NASA
Bombshell: Global Groundwater Crisis Threatens Our Food Supplies And
Our Security
Joe
Romm
31
October, 2014
An
alarming satellite-based analysis from NASA finds that the world is
depleting groundwater — the water stored unground in soil and
aquifers — at an unprecedented rate.
A
new Nature Climate Change piece, “The
global groundwater crisis,”
by James Famiglietti, a leading hydrologist at the NASA Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, warns that “most of the major aquifers in
the world’s arid and semi-arid zones, that is, in the dry parts of
the world that rely most heavily on groundwater, are experiencing
rapid rates of groundwater depыetion.”
The
groundwater at some of the world’s largest aquifers — in the U.S.
High Plains, California’s Central Valley, China, India, and
elsewhere — is being pumped out “at far greater rates than it can
be naturally replenished.”
The
most worrisome fact: “nearly all of these underlie the word’s
great agricultural regions and are primarily responsible for their
high productivity.”
And
this is doubly concerning in our age of unrestricted carbon pollution
because it is precisely these semiarid regions that are projected to
see drops in precipitation and/or soil moisture, which will sharply
boost the chances of civilization-threatening
megadroughts and Dust-Bowlification.
As
these increasingly drought-prone global bread-baskets lose their
easily accessible ground-water too, we end up with a death spiral:
“Moreover, because the natural human response to drought is to pump
more groundwater continued groundwater depletion will very likely
accelerate mid-latitude drying, a problem that will be exacerbated by
significant population growth in the same regions.”
So
this is very much a crisis, albeit an under-reported one. But why is
NASA the one sounding the alarm? How has the space agency been able
to study what happens underground? The answer is that NASA’s
Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite mission can
track the earth’s mass over space and time — and large changes in
the amount of water stored underground cause an observable change in
mass.
Here
is California’s groundwater depletion over the last three years as
observed by GRACE:
NASA:
“The ongoing California drought is evident in these maps of dry
season (Sept–Nov) total water storage anomalies (in millimeter
equivalent water height; anomalies with respect to 2005–2010).
California’s Sacramento and San Joaquin river basins have lost
roughly 15 km3 of total water per year since 2011 — more water than
all 38 million Californians use for domestic and municipal supplies
annually — over half of which is due to groundwater pumping in the
Central Valley.”
Certainly,
the combined threat of mega-drought and groundwater depletion in the
U.S. breadbaskets should be cause for concern and action by itself.
But
we should also worry about what is happening around the globe, if for
no other reason than it inevitably affects our security. As I wrote
last year, “Warming-Fueled
Drought Helped Spark Syria’s Civil War.”
Dr.
Famiglietti explains the risk:
Further declines in groundwater availability may well trigger more civil uprising and international violent conflict in the already water-stressed regions of the world, and new conflict in others. From North Africa to the Middle East to South Asia, regions where it is already common to drill over 2 km [kilometers] to reach groundwater, it is highly likely that disappearing groundwater could act as a flashpoint for conflict.
Outside
of this country, NASA has observed aquifer declines in “the North
China Plain, Australia’s Canning Basin, the Northwest Sahara
Aquifer System, the Guarani Aquifer in South America … and the
aquifers beneath northwestern India and the Middle East.”
Water
storage declines (mm equivalent water height) in several of the
world’s major aquifers.
Famiglietti
says that groundwater “acts as the key strategic reserve in times
of drought, in particular during prolonged events,” such as we’re
seeing in the West, Brazil, and Australia:
Like money in the bank, groundwater sustains societies through the lean times of little incoming rain and snow. Hence, without a sustainable groundwater reserve, global water security is at far greater risk than is currently recognized.
Yes,
we can stave off bankruptcy a little longer despite our unsustainable
lifestyle by taking money from our children’s bank accounts. As
we reported
last year,
we’re taking $7.3 trillion a year in natural capital — arable
land, potable water, livable climate, and so on — from our children
without paying for it. In short, humanity has constructed thegrandest
of Ponzi schemes,
whereby current generations have figured out how to live off the
wealth of future generations.
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