中国地下水危机:对全球可持续性影响的机制分析

Michele Lancia , Yingying Yao , Charles B. Andrews , Xiaoli Wang , Xingxing Kuang , Jinren Ni , Steven M. Gorelick , Bridget R. Scanlon , Yanxin Wang , Chunmiao Zheng
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引用次数: 10

摘要

在过去的几十年里,中国的地下水储量迅速枯竭,在管理和保护这一资源方面落后。因此,河流干涸、地面沉降、盐水入侵和湿地损失广泛。为了帮助管理这一重要的地下水资源,我们构建了中国第一个国家级地下水流动数值模型,以提供对地下流动动力学的全面概述和理解。地下水模型是三维的,水平分辨率为10公里乘10公里,垂直层为5个离散层(地表以下1700米)。校正后的模型与计算的观测水位相匹配,并充分再现了水量收支。该模型通过回溯中国经济发展的不同阶段来重建地下水枯竭。从1945年到2020年,北方省份的地下水平均枯竭约16.7 km3/年(相当于黄河年流量的30%),而中国南方没有出现大量地下水枯竭。地下水枯竭与观测到的黄河基流地下水排放量大幅减少(-23%)相一致,而长江基流的变化可以忽略不计。我们的研究提供了一个整体的工具,以支持全国水资源管理战略的发展,并缓和未来中国经济增长可能在全球范围内传播的水危机的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The China groundwater crisis: A mechanistic analysis with implications for global sustainability

The China groundwater crisis: A mechanistic analysis with implications for global sustainability

Over the past several decades, China has rapidly depleted groundwater storage, and has lagged in managing and protecting this resource. As a result, dried up rivers, land subsidence, saltwater intrusion, and wetland losses are extensive. To assist with managing this vital groundwater resource, we constructed the first national-scale numerical groundwater flow model of China to provide a comprehensive overview and understanding of the subsurface flow dynamics. The groundwater model is three-dimensional with a 10 km by 10 km horizontal resolution and five discretized vertical layers (up to 1700 m below the land surface). The calibrated model matched calculated to observed water levels and sufficiently reproduced water budgets. The model was used to reconstruct groundwater depletion by retracing the different stages of Chinese economic development. From 1945 to 2020, the northern provinces are characterized by an average groundwater depletion of ∼16.7 km3/yr (equivalent to 30% of the Yellow River's annual flow) while southern China has experienced no substantial groundwater depletion. Groundwater depletion is consistent with a large observed reduction in groundwater discharge as baseflow to the Yellow River (-23%) relative to negligible variation in baseflow in the Yangtze River. Our study provides a holistic tool to support development of nationwide water management strategies and temper the effects of a future water crisis that China's growing economy could propagate at the global scale.

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