As sea levels rise, coastal communities could lose up
to 50 percent more of their fresh water supplies than
previously thought, according to a new study from Ohio
State University.
Hydrologists here have simulated how saltwater will intrude
into fresh water aquifers, given the sea level rise predicted
by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
The IPCC has concluded that within the next 100 years,
sea level could rise as much as 23 inches, flooding coasts
worldwide.
Scientists previously assumed that, as saltwater moved
inland, it would penetrate underground only as far as
it did above ground.
But this new research shows that when saltwater and fresh
water meet, they mix in complex ways, depending on the
texture of the sand along the coastline. In some cases,
a zone of mixed, or brackish, water can extend 50 percent
further inland underground than it does above ground.
Like saltwater, brackish water is not safe to drink because
it causes dehydration. Water that contains less than 250
milligrams of salt per liter is considered fresh water
and safe to drink.
Motomu Ibaraki, associate professor of earth sciences
at Ohio State, led the study. Graduate student Jun Mizuno
presented the results Tuesday, October 30, 2007, at the
Geological Society of America meeting in Denver.
Most people are probably aware of the damage that
rising sea levels can do above ground, but not underground,
which is where the fresh water is, Ibaraki said.
Climate change is already diminishing fresh water
resources, with changes in precipitation patterns and
the melting of glaciers. With this work, we are pointing
out another way that climate change can potentially reduce
available drinking water. The coastlines that are vulnerable
include some of the most densely populated regions of
the world.
In the United States, lands along the East Coast and
the Gulf of Mexico -- especially Florida and Louisiana
-- are most likely to be flooded as sea levels rise. Vulnerable
areas worldwide include Southeast Asia, the Middle East,
and northern Europe.
Almost 40 percent of the world population lives
in coastal areas, less than 60 kilometers from the shoreline,
Mizuno said. These regions may face loss of freshwater
resources more than we originally thought.
Scientists have used the IPCC reports to draw maps of
how the world's coastlines will change as waters rise,
and they have produced some of the most striking images
of the potential consequences of climate change.
Ibaraki said that he would like to create similar maps
that show how the water supply could be affected.
That's not an easy task, since scientists don't know
exactly where all of the world's fresh water is located,
or how much is there. Nor do they know the details of
the subterranean structure in many places.
One finding of this study is that saltwater will penetrate
further into areas that have a complex underground structure.
Typically, coastlines are made of different sandy layers
that have built up over time, Ibaraki explained. Some
layers may contain coarse sand and others fine sand. Fine
sand tends to block more water, while coarse sand lets
more flow through.
The researchers simulated coastlines made entirely of
coarse or fine sand, and different textures in between.
They also simulated more realistic, layered underground
structures.
The simulation showed that, the more layers a coastline
has, the more the saltwater and fresh water mix. The mixing
causes convection -- similar to the currents that stir
water in the open sea. Between the incoming saltwater
and the inland fresh water, a pool of brackish water forms.
Further sea level rise increases the mixing even more.
Depending on how these two factors interact, underground
brackish water can extend 10 to 50 percent further inland
than the saltwater on the surface.
According to the United States Geological Survey, about
half the country gets its drinking water from groundwater.
Fresh water is also used nationwide for irrigating crops.
In order to obtain cheap water for everybody, we
need to use groundwater, river water, or lake water,
Ibaraki said. But all those waters are disappearing
due to several factors --including an increase in demand
and climate change.
One way to create more fresh water is to desalinate saltwater,
but that's expensive to do, he said.
To desalinate, we need energy, so our water problem
would become an energy problem in the future.