The water table is dropping all over the world’: NASA warns we’re on the path to glob

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
73
48
WASHINGTON — Drought-stricken California is not the only place draining underground aquifers in the hunt for fresh water.

It’s happening across the world, according to two new studies by U.S. researchers released Tuesday.

Twenty-one of the world’s 37 largest aquifers — in locations from India and China to the United States and France — have passed their sustainability tipping points, meaning more water is being removed than replaced from these vital underground reservoirs. Thirteen of 37 aquifers fell at rates that put them into the most troubled category.

“The situation is quite critical,” said Jay Famiglietti, senior water scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the studies’ principal investigator.

And it’s difficult to see it getting better soon. These groundwater reserves take thousands of years to accumulate and only slowly recharge with water from snowmelt and rains. Now, as drilling for water has taken off across the globe, the hidden water reservoirs are being stressed. Underground aquifers supply 35 percent of the water used by humans worldwide. Demand is even greater in times of drought. Rain-starved California is currently tapping aquifers for 60 percent of its water use, up from the usual 40 percent.

In another finding from the studies led by the University of California Irvine, scientists say that some of these aquifers may be much smaller than previously thought. Only a few of the aquifers have been mapped in detail and most estimates of aquifer water reserves have “uncertainty ranges across orders of magnitude,” according to the studies.

The new studies used NASA’s GRACE satellites to take unprecedentedly precise measurements of the groundwater reservoirs hidden beneath the ground. The satellites detected subtle changes in the gravitational pull of the earth’s surface. Water is exceptionally heavy and exerts a greater pull on orbiting spacecraft. As the satellites flew overhead, slight changes in aquifer water levels were charted over a decade, from 2003 to 2013.

“The water table is dropping all over the world,” Familglietti said. “There’s not an infinite supply of water.”

In Australia, the Canning Basin in the country’s western end had the third-highest rate of depletion in the world. But the Great Artesian Basin to the east was among the healthiest.

The difference, the studies found, is likely attributable to heavy mining near the Canning Basin. Mining is a water-intensive activity.

In the United States, California’s Central Valley Aquifer was in the most trouble. It is being drained to irrigate farm fields. California only last year passed its first extensive groundwater regulations, allowing for local control over groundwater. But the new law could take two decades to take effect.

Also running a negative balance was the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains Aquifer, which stretches across the Gulf Coast and Florida. But three other aquifers in the middle of the country appeared to be in relatively good shape.

The studies were published Tuesday in the Water Resources Research journal.

Familglietti said he hoped the findings would spur discussion and further research into how much groundwater is left.

“We need to get our heads together on how we manage groundwater,” he said, “because we’re running out of it.”

© Copyright (c) National Post


‘The water table is dropping all over the world’: NASA warns we’re on the path to global drought
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
How is our desalinization technology ?

How much and how fast can we do it ?

Ah ****it, I'll google it...........sometime

The USA has parts of two or three great lakes. Build a pipeline.
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
47,127
8,145
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.canadianforums.ca
The USA has parts of two or three great lakes. Build a pipeline.

1. the lake is a shared lake with Canada and I would hope Canada tells the USA to pound sand to your idea. However if they want to suck Lake Michigan dry, have at'er.

2. is this what you want for the Great Lakes?? World's Fourth-Largest Lake Nearly Dried Up



World's Fourth-Largest Lake Nearly Dried Up : News : Nature World News
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
1. the lake is a shared lake with Canada and I would hope Canada tells the USA to pound sand to your idea. However if they want to suck Lake Michigan dry, have at'er.

2. is this what you want for the Great Lakes?? World's Fourth-Largest Lake Nearly Dried Up



World's Fourth-Largest Lake Nearly Dried Up : News : Nature World News


Course not, but no one asks me.............Big bro will do what he wants, and the people pounding salt
will be us...............

Go figure the Ruskies eh.8O
 

skookumchuck

Council Member
Jan 19, 2012
2,467
0
36
Van Isle
Has anyone wondered what happened to the simple scientific fact that matter cannot be destroyed, only changed. So what does water become? Or better still where does it go? The ocean? Desalinize.
I used to envy those in the southern regions, i like it just fine here now.
 

eh1eh

Blah Blah Blah
Aug 31, 2006
10,749
103
48
Under a Lone Palm
:lol: maybe they can divert the Columbia River.. on the Washington/ Oregon border.. less distance to cover from the great lakes..

It just empties into the ocean, a diversion would save on desalination..

https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Columbia_River

Ya, since all the salmon are dead, no need to have access to the ocean to the Columbia.
Maybe they could solve the drought problems by damning the Colorado river and... oh,never mind.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
118,362
14,510
113
Low Earth Orbit
Ya, since all the salmon are dead, no need to have access to the ocean to the Columbia.
Maybe they could solve the drought problems by damning the Colorado river and... oh,never mind.

Salmon are dead? Did you know can't find their way home thanks to magnetic pole shift not pollution, climate change or fracking?

The prairie provinces and states need it in winter. What would you rather have, no water, or brine.

In winter?