4.7 Article

Benefits and pitfalls of GRACE data assimilation: A case study of terrestrial water storage depletion in India

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 44, Issue 9, Pages 4107-4115

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017GL072994

Keywords

GRACE TWS; data assimilation; unmodeled processes; anthropogenic effects; groundwater; India

Funding

  1. NASA Terrestrial Hydrology
  2. GRACE
  3. GRACE Follow-On Science Team programs
  4. NASA MEaSUREs Program
  5. SPM fellowship, CSIR (India)
  6. Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) project AGI [IIT/SRIC/GG and CSE/AGI/2013-14/201]

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This study investigates some of the benefits and drawbacks of assimilating terrestrial water storage (TWS) observations from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) into a land surface model over India. GRACE observes TWS depletion associated with anthropogenic groundwater extraction in northwest India. The model, however, does not represent anthropogenic groundwater withdrawals and is not skillful in reproducing the interannual variability of groundwater. Assimilation of GRACE TWS introduces long-term trends and improves the interannual variability in groundwater. But the assimilation also introduces a negative trend in simulated evapotranspiration, whereas in reality evapotranspiration is likely enhanced by irrigation, which is also unmodeled. Moreover, in situ measurements of shallow groundwater show no trend, suggesting that the trends are erroneously introduced by the assimilation into the modeled shallow groundwater, when in reality the groundwater is depleted in deeper aquifers. The results emphasize the importance of representing anthropogenic processes in land surface modeling and data assimilation systems.

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