over decades of use. 

    The other way to get a lot of water underground fast is with groundwater basins. These big areas of land can be flooded with storm runoff, water we couldn’t otherwise capture. 

    Dr. Graham Fogg, professor emeritus of hydrogeology at UC Davis, said, “If you look across this landscape, I mean it looks all the same, so people think, ‘Oh, the aquifer is uniform.’  Well, it’s not uniform.” 

    “It’s kind of like a complex architecture underground. Where water moves quickly and where we can recharge relatively rapidly is sand and gravel,” Dr. Fogg added.  

    To find where the best, most porous soil is, the DWR uses a high-tech electromagnetic device carried high above the ground by a helicopter traveling up and down the state. 

    Think of it like a giant X-ray or MRI that looks deep into the ground, around 1,000 feet, to map where the most porous areas are located. 

    Whether it is with big basins or reversible pumps, these tools will become more important as our climate is changing and storms have the potential to get stronger. 

    “Our surface water storage can fill quickly as we saw last year, (but) then what?” Godwin said. “This is the ‘then what?’”  

    This way of thinking about groundwater storage is so different from what was applied in previous decades. It takes years to get the different water agencies and thousands of landowners on board. 

    However, cities like Roseville, as well as the state’s water administrators and countless owners, are catching on and making those changes to save California’s water future. 

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    Richard Sharp

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