Groundwater Depletion
Narration: Michael Puma
Transcript:
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Between 2000 and 2010, groundwater depletion
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caused by irrigation increased 22 percent.
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NASA scientists and colleagues used Earth observations and models
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to understand where this groundwater depletion is most severe.
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The most overexploited aquifers: the North and South Arabian,
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Persian, Western Mexico and Upper Ganges,
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all show evidence of groundwater depletion from irrigation.
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In drier countries like Kuwait, Iran and Saudi Arabia,
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crops require extremely large amounts of groundwater-depleting irrigation to grow.
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For example, rice grown in Pakistan causes eight times more groundwater depletion per unit
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than in India, where surface water resources are more plentiful.
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International trade moves these crops between countries,
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so in some cases, the countries consuming the most groundwater depletion-linked crops
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may have more water supplies, relatively speaking.
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However, importers of groundwater depleting-crops
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face a potential future food supply risk, as overexploited aquifers
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may not be able to continue providing water
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at current levels in the long-term.