Reconstruction of global gridded monthly sectoral water withdrawals for 1971–2010 and analysis of their spatiotemporal patterns
Zhongwei Huang,Zhongwei Huang,Mohamad Hejazi,Mohamad Hejazi,Xinya Li,Qiuhong Tang,Chris R. Vernon,Guoyong Leng,Yaling Liu,Petra Döll,Stephanie Eisner,Dieter Gerten,Dieter Gerten,Naota Hanasaki,Yoshihide Wada +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reconstruct a global monthly gridded (0.5°degree) sectoral water withdrawal dataset for the period 1971-2010, which distinguishes six water use sectors, i.e. irrigation, domestic, electricity generation (cooling of thermal power plants), livestock, mining and manufacturing.
read more
Abstract: Human water withdrawal has increasingly altered the global water cycle in past decades, yet our understanding of its driving forces and patterns is limited. Reported historical estimates of sectoral water withdrawals are often sparse and incomplete, mainly restricted to water withdrawal estimates available at annual and country scale, due to a lack of observations at local and seasonal time scales. In this study, through collecting and consolidating various sources of reported data and developing spatial and temporal statistical downscaling algorithms, we reconstruct a global monthly gridded (0.5 degree) sectoral water withdrawal dataset for the period 1971–2010, which distinguishes six water use sectors, i.e. irrigation, domestic, electricity generation (cooling of thermal power plants), livestock, mining, and manufacturing. Based on the reconstructed dataset, the spatial and temporal patterns of historical water withdrawal are analyzed. Results show that global total water withdrawal has increased significantly during 1971–2010, mainly driven by the increase of irrigation water withdrawal. Regions with high water withdrawal are those densely populated or with large irrigated cropland production, e.g., the United States (US), eastern China, India, and Europe. Seasonally, irrigation water withdrawal in summer for the major crops contributes a large percentage of annual total irrigation water withdrawal in mid and high-latitude regions, and the dominant season of irrigation water withdrawal is also different across regions. Domestic water withdrawal is mostly characterized by a summer peak, while water withdrawal for electricity generation has a winter peak in high-latitude regions and a summer peak in low-latitude regions. Despite the overall increasing trend, irrigation in the western US and domestic water withdrawal in western Europe exhibit a decreasing trend. Our results highlight the distinct spatial pattern of human water use by sectors at the seasonal and annual scales. The reconstructed gridded water withdrawal dataset is open-access, and can be used for examining issues related to water withdrawals at fine spatial, temporal and sectoral scales.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Potential for large-scale CO2 removal via enhanced rock weathering with croplands
David J. Beerling,E. P. Kantzas,Mark R. Lomas,Peter Wade,Rafael M. Eufrasio,Phil Renforth,Binoy Sarkar,M. Grace Andrews,Rachael H. James,Christopher R. Pearce,Jean-Francois Mercure,Jean-Francois Mercure,Hector Pollitt,Philip B. Holden,Neil R. Edwards,Neil R. Edwards,Madhu Khanna,Lenny Koh,Shaun Quegan,Nicholas Frank Pidgeon,Ivan A. Janssens,James Hansen,Steven A. Banwart +22 more
TL;DR: An integrated performance modelling approach is used to make an initial techno-economic assessment for 2050, quantifying how CDR potential and costs vary among nations in relation to business-as-usual energy policies and policies consistent with limiting future warming to 2 degrees Celsius.
Droughts in East Africa: Causes, impacts and resilience
TL;DR: In this paper, a state-of-the-art review of the causes and impacts of, and resilience to droughts in East Africa is presented, including their evolution, complexity, social implications and people's vulnerability.
354
Deceleration of China's human water use and its key drivers
Feng Zhou,Yan Bo,Philippe Ciais,Philippe Ciais,Patrice Dumas,Qiuhong Tang,Xuhui Wang,Junguo Liu,Chunmiao Zheng,Jan Polcher,Zun Yin,Matthieu Guimberteau,Matthieu Guimberteau,Shushi Peng,C. Ottlé,Xining Zhao,Jianshi Zhao,Qian Tan,Lei Chen,Huizhong Shen,Hui Yang,Shilong Piao,Hao Wang,Yoshihide Wada +23 more
TL;DR: The data show that a widespread deceleration of water use in recent decades and the adoption of improved irrigation practices and industrial water recycling partly offset the increase driven by the rising water demand from economic growth and structural transition, highlighting the value of technological adoptions to help in designing targets and incentives for water scarcity mitigations.
