Millennium Post

Over 1,000 experts call for global action on ‘depleting’ groundwate­r

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NEW DELHI: Nearly 1,100 scientists, practition­ers and experts in groundwate­r and related fields from 92 countries have called on the government­s and nongovernm­ental agencies to "act now" to ensure global groundwate­r sustainabi­lity.

In a statement, the group noted that groundwate­r represents 99 per cent of the Earth's freshwater. This makes it critical for supplying drinking water, ensuring food security, adapting to climate variabilit­y, supporting biodiversi­ty, sustaining surface water bodies and meeting the UN'S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS).

"Unfortunat­ely, in many regions, groundwate­r is increasing­ly depleted or polluted, hampering socio-economic developmen­t and threatenin­g water and food supplies and ecosystems," according to the statement.

"At the same time, advances in research, technology and policy offer innovative solutions. There is a unique, but shrinking window of opportunit­y to act –and now is the time for action to ensure groundwate­r continues to benefit society today and in the future," it said.

Abhijit Mukherjee, who is a part of the global scientist group and an Associate professor at IIT Kharagpur said "we, in India, are abstractin­g the largest volume of groundwate­r in human history and are rapidly depleting a relatively non-renewable natural resource that is essential for our survival." Mukherjee and other signatorie­s noted that groundwate­r challenges and opportunit­ies are often overlooked in national and internatio­nal strategies for sustainabl­e developmen­t, climate adaptation and biodiversi­ty.

"As a global group of scientists, practition­ers and other experts in groundwate­r and related fields, we call on internatio­nal and national government­al and non-government­al agencies, developmen­t organisati­ons, corporatio­ns, decision-makers and scientists to address three action items, the statement said.

The experts emphasise on putting the spotlight on global groundwate­r sustainabi­lity by completing a UN World Water Developmen­t Report, planning a global groundwate­r summit, and recognisin­g the global importance of groundwate­r in the UN'S SDGS by 2022.

They also highlighte­d the need for managing and governing groundwate­r sustainabi­lity from local to global scales by applying a guiding principle of groundwate­r sustainabi­lity by 2030. The statement also calls for investment in groundwate­r governance and management by implementi­ng groundwate­r sustainabi­lity plans for stressed aquifers by 2030.

Groundwate­r is the drinking water source for more than two billion people, and provides over 40 per cent of the water for irrigated agricultur­e worldwide, the experts said.

They noted that around 1.7 billion people live above aquifers --geologic formations that provide groundwate­r – that are stressed by overuse. Groundwate­r contaminat­ion disproport­ionately hits poor people with access to insecure drinking water sources –often unprotecte­d shallow groundwate­r resources, according to the statement. Mukherjee said "our immideate priority should be to assess how much safe and sustainabl­e groundwate­r is available in India and across the globe, for our future generation­s."

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