Credit: Tiago Fioreze / Wikipedia
Groundwater
extraction and other land water contribute about three times less to sea level
rise than previous estimates, according to a new study published in the journal
Nature Climate Change. The study does not change the overall picture of
future sea level rise, but provides a much more accurate understanding of the
interactions between water on land, in the atmosphere, and the oceans, which
could help to improve future models of sea level rise.
"Projecting
accurate sea
level rise is important, because rising sea level is a threat to
people who live near the ocean and in small islands," explains IIASA
researcher Yoshihide Wada, who led the study. "Some low-lying areas will
have more frequent flooding, and very low-lying land could be submerged
completely. This could also damage substantially coastal infrastructure."
Sea
level has risen 1.7 mm per year over the 20th and the early 21st century, a
trend that is expected to continue as climate
change further warms the planet. Researchers have attributed the
rising seas to a combination of factors including melting ice caps and
glaciers, thermal expansion (water expands as it gets
warmer), and the extraction of groundwater for human use.
Land
water contributions are small in comparison to the contribution of ice melt and
thermal expansion, yet they have been increasing, leading to concerns that this
could exacerbate the problem of sea level rise caused by climate change.
However,
much uncertainty remains about how much different sources contribute to sea
level rise. In fact, sea level has actually risen more than researchers could
account for from the known sources, leading to a gap between observed and
modeled global sea-level budget.
Previous
studies, including estimates used in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report, had
assumed that nearly 100% of extracted groundwater ended up in the ocean. The
new study improves on previous estimates by accounting for feedbacks between
the land, ocean, and atmosphere. It finds that number is closer to 80%. That
means that the gap between modeled and observed sea level rise is even wider,
suggesting that other processes are contributing more water than previously
estimated.
"During
the 20th century and early 21st century, cumulative groundwater contribution to
global sea level was overestimated by at least 10 mm," says Wada. In fact,
the new study shows that from 1971 to 2010, the contribution of land water to
global sea level rise was actually slightly negative - meaning that more water
was stored in groundwater and also due to reservoir impoundment behind dams.
From 1993 to 2010, the study estimates terrestrial water as contributing
positive 0.12 mm per year to sea level rise.
The study does not change the fact that future groundwater contribution to sea level will increase as groundwater extraction increases. And the increasing trend in groundwater depletion has impacts beyond sea level rise. Wada explains, "The water stored in the ground can be compared to money in the bank. If you withdraw money at a faster rate than you deposit it, you will eventually start having account-supply problems.
If we use groundwater unsustainably, in the future there might not be enough groundwater to use for food production. Groundwater depletion can also cause severe environmental problems like reduction of water in streams and lakes, deterioration of water quality, increased pumping costs, and land subsidence."
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-05-groundwater-contribute-sea.html#jCp
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