TY - JOUR
T1 - Forecasting water budget deficits and groundwater depletion in the main fossil aquifer systems in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula
AU - Mazzoni, Annamaria
AU - Heggy, Essam
AU - Scabbia, Giovanni
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2018/11
Y1 - 2018/11
N2 - We develop a water budget model that quantifies and forecasts water deficits and groundwater depletion of the main exploitable fresh fossil aquifer systems in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula under different climatic and socio-economic scenarios from 2016 until 2050. Our results suggest that in the upcoming few decades, under the most plausible climatic and socio-economic scenario (SSP2-AVG), within North Africa, only Egypt and Libya will experience severe water deficits with respectively ∼45% and ∼90% of their current water budget in 2050. For the Arabian Peninsula, all countries will undergo water deficits, ranging from ∼20% for Saudi Arabia to almost double the supply for Yemen (∼190%). Under these alarming deficits, resulting from severe anthropogenic discharges, the majority of the small to mid-size exploitable fossil aquifer systems in the Arabian Peninsula could reach full depletion by 2050 and the total depletion of groundwater resources in all aquifer systems could be reached in ∼60–90 years. Over the same time span, North African fossil aquifers will lose 1–15% of their exploitable fresh water volume and may reach total depletion in ∼200–350 years with the projected increased extraction rates. We find that the major cause of the water budget deficit and groundwater depletion in the MENA area are anthropogenic drivers rather than climatic ones. Finally, we conclude that if current hydrologic, climatic and socio-economic trends continue, the nations with the lowest gross domestic product per capita, like Egypt, Yemen and Libya, will undergo the highest water deficit per capita, leading to a significant rise in food prices, potentially resulting in more socio-economic instabilities over the next three decades.
AB - We develop a water budget model that quantifies and forecasts water deficits and groundwater depletion of the main exploitable fresh fossil aquifer systems in North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula under different climatic and socio-economic scenarios from 2016 until 2050. Our results suggest that in the upcoming few decades, under the most plausible climatic and socio-economic scenario (SSP2-AVG), within North Africa, only Egypt and Libya will experience severe water deficits with respectively ∼45% and ∼90% of their current water budget in 2050. For the Arabian Peninsula, all countries will undergo water deficits, ranging from ∼20% for Saudi Arabia to almost double the supply for Yemen (∼190%). Under these alarming deficits, resulting from severe anthropogenic discharges, the majority of the small to mid-size exploitable fossil aquifer systems in the Arabian Peninsula could reach full depletion by 2050 and the total depletion of groundwater resources in all aquifer systems could be reached in ∼60–90 years. Over the same time span, North African fossil aquifers will lose 1–15% of their exploitable fresh water volume and may reach total depletion in ∼200–350 years with the projected increased extraction rates. We find that the major cause of the water budget deficit and groundwater depletion in the MENA area are anthropogenic drivers rather than climatic ones. Finally, we conclude that if current hydrologic, climatic and socio-economic trends continue, the nations with the lowest gross domestic product per capita, like Egypt, Yemen and Libya, will undergo the highest water deficit per capita, leading to a significant rise in food prices, potentially resulting in more socio-economic instabilities over the next three decades.
KW - Arid environments
KW - Climate change
KW - Groundwater budget
KW - Projections
KW - Water and food security
KW - Water deficit
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85054446457
U2 - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2018.09.009
DO - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2018.09.009
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85054446457
SN - 0959-3780
VL - 53
SP - 157
EP - 173
JO - Global Environmental Change
JF - Global Environmental Change
ER -