4.8 Article

Multicompartment Depletion Factors for Water Consumption on a Global Scale

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 10, Pages 4318-4331

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c04803

Keywords

ecosystem; freshwater availability; water management; impact assessment; sustainability

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Balancing the need for freshwater between human communities and ecosystems is a significant challenge in the 21st century due to population growth and improved living conditions. A global operational method to evaluate the consequences of freshwater consumption and its interdependence on different water compartments is currently missing. This study developed depletion factors to quantify the effects of water consumption on various hydrological variables globally, providing valuable insights into the ecological impacts of water consumption. These depletion factors can be integrated into sustainability assessment tools to guide sustainable water management strategies.
Balancing human communities' and ecosystems' need for freshwater is one of the major challenges of the 21(st) 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.

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