The groundwater risk index: Development and application in the Middle East and North Africa region

Sci Total Environ. 2018 Jul 1:628-629:1149-1164. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.066. Epub 2018 Feb 20.

Abstract

Overreliance on predominantly non-renewable groundwater resources and their subsequent depletion has given rise to adverse environmental, political, economic, and social effects. The high costs of groundwater depletion are exacerbated by the notable absence of tools designed to identify and diagnose areas at risk of groundwater degradation. In this study, a Groundwater Risk Index (GRI) was developed as a distributed composite index to assess and evaluate groundwater depletion risk by combining different environmental and socioeconomic datasets and models. GRI is designed to be used by end-users (e.g. governments, NGOs) as a multicriteria diagnostic tool to identify and determine the probability and severity of an entity experiencing the adverse effects of groundwater mining. Annual GRI results indicate that groundwater risk is highly dependent on governance and food security. Surprisingly, groundwater storage reserves were indeterminate of groundwater risk. Given the centrality of agricultural production in groundwater consumptive use, MENA countries are recommended to mitigate groundwater depletion by establishing reliable and secure virtual water transfers (agricultural trade) to achieve food security, as opposed to unsustainably exploiting finite water resources for short-term food sufficiency. The GRI's design choices, including adopting an equal weighting scheme and a linear additive aggregation approach, promote structural flexibility that enables the modification, application, and implementation of the index in other semi- to hyper-arid regions with a high level of dependency on groundwater resources.

Keywords: Food security; Governance; Groundwater reserves; Groundwater risk index; MENA.