238
Large-sample hydrology: recent progress, guidelines for new datasets and grand challenges
TL;DR: A review of currently available large-sample hydrology (LSH) datasets can be found in this paper, where the authors highlight current limitations of LSH datasets and propose guidelines and coordinated actions to overcome these limitations.
210
Satellites reveal widespread decline in global lake water storage
Fangfang Yao,Ben Livneh,Balaji Rajagopalan,Jida Wang,Jean-François Crétaux,Yoshihide Wada,Muriel Berge-Nguyen +6 more
TL;DR: Yao et al. as mentioned in this paper analyzed the largest global lakes using three decades of satellite observations, climate data, and hydrologic models, finding statistically significant storage declines for 53% of these water bodies over the period 1992-2020.
195
References
Global Water Resources: Vulnerability from Climate Change and Population Growth
TL;DR: Numerical experiments combining climate model outputs, water budgets, and socioeconomic information along digitized river networks demonstrate that (i) a large proportion of the world's population is currently experiencing water stress and (ii) rising water demands greatly outweigh greenhouse warming in defining the state of global water systems to 2025.
5.1K
Potential impacts of a warming climate on water availability in snow-dominated regions
TL;DR: In a warmer world, less winter precipitation falls as snow and the melting of winter snow occurs earlier in spring, which leads to a shift in peak river runoff to winter and early spring, away from summer and autumn when demand is highest.
The Twentieth Century Reanalysis Project
Gilbert P. Compo,Gilbert P. Compo,Jeffrey S. Whitaker,Prashant D. Sardeshmukh,Prashant D. Sardeshmukh,N. Matsui,N. Matsui,Rob Allan,Xiaojun Yin,Byron E. Gleason,Russell S. Vose,Glenn Rutledge,P. Bessemoulin,Stefan Brönnimann,Stefan Brönnimann,Manola Brunet,Manola Brunet,R. Crouthamel,Andrea Grant,Pavel Ya. Groisman,Pavel Ya. Groisman,Philip Jones,Michael C. Kruk,Andries Kruger,Gareth J. Marshall,Maurizio Maugeri,H. Mok,Øyvind Nordli,Tom Ross,Ricardo M. Trigo,Xiaolan L. Wang,Scott D. Woodruff,Steven J. Worley +32 more
TL;DR: The Twentieth Century Reanalysis (20CR) dataset as discussed by the authors provides the first estimates of global tropospheric variability, and of the dataset's time-varying quality, from 1871 to the present at 6-hourly temporal and 2° spatial resolutions.
The impacts of climate change on water resources and agriculture in China
Shilong Piao,Philippe Ciais,Yao Huang,Zehao Shen,Shushi Peng,Junsheng Li,Liping Zhou,Hongyan Liu,Yuecun Ma,Yihui Ding,Pierre Friedlingstein,Pierre Friedlingstein,Chunzhen Liu,Kun Tan,Yongqiang Yu,Tianyi Zhang,Jingyun Fang +16 more
TL;DR: It is found that notwithstanding the clear warming that has occurred in China in recent decades, current understanding does not allow a clear assessment of the impact of anthropogenic climate change on China’s water resources and agriculture and therefore China's ability to feed its people.
3.1K
Satellite-based estimates of groundwater depletion in India
Matthew Rodell,Isabella Velicogna,Isabella Velicogna,Isabella Velicogna,James S. Famiglietti +4 more
TL;DR: The available evidence suggests that unsustainable consumption of groundwater for irrigation and other anthropogenic uses is likely to be the cause of groundwater depletion in northwest India and the consequences for the 114,000,000 residents of the region may include a reduction of agricultural output and shortages of potable water, leading to extensive socioeconomic stresses.
Related Papers (5)
Jacob Schewe,Jens Heinke,Jens Heinke,Dieter Gerten,Ingjerd Haddeland,Nigel W. Arnell,Douglas B. Clark,Rutger Dankers,Stephanie Eisner,Balázs M. Fekete,Felipe J. Colón-González,Simon N. Gosling,Hyungjun Kim,Xingcai Liu,Yoshimitsu Masaki,Felix T. Portmann,Felix T. Portmann,Yusuke Satoh,Tobias Stacke,Qiuhong Tang,Yoshihide Wada,Dominik Wisser,Torsten Albrecht,Katja Frieler,Franziska Piontek,Lila Warszawski,Pavel Kabat +26 more