Psst!
DON'T forget about Peak Oil
Forget
Peak Oil—start worrying about Peak Water
By
Todd Woody
20
May, 2013
A
report released today by the US Geological Survey (USGS) today shows
that Americans
are sucking dry the aquifers that
irrigate their crops and supply their drinking water. Between 1900
and 2008, the US lost 1,000 cubic kilometers (240 cubic miles) of
groundwater. That’s twice the volume of the water in Lake
Erie.
It
gets worse. The rate of groundwater depletion is accelerating,
according to the study of 40 major US aquifers. Between 1900 and
2008, the US lost an average of 9.2 cubic kilometers of groundwater
annually as the growth of cities and industrial agriculture tapped
underground reserves. But between 2000 and 2008, groundwater
depletion jumped 171% to an average of 25 cubic kilometers a year. In
just those nine years, the amount of water pumped from the Ogallala
aquifer, which supplies a large swath of the US, was equivalent to
32% of the water that was depleted from the Ogallala during the
entire 20th century.
“Although
groundwater depletion is rarely assessed and poorly documented, it is
becoming recognized as an increasingly serious global problem that
threatens sustainability of water supplies,” the USGS scientists
wrote.
Climate
change likely contributed to the spike as droughts reduce rainfall
and snowmelt. In California, for instance, a falloff in Sierra Nevada
mountain snow that supplies water to the state’s
multibillion-dollar agriculture industry led to increased pumping of
groundwater in the Central Valley.
And
in a scary feedback loop, sinking aquifers are contributing, albeit
only slightly, to
a rise in sea levels.
Much of the agricultural water pumped from aquifers ends up as
runoff transported by streams and rivers into the ocean. (Depleted
aquifers also result in the land sinking relative to ocean levels.)
“Groundwater depletion in the US in the years 2000-2008 can
explain more than 2% of the observed global sea-level rise during
that period,” the study states.
If
the groundwater pumping ceases, rainfall will slowly recharge
aquifers, though that process can take hundreds or thousands of
years. That time is likely to increase as climate change results in a
drier, drought-stricken world.
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