Literature DB >> 16007924

Groundwater and human development: challenges and opportunities in livelihoods and environment.

T Shah1.   

Abstract

At less than 1000 km3/year, the world's annual use of groundwater is 1.5% of renewable water resource but contributes a lion's share of water-induced human welfare. Global groundwater use however has increased manifold in the past 50 years; and the human race has never had to manage groundwater use on such a large scale. Sustaining the massive welfare gains groundwater development has created without ruining the resource is a key water challenge facing the world today. In exploring this challenge, we have focused a good deal on conditions of resource occurrence but less so on resource use. I offer a typology of five groundwater demand systems as Groundwater Socio-ecologies (GwSE), each embodying a unique pattern of interactions between socio-economic and ecological variables, and each facing a distinct groundwater governance challenge. During the past century, a growing corpus of experiential knowledge has accumulated in the industrialized world on managing groundwater in various uses and contexts. A daunting global groundwater issue today is to apply this knowledge intelligently to by far the more formidable challenge that has arisen in developing regions of Asia and Africa, where groundwater irrigation has evolved into a colossal anarchy supporting billions of livelihoods but threatening the resource itself.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16007924

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Water Sci Technol        ISSN: 0273-1223            Impact factor:   1.915


  3 in total

1.  Water quality and chronic kidney disease of unknown aetiology (CKDu) in the dry zone region of Sri Lanka: impacts on well-being of village communities and the way forward.

Authors:  Uthpala Pinto; Bhadranie Thoradeniya; Basant Maheshwari
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2019-12-10       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Modern groundwater reaches deeper depths in heavily pumped aquifer systems.

Authors:  Melissa Thaw; Merhawi GebreEgziabher; Jobel Y Villafañe-Pagán; Scott Jasechko
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 17.694

3.  Groundwater depletion will reduce cropping intensity in India.

Authors:  Meha Jain; Ram Fishman; Pinki Mondal; Gillian L Galford; Nishan Bhattarai; Shahid Naeem; Upmanu Lall; Ruth S DeFries
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-02-24       Impact factor: 14.136

  3 in total

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