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Understanding Climate Change and Anthropogenic Impacts on the Salinization of Low-Lying Coastal Groundwater Systems

  • University of Oldenburg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Fresh coastal groundwater is a valuable water resource of global significance, but its quality is threatened by saltwater intrusion. Excessive groundwater abstraction, sea-level rise (SLR), land subsidence and other climate-related factors are expected to accelerate this process in the future. The objective of this study is to (a) quantify the impact of projected climate change and (b) explore the role of individual hydrogeological boundaries on groundwater salinization of low-lying coastal groundwater systems until 2100 CE. We employ numerical density-dependent groundwater flow and salt transport modeling for this purpose, using Northwestern Germany as a case. Separate model variants are constructed and forced with climate data, that is, projected SLR and groundwater recharge, as well as likely ranges of other hydrogeological boundaries, including land subsidence, abstraction rates and drain levels. We find that autonomous salinization in the marsh areas, resulting from non-equilibrium of the present-day groundwater salinity distribution with current boundary conditions, is responsible for >50% of the salinization increase until 2100 CE. Sea-level rise, land subsidence and drain levels are the other major factors controlling salinization. We further show that salinization of the water resources is a potential threat to coastal water users, including water suppliers and the agrarian sector, as well as coastal ecosystems. Regional-scale uplifting of drain levels is identified as an efficient measure to mitigate salinization of deep and shallow groundwater in the future. The presented modeling approach highlights the consequences of climate change and anthropogenic impacts for coastal salinization, supporting the timely development of mitigation strategies.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2024EF004737
Pages (from-to)1-19
Number of pages19
JournalEarth's Future
Volume12
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024. The Author(s).

Funding

We thank the following institutions for manifold support: Deltares (technical modeling support), Landesamt fuer Bergbau, Energie und Geologie (LBEG) and Niedersaechsisches Kompetenzzentrum Klimawandel (NIKO) (provision of mGROWA18/22, geologic and freshwater interface data), Niedersaechsischer Landesