The Free Press Journal

Freshwater may become history for Indians soon

-

India is among the hotspots where overuse of water resources has caused a serious decline in the availabili­ty of freshwater, according to a first-of-itskind study using an array of NASA satellite observatio­ns of Earth.

Scientists led by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in the US used data on human activities to map locations where freshwater is changing around the globe and why. The study, published in the journal Nature, found that Earth’s wet land areas are getting wetter and dry areas are getting drier due to a variety of factors, including human water management, climate change and natural cycles.

Areas in northern and eastern India, the Middle East, California and Australia are among the hotspots where overuse of water resources has caused a serious decline in the availabili­ty of freshwater that is already causing problems, ‘The Guardian’ reported.

Study led by NASA reveals that India is one of the hotspots where water resources are declining at a faster rate

In northern India, groundwate­r extraction for irrigation of crops such as wheat and rice have caused a rapid decline in available water, despite rainfall being normal throughout the period studied, the report said.

“The fact that extraction­s already exceed recharge during normal precipitat­ion does not bode well for the availabili­ty of groundwate­r during future droughts,” researcher­s said.

The team used 14 years of observatio­ns from the US/German-led Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) spacecraft mission to track global trends in freshwater in 34 regions around the world. “This is the first time that we have used observatio­ns from multiple satellites in a thorough assessment of how freshwater availabili­ty is changing everywhere on Earth,” said Matt Rodell of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

“What we are witnessing is major hydrologic change”, said Jay Famigliett­i of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

“We see a distinctiv­e pattern of the wet land areas of the world getting wetter – those are the high latitudes and the tropics — and the dry areas in between getting dryer. Embedded within the dry areas we see multiple hotspots resulting from groundwate­r depletion,” said Famigliett­i.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India