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Groundwater Depletion and Associated CO 2 Emissions in India
Author(s) -
Mishra Vimal,
Asoka Akarsh,
Vatta Kamal,
Lall Upmanu
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
earth's future
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.641
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2328-4277
DOI - 10.1029/2018ef000939
Subject(s) - groundwater , water table , environmental science , irrigation , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental engineering , geology , ecology , geotechnical engineering , biology
Abstract India, the world's largest groundwater user, withdraws about 230‐billion‐m 3 groundwater annually for irrigation. Excessive groundwater pumping in India leads to rapid groundwater depletion and CO 2 emissions. Here using multiple data sources (observation wells and Gravity Recovery Climate Experiment) to estimate groundwater depletion in India, as well as the associated chemistry and the pumping energy requirements, we provide the first estimate of the potential CO 2 emissions due to bicarbonate extraction ( CO 2 release due to lowering of groundwater table) and groundwater pumping. We show that combined annual  CO 2 release due to bicarbonate extraction and pumping in India is approximately 32.01–131.74 million tons (31.29–131.02 million tons for pumping and 0.72 million tons for bicarbonate). The total estimated groundwater depletion in India is in the range of 122 to 199 billion m 3 from the observation wells (1996–2016) and Gravity Recovery Climate Experiment (2002–2016). The  CO 2 emissions due to bicarbonate (~0.72 million tons/year) are dominated by those due to groundwater pumping (31.29–131.02 million tons/year) in India. However, the total (pumping and bicarbonate) estimated annual  CO 2 emission from groundwater is less than 2–7% of the total (annual) CO 2 emission from India. Based on our unique data set collected from more than 500 farmers in Punjab, we show that a low‐cost intervention for irrigation scheduling based on soil moisture information can provide a sustainable solution by reducing groundwater pumping and CO 2 emissions. The environmental problem of groundwater depletion in India is much more serious than the associated CO 2 emissions, and hence, there is an urgent need for a regulation of groundwater use.

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