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Climate change is expected to modify the hydrological cycle and
affect freshwater resources. Groundwater is a critical source of
fresh drinking water for almost half of the world's population and
it also supplies irrigated agriculture. Groundwater is also
important in sustaining streams, lakes, wetlands, and associated
ecosystems. But despite this, knowledge about the impact of climate
change on groundwater quantity and quality is limited. Direct
impacts of climate change on natural processes (groundwater
recharge, discharge, storage, saltwater intrusion, biogeochemical
reactions, chemical fate and transport) may be exacerbated by human
activities (indirect impacts). Increased groundwater abstraction,
for example, may be needed in areas with unsustainable or
contaminated surface water resources caused by droughts and floods.
Climate change effects on groundwater resources are, therefore,
closely linked to other global change drivers, including population
growth, urbanization and land-use change, coupled with other
socio-economic and political trends. Groundwater response to global
changes is a complex function that depends on climate change and
variability, topography, aquifer characteristics, vegetation
dynamics, and human activities. This volume contains case studies
from diverse aquifer systems, scientific methods, and climatic
settings that have been conducted globally under the framework of
the UNESCO-IHP project Groundwater Resources Assessment under the
Pressures of Humanity and Climate Change (GRAPHIC). This book
presents a current and global synthesis of scientific findings and
policy recommendations for scientists, water managers and policy
makers towards adaptive management of groundwater sustainability
under future climate change and variability.
Climate change is expected to modify the hydrological cycle and
affect freshwater resources. Groundwater is a critical source of
fresh drinking water for almost half of the world's population and
it also supplies irrigated agriculture. Groundwater is also
important in sustaining streams, lakes, wetlands, and associated
ecosystems. But despite this, knowledge about the impact of climate
change on groundwater quantity and quality is limited. Direct
impacts of climate change on natural processes (groundwater
recharge, discharge, storage, saltwater intrusion, biogeochemical
reactions, chemical fate and transport) may be exacerbated by human
activities (indirect impacts). Increased groundwater abstraction,
for example, may be needed in areas with unsustainable or
contaminated surface water resources caused by droughts and floods.
Climate change effects on groundwater resources are, therefore,
closely linked to other global change drivers, including population
growth, urbanization and land-use change, coupled with other
socio-economic and political trends. Groundwater response to global
changes is a complex function that depends on climate change and
variability, topography, aquifer characteristics, vegetation
dynamics, and human activities. This volume contains case studies
from diverse aquifer systems, scientific methods, and climatic
settings that have been conducted globally under the framework of
the UNESCO-IHP project Groundwater Resources Assessment under the
Pressures of Humanity and Climate Change (GRAPHIC). This book
presents a current and global synthesis of scientific findings and
policy recommendations for scientists, water managers and policy
makers towards adaptive management of groundwater sustainability
under future climate change and variability.
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