Інститут мистецтвознавства, фольклористики та етнології ім. М.Т. Рильського НАН України
Doi
Abstract
Groundwater is a life-sustaining resource that supplies water to
billions of people, plays a central part in irrigated agriculture
and influences the health of many ecosystems1,2. Most assessments
of global water resources have focused on surface water3–6, but
unsustainable depletion of groundwater has recently been
documented on both regional7,8 and global scales9–11. It remains
unclear how the rate of global groundwater depletion compares to
the rate of natural renewal and the supply needed to support
ecosystems. Here we define the groundwater footprint (the area
required to sustain groundwater use and groundwater-dependent
ecosystem services) and show that humans are overexploiting
groundwater in many large aquifers that are critical to agriculture,
especially in Asia and North America. We estimate that the size of
the global groundwater footprint is currently about 3.5 times the
actual area of aquifers and that about 1.7 billion people live in areas
where groundwater resources and/or groundwater-dependent
ecosystems are under threat. That said, 80 per cent of aquifers have
a groundwater footprint that is less than their area, meaning that
the net global value is driven by a few heavily overexploited
aquifers. The groundwater footprint is the first tool suitable for
consistently evaluating the use, renewal and ecosystem requirements
of groundwater at an aquifer scale. It can be combined
with the water footprint and virtual water calculations12–14, and
be used to assess the potential for increasing agricultural yields
with renewable groundwaterref15. The method could be modified
to evaluate other resources with renewal rates that are slow and
spatially heterogeneous, such as fisheries, forestry or soil