'Invisible' Solution to Water Shortages Lies Beneath Our Feet : Daily Current Affairs

Relevance: GS-3: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation.

Key Phrases: Water Resource, Human Exploitation, Groundwater, World Water Development Report 2022, UNESCO, India and SDG 6, Freshwater, Ecological and Social Consequences, Fossil Water, Over-Extraction, Land Subsidence, Challenges, Sub-Saharan Africa, AquaMAP.

Why in News?

  • Exploration companies that gather vast information underground, including water, should share data for sustainable use.

Background:

  • Water shortages, already affecting billions of people worldwide, are expected to worsen in the coming decades - linked to drought, pollution, rising sea levels and poor management - but an "invisible" solution may be hiding underground.
  • With water usage seen rising by 1 per cent each year over the next three decades, a U.N. report predicted on recently that so-called groundwater will grow in importance as climate change and human exploitation shrink surface supplies like lakes and reservoirs.
  • Today, groundwater - which accounts for 99 per cent of the planet's freshwater supplies - is poorly understood and consequently undervalued, mismanaged and even abused, according to the U.N. World Water Development Report 2022
  • Globally, 3.6 billion people had inadequate access to water for at least one month of the year in 2018, and this figure is expected to top 5 billion by 2050, researchers say.
  • "What if the solution to the world's water problems is sitting there right under our feet?" said Richard Connor, editor-in-chief of the new report published by UNESCO.
  • "There is an enormous opportunity if we can manage and exploit all this groundwater sustainably," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
  • As the global population grows, hiking pressure on water supplies, here's why we should pay more attention to the huge potential of groundwater and take steps to manage it properly:

India and SDG 6

  • The overall proportion of Indian households with access to improved water sources increased from 68% in 1992-93 to 89.9% in 2020-21. According to the World Bank, more than 520 million in India were defecating in the open – the highest number in the world. This figure is expected to have reduced significantly given that improving sanitation is a key priority of the government which has introduced several flagship programmes including the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan to clean India, the National Rural Drinking Water Programme, and Namami Gange, which aims at the conservation of the River Ganga.

Why is groundwater important and what are its benefits?

  • Only about 1 per cent of the water on Earth is freshwater - mostly found in ice caps - with the rest being saline, in the oceans.
  • Of the planet's liquid freshwater, 99 per cent is found underground, where the quality is generally good. It can therefore be used safely, affordably and without requiring advanced treatment.
  • Water stored above ground, such as in reservoirs and dams, is a finite resource, often costly and vulnerable to pollution and climate change impacts like severe drought - and the ways it is exploited can have ecological and social consequences.
  • By comparison, 10-20 per cent of groundwater renews naturally and is found at shallow depths, making it easily accessible.
  • The rest is "fossil water" that has been in the ground for thousands or even millions of years and, while not renewable, is abundant.
  • Groundwater systems are important for supporting nature-rich landscapes such as forests, and provide about a quarter of all water used for farming, according to the U.N. report.
  • Underground supplies also account for about half of the water used domestically by the world's population and are the cheapest source of drinking water for rural villagers, most of whom are not connected to public or private supply systems.

How are groundwater supplies abused, and what are the consequences?

  • Over-extraction can have dire consequences, including land subsidence and conflicts linked to scarce supplies.
  • In 2018, when India suffered what was seen as the worst water crisis in its history, a report by a government think-tank predicted that at least 40% of its 1.3 billion population would have no reliable access to drinking water by 2030.
  • Droughts are becoming more frequent as the climate heats up, creating problems for India's rain-dependent farmers, while disputes between states are rising.
  • In Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, meanwhile, rapid urbanisation and disappearing water catchment areas mean most residents rely on wells that drain underground aquifers, causing the mega-city to sink by about 5-10 cm (2-4 inches) each year.
  • The planet's groundwater can be contaminated by improper sanitation and pit latrines, as well as industrial pollution from tanning, mining and agricultural chemicals.
  • U.N. report editor Connor noted that groundwater is less susceptible to pollution than surface supplies.
  • But once it happens, the contamination is hard to reverse, he said, calling for more action to protect groundwater by strengthening environment agencies, regulation and enforcement.

What are the challenges of tapping more groundwater, and how can they be overcome?

  • A region like sub-Saharan Africa has poorly developed water infrastructure and little irrigation for farming, leaving it dependent on increasingly erratic rainfall and vulnerable to drought - which can fuel famine, poverty and mass migration.
  • The region, along with the Middle East, holds significant groundwater reserves that are largely untapped and, if extracted in a controlled manner, could help maintain water security.
  • The U.N. report said that governments must invest in water infrastructure and institutions and train professionals to access those reserves sustainably.
  • The development of groundwater sources could catalyse economic growth by expanding irrigated farmland and improving agricultural yields and crop diversity, it added.
  • Outside Australia, Europe and the United States, little data exists on groundwater, including how much is available at different depths, its quality and level of salinity.
  • But companies involved in oil, gas and mineral exploration often gather vast amounts of information on the underground - including the water it holds.
  • Corporate responsibility pledges by such firms could include sharing groundwater information with agencies responsible for managing it to support sustainable use.

Way Forward:

  • Achieving 'clean water for all' and 'reducing the number of people suffering from water scarcity', as advocated by SDG6, requires that we expand our focus from solely water quantity solutions (e.g. increasing water use efficiencies and reservoir storage), to measures that contribute to both water quantity and water quality improvements.
  • Moreover, water quality improvements and water scarcity reduction should be sustainable without compromising environmental objectives. In addition to the 'hard infrastructure' clean water technologies, a strong focus on sustainable use of ground water is also paramount in meeting the sustainable management of clean and sufficient water for all processes.
  • A hybrid water management system is necessary, where (along with professionals and policy makers) the individual, a community and society have definite roles in the value chain. The challenge is not to be techno-centric but anthropogenic.

Source: The Hindu BL

Mains Question:

Q. What do you understand by fossil water? What are the challenges of tapping more groundwater, and how can they be overcome? Critically Examine.