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      Global water resources and the role of groundwater in a resilient water future

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          Four billion people facing severe water scarcity

          Global water scarcity assessment at a high spatial and temporal resolution, accounting for environmental flow requirements.
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            Global threats to human water security and river biodiversity.

            Protecting the world's freshwater resources requires diagnosing threats over a broad range of scales, from global to local. Here we present the first worldwide synthesis to jointly consider human and biodiversity perspectives on water security using a spatial framework that quantifies multiple stressors and accounts for downstream impacts. We find that nearly 80% of the world's population is exposed to high levels of threat to water security. Massive investment in water technology enables rich nations to offset high stressor levels without remedying their underlying causes, whereas less wealthy nations remain vulnerable. A similar lack of precautionary investment jeopardizes biodiversity, with habitats associated with 65% of continental discharge classified as moderately to highly threatened. The cumulative threat framework offers a tool for prioritizing policy and management responses to this crisis, and underscores the necessity of limiting threats at their source instead of through costly remediation of symptoms in order to assure global water security for both humans and freshwater biodiversity.
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              Global water resources: vulnerability from climate change and population growth.

              The future adequacy of freshwater resources is difficult to assess, owing to a complex and rapidly changing geography of water supply and use. 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. Consideration of direct human impacts on global water supply remains a poorly articulated but potentially important facet of the larger global change question.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Nature Reviews Earth & Environment
                Nat Rev Earth Environ
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                2662-138X
                February 2023
                January 31 2023
                : 4
                : 2
                : 87-101
                Article
                10.1038/s43017-022-00378-6
                e8b1983e-d1dd-4996-82ac-7406ec5f7885
                © 2023

                https://www.springernature.com/gp/researchers/text-and-data-mining

                https://www.springernature.com/gp/researchers/text-and-data-mining

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