TY - JOUR
T1 - Global water resources and the role of groundwater in a resilient water future
AU - Scanlon, Bridget R.
AU - Fakhreddine, Sarah
AU - Rateb, Ashraf
AU - de Graaf, Inge
AU - Famiglietti, Jay
AU - Gleeson, Tom
AU - Grafton, R. Quentin
AU - Jobbagy, Esteban
AU - Kebede, Seifu
AU - Kolusu, Seshagiri Rao
AU - Konikow, Leonard F.
AU - Long, Di
AU - Mekonnen, Mesfin
AU - Schmied, Hannes Mueller
AU - Mukherjee, Abhijit
AU - MacDonald, Alan
AU - Reedy, Robert C.
AU - Shamsudduha, Mohammad
AU - Simmons, Craig T.
AU - Sun, Alex
AU - Taylor, Richard G.
AU - Villholth, Karen G.
AU - Vörösmarty, Charles J.
AU - Zheng, Chunmiao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2023/1/31
Y1 - 2023/1/31
N2 - Water is a critical resource, but ensuring its availability faces challenges from climate extremes and human intervention. In this Review, we evaluate the current and historical evolution of water resources, considering surface water and groundwater as a single, interconnected resource. Total water storage trends have varied across regions over the past century. Satellite data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) show declining, stable and rising trends in total water storage over the past two decades in various regions globally. Groundwater monitoring provides longer-term context over the past century, showing rising water storage in northwest India, central Pakistan and the northwest United States, and declining water storage in the US High Plains and Central Valley. Climate variability causes some changes in water storage, but human intervention, particularly irrigation, is a major driver. Water-resource resilience can be increased by diversifying management strategies. These approaches include green solutions, such as forest and wetland preservation, and grey solutions, such as increasing supplies (desalination, wastewater reuse), enhancing storage in surface reservoirs and depleted aquifers, and transporting water. A diverse portfolio of these solutions, in tandem with managing groundwater and surface water as a single resource, can address human and ecosystem needs while building a resilient water system.
AB - Water is a critical resource, but ensuring its availability faces challenges from climate extremes and human intervention. In this Review, we evaluate the current and historical evolution of water resources, considering surface water and groundwater as a single, interconnected resource. Total water storage trends have varied across regions over the past century. Satellite data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) show declining, stable and rising trends in total water storage over the past two decades in various regions globally. Groundwater monitoring provides longer-term context over the past century, showing rising water storage in northwest India, central Pakistan and the northwest United States, and declining water storage in the US High Plains and Central Valley. Climate variability causes some changes in water storage, but human intervention, particularly irrigation, is a major driver. Water-resource resilience can be increased by diversifying management strategies. These approaches include green solutions, such as forest and wetland preservation, and grey solutions, such as increasing supplies (desalination, wastewater reuse), enhancing storage in surface reservoirs and depleted aquifers, and transporting water. A diverse portfolio of these solutions, in tandem with managing groundwater and surface water as a single resource, can address human and ecosystem needs while building a resilient water system.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147143968&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s43017-022-00378-6
DO - 10.1038/s43017-022-00378-6
M3 - Review article
SN - 2662-138X
VL - 4
SP - 87
EP - 101
JO - Nature Reviews Earth and Environment
JF - Nature Reviews Earth and Environment
IS - 2
ER -