| Literature DB >> 34161268 |
Roohollah Noori1, Mohsen Maghrebi2, Ali Mirchi3, Qiuhong Tang4,5, Rabin Bhattarai6, Mojtaba Sadegh7, Mojtaba Noury8, Ali Torabi Haghighi9, Bjørn Kløve9, Kaveh Madani10,11.
Abstract
Global groundwater assessments rank Iran among countries with the highest groundwater depletion rate using coarse spatial scales that hinder detection of regional imbalances between renewable groundwater supply and human withdrawals. Herein, we use in situ data from 12,230 piezometers, 14,856 observation wells, and groundwater extraction points to provide ground-based evidence about Iran's widespread groundwater depletion and salinity problems. While the number of groundwater extraction points increased by 84.9% from 546,000 in 2002 to over a million in 2015, the annual groundwater withdrawal decreased by 18% (from 74.6 to 61.3 km3/y) primarily due to physical limits to fresh groundwater resources (i.e., depletion and/or salinization). On average, withdrawing 5.4 km3/y of nonrenewable water caused groundwater tables to decline 10 to 100 cm/y in different regions, averaging 49 cm/y across the country. This caused elevated annual average electrical conductivity (EC) of groundwater in vast arid/semiarid areas of central and eastern Iran (16 out of 30 subbasins), indicating "very high salinity hazard" for irrigation water. The annual average EC values were generally lower in the wetter northern and western regions, where groundwater EC improvements were detected in rare cases. Our results based on high-resolution groundwater measurements reveal alarming water security threats associated with declining fresh groundwater quantity and quality due to many years of unsustainable use. Our analysis offers insights into the environmental implications and limitations of water-intensive development plans that other water-scarce countries might adopt.Entities:
Keywords: groundwater depletion; salinity; water quality; water resources management
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34161268 PMCID: PMC8237601 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2024221118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.(A) Number of groundwater extraction points including deep wells (blue), semideep wells (yellow), qanats (purple), and springs (red). (B) Annual groundwater withdrawal from extraction points in Iran and in each of the 30 subbasins during 2002 to 2015. Total annual extracted groundwater volume decreased about 18% across Iran, mainly due to limited groundwater availability. Maximum groundwater withdrawal occurred during the 2005-to-2008 drought.
Fig. 2.(A) Temporal trend of cumulative decline in groundwater resource volume and groundwater level. Both temporal trends show a continuous decline at national and subbasin scales. Salt Lake (Daryacheh Namak) and South Baluchestan subbasins experienced the largest and smallest annual average DGRV, respectively. Hirmand had the smallest annual average DGRL and Qareghom had the largest annual average DGRL. (B) Spatial distribution of average groundwater level based on the inverse distance weighting method using groundwater level data from 12,230 piezometers measured during the study period. The average groundwater level varied between 2.7 and 244.5 m. (C) Spatial distribution of “free plains” (215 plains), “critical plains” (31 plains), “prohibited plains” (236 plains), and “critical prohibited plains” (127 plains) across Iran as of 2018 (2). Free plains are areas where permits are issued for drilling new wells. Critical prohibited plains and prohibited plains refer to places where drilling new wells is banned except for potable water. Critical plains are projected to reach prohibited-plain status in the future.
Fig. 3.Annual average groundwater consumption in Iran’s agricultural (purple), domestic (blue), and industrial (yellow) sectors across the country and in each subbasin during 2002 to 2015.
Fig. 4.Spatial distribution of annual average EC (A) and changes in annual average EC from 2002 to 2015 (B). Measured annual average EC indicates very high salinity hazard (EC more than 2,250 µS/cm) in 16 out of 30 subbasins. Also, changes in annual average EC were positive (i.e., deteriorating; red bars) in almost all subbasins (except for the water-rich Anzali and Haraz subbasins; blue bars).