4.7 Article

Linkages between GRACE water storage, hydrologic extremes, and climate teleconnections in major African aquifers

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac3bfc

Keywords

Africa water storage; GRACE satellites; climate teleconnections; sustainable groundwater management; floods and droughts; managed aqufier recharge

Funding

  1. Jackson Endowment at the University of Texas at Austin

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Water resources management in Africa is critical. This study assesses the spatiotemporal variability in water storage and its controls in major African aquifers. The results show declining trends in water storage in northern Africa due to irrigation water use, while rising trends are found in western Africa due to land use change and increased recharge. Climate extremes strongly control water storage in eastern and southern Africa.
Water resources management is a critical issue in Africa where many regions are subjected to sequential droughts and floods. The objective of our work was to assess spatiotemporal variability in water storage and related controls (climate, human intervention) in major African aquifers and consider approaches toward more sustainable development. Different approaches were used to track water storage, including GRACE/GRACE Follow On satellites for Total Water Storage (TWS); satellite altimetry for reservoir storage, MODIS satellites for vegetation indices, and limited ground-based monitoring. Results show that declining trends in TWS (60-73 km(3) over the 18 yr GRACE record) were restricted to aquifers in northern Africa, controlled primarily by irrigation water use in the Nubian and NW Saharan aquifers. Rising TWS trends were found in aquifers in western Africa (23-49 km(3)), attributed to increased recharge from land use change and cropland expansion. Interannual variability dominated TWS variability in eastern and southern Africa, controlled primarily by climate extremes. Climate teleconnections, particularly El Nino Southern Oscillation and Indian Ocean Dipole, strongly controlled droughts and floods in eastern and southern Africa. Huge aquifer storage in northern Africa suggests that the recent decadal storage declines should not impact the regional aquifers but may affect local conditions. Increasing groundwater levels in western Africa will need to be managed because of locally rising groundwater flooding. More climate resilient water management can be accomplished in eastern and southern Africa by storing water from wet to dry climate cycles. Accessing the natural water storage provided by aquifers in Africa is the obvious way to manage the variability between droughts and floods.

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