A new study
has revealed that almost a quarter of the world's population lives in places
where groundwater is being used up far too quickly. DW spoke to Dr. Marc
Bierkens, a professor of hydrology at Utrecht University.
DW:
Professor Bierkins, could you tell us what groundwater is and why we should be
concerned about it.
Marc
Bierkens: Groundwater is the water that is stored in the pores and fissures of
the geological formations below the ground. If you dig a hole in the western
part of the Netherlands, within one meter you will find that the hole will fill
with water - that's groundwater.
Has it
recently arrived or is it water that has been there for a long time?
That
differs, depending on where you are. If you are tapping shallow groundwater in
my country, the Netherlands, it might be a few months to a few years old. But
if you go to the Sahara, they have actually found water there that has been
dated up to a million years old. So, it is quite variable, but on average it's
a little older than the water you find in the rivers. It's preferred for
drinking water because it's usually much safer and much cleaner than surface
water, and less bound to be polluted.
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Irrigating crops with groundwater has improved production on Indian farms, but the region's water tables are declining |
Why is it
cleaner than the other water available?
A lot of
that water has travelled through the soil… there is air, sand grains and
fissures. The water slowly percolates through that, sort like a sponge. And it
is being filtered before it reaches the actual groundwater body.
Looking at
your findings, can you tell us what you've discovered?
We looked
at groundwater-carrying layers all over the world, these are called aquifers.
For each aquifer, we checked how much rainwater percolates down to the
groundwater per year. We also worked out how much water was extracted from the
ground. If there is more water extracted than replaced, you are depleting those
resources. It's like taking more money out of your bank account than you earn.
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Groundwater is being tapped in areas with low rainfall |
Your study
shows that some regions are headed for real trouble if action isn't taken right
away. Can you give me an example of a place where the problem is particularly
bad?
The area
that really stands out is north-western India and north-eastern Pakistan. Other
areas are north-eastern China, the central United States, the central valley of
California, places in Mexico and Saudi Arabia and Iran. Those are the hotspots
of the world.
Can you
tell us more about the situation in India?
In India,
the western part is quite dry during the growing season. Now I have to explain,
this area is tropical. There used to be just one growing season there in the
past, only during the rainy season. But they figured out how to irrigate there
so they are taking water from surface water, but also from groundwater and use
it to irrigate crops.
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Farmers in the US are redirecting surface water into the aquifers to prevent catastrophic shortages |
This means
they can have two, sometimes three harvests per year. They can do that by
continually irrigating those crops - including during dry periods. So you see
an extension of irrigated areas and that's all driven by population growth.
Population
numbers have soared in those areas. There's not enough surface water - not
enough water in rivers and lakes - to supply them. So they have been taking it
out of the groundwater. With this, they slowly entered a situation of overuse.
There are areas there where the groundwater tables are dropping more than a
meter a year.
Looking at
the situation here in Europe, what were your findings in this part of the
world?
Here the
situation is quite different. If you talk about Germany and the Netherlands,
this is an area where, on average, there is much more precipitation than
evaporation. So, we have high rates of groundwater recharge. On average, we
have sufficient groundwater to feed our needs. We also don't need to irrigate
our crops so much because we have enough rainfall.
But there
are other parts of Europe, not as severe as India, but look at south-eastern
Spain, where there is not much rainfall. It's quite dry. They have been using
groundwater as well, to irrigate crops. That has also led to groundwater
depletion. Other areas include the lower parts of the Danube, Romania and
Bulgaria. There you have irrigated crops that use groundwater. And, at least in
the summer, much more groundwater is pumped up there than recharges during that
period. So, there you also have some problems with groundwater depletion.
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New legislation in Spain protects the groundwater from exploitation |
What about
places where they were using their groundwater in ways that were not
sustainable, but are now meeting demand without overusing available resources?
In the
southeast of Spain, legislation has come into place to limit the extraction
rights of farmers, which means they have to start growing crops that are much
less dependent on water. In the central United States, in the high plains or
the Ogallala aquifer, they've been working on recharge projects. They have been
redirecting surface water into those aquifers, thereby increasing groundwater
recharge. That has reversed the decline of water tables, at least in the
northern part of that aquifer.
Dr. Marc
Bierkens is a professor of hydrology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
He is a co-author on the report 'Water balance of global aquifers revealed by
groundwater footprint' along with with Tom Gleeson of McGill University in
Montreal.
Interview: Saroja Coelho
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