Section for Quantitative Sustainability Assessment, Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering, Technical University of Denmark (DTU), 2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark.
Industrial Ecology Programme, Department of Energy and Process Engineering, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Høgskoleringen 5, 7034 Trondheim, Norway.
Environ Sci Technol. 2023 Mar 14;57(10):4318-4331. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.2c04803. Epub 2023 Feb 28.
Balancing human communities' and ecosystems' need for freshwater is one of the major challenges of the 21 century as population growth and improved living conditions put increasing pressure on freshwater resources. While frameworks to assess the environmental impacts of freshwater consumption have been proposed at the regional scale, an operational method to evaluate the consequences of consumption on different compartments of the water system and account for their interdependence is missing at the global scale. Here, we develop depletion factors that simultaneously quantify the effects of water consumption on streamflow, groundwater storage, soil moisture, and evapotranspiration globally. We estimate freshwater availability and water consumption using the output of a global-scale surface water-groundwater model for the period 1960-2000. The resulting depletion factors are provided for 8,664 river basins, representing 93% of the landmass with significant water consumption, i.e., excluding Greenland, Antarctica, deserts, and permanently frozen areas. Our findings show that water consumption leads to the largest water loss in rivers, followed by aquifers and soil, while simultaneously increasing evapotranspiration. Depletion factors vary regionally with ranges of up to four orders of magnitude depending on the annual consumption level, the type of water used, aridity, and water transfers between compartments. Our depletion factors provide valuable insights into the intertwined effects of surface and groundwater consumption on several hydrological variables over a specified period. The developed depletion factors can be integrated into sustainability assessment tools to quantify the ecological impacts of water consumption and help guide sustainable water management strategies, while accounting for the performance limitations of the underlying model.
平衡人类社区和生态系统对淡水的需求是 21 世纪的主要挑战之一,因为人口增长和生活条件的改善给淡水资源带来了越来越大的压力。虽然已经在区域尺度上提出了评估淡水消费对环境影响的框架,但在全球尺度上仍缺乏评估消费对水系统不同部分的影响并考虑它们相互依存关系的操作方法。在这里,我们开发了消耗系数,这些系数同时量化了全球范围内水资源消耗对河流流量、地下水储存、土壤湿度和蒸散的影响。我们使用全球地表水-地下水模型的输出来估计 1960-2000 年期间的淡水资源可用性和消费。为代表着具有大量水资源消耗的陆地面积 93%的 8664 个流域提供了由此产生的消耗系数,即不包括格陵兰岛、南极洲、沙漠和永久性冰冻地区。我们的研究结果表明,水资源消耗导致河流中流失的水量最大,其次是含水层和土壤,同时增加了蒸散量。消耗系数因地区而异,范围可达四个数量级,取决于年消费水平、用水类型、干旱程度以及各部分之间的水量转移。我们的消耗系数为特定时期地表水和地下水消耗对多个水文变量的相互交织的影响提供了有价值的见解。所开发的消耗系数可以集成到可持续性评估工具中,以量化水资源消耗对生态的影响,并帮助指导可持续水资源管理策略,同时考虑到基础模型的性能限制。