Fresh
water demand driving sea-level rise faster than glacier melt
Trillions
of tonnes of water have been pumped up from deep underground
reservoirs in every part of the world, says report
For
three decades, Saudi Arabia has been drilling for water from
underground aquifers. Engineers and farmers have tapped hidden
reserves of water to grow grains, fruit and vegetables in the desert
of Wadi As-Sirhan Basin. Photograph: Landsat/Nasa
20
May, 2012
Humanity's
unquenchable thirst for fresh water is driving up sea levels even
faster than melting glaciers, according to new research. The massive
impact of the global population's growing need for water on rising
sea levels is revealed in a comprehensive assessment of all the ways
in which people use water.
Trillions
of tonnes of water have been pumped up from deep underground
reservoirs in every part of the world and then channelled into fields
and pipes to keep communities fed and watered. The water then flows
into the oceans, but far more quickly than the ancient aquifers are
replenished by rains. The global tide would be rising even more
quickly but for the fact that man-made reservoirs have, until now,
held back the flow by storing huge amounts of water on land.
"The
water being taken from deep wells is geologically old – there is no
replenishment and so it is a one way transfer into the ocean,"
said sea level expert Prof Robert Nicholls, at the University of
Southampton. "In the long run, I would still be more concerned
about the impact of climate change, but this work shows that even if
we stabilise the climate, we might still get sea level rise due to
how we use water." He said the sea level would rise 10 metres or
more if all the world's groundwater was pumped out, though he said
removing every drop was unlikely because some aquifers contain salt
water. The sea level is predicted to rise by 30-100cm by 2100,
putting many coasts at risk, by increasing the number of storm surges
that swamp cities.
The
new research was led by Yadu Pokhrel, at the University of Tokyo, and
published in Nature Geoscience. "Our study is based on a
state-of-the-art model which we have extensively validated in our
previous works," he said. "It suggests groundwater is a
major contributor to the observed sea level rise." The team's
results also neatly fill a gap scientists had identified between the
rise in sea level observed by tide gauges and the contribution
calculated to come from melting ice.
The
drawing of water from deep wells has caused the sea to rise by an
average of a millimetre every year since 1961, the researchers
concluded. The storing of freshwater in reservoirs has offset about
40% of that, but the scientists warn that this effect is diminishing.
"Reservoir
water storage has levelled off in recent years," they write. "By
contrast, the contribution of groundwater depletion has been
increasing and may continue to do so in the future, which will
heighten the concerns regarding the potential sea level rise in the
21st century." Nicholls, who was not part of the research team,
said there are a wide range of projections of future sea level. "But
this work makes one worry about the uncertainty at the high end
more," he said.
The
researchers compared the contribution of groundwater withdrawal and
reservoir storage to the more familiar causes of rising sea level:
ice melted by global warming and the expansion of the ocean as it
warms. The pumping out of groundwater is five times bigger in scale
than the melting of the planet's two great ice caps, in Greenland and
Antarctica, and twice as great as both the melting of all other
glaciers and ice or the thermal expansion of seawater.
The
scale of groundwater use is as vast as it is unsustainable: over the
past half century 18 trillion tonnes of water has been removed from
underground aquifers without being replaced. In some parts of the
world, the stores of water have now been exhausted. Saudi Arabia, for
example, was self-sufficient in wheat, grown in the desert using
water from deep, fossil aquifers. Now, many of the aquifers have run
dry and most wheat is imported, with all growing expected to end in
2016. In northern India, the level of the water table is dropping by
4cm every year.
Pokhrel's
team also investigated the effect of rising temperatures on other
ways in which water is stored on land. They found that the drying of
soils and loss of snow added almost a tenth of a millimetre per year
to sea level rise.
Prof
Jonathan Bamber, of the University of Bristol, said the washing of
vast volumes of groundwater into the sea was a large factor, but did
not appear to have accelerated over the past 50 years, despite the
world population more than doubling in that time. In contrast, the
melting of ice sheets and glaciers as global temperatures rise has
accelerated over the past 20 years, he said: "So it is pretty
clear to me that this will be the dominant contributor in the
future."
The
new work reveals the surprisingly large effect of deep water wells on
the oceans, said Martin Vermeer, at Aalto University in Finland, but
would not radically alter overall estimates of sea level rise by
2100. "It's an incremental change, nothing revolutionary,
assuming the result of this paper holds up. Science is never built
upon a single result."
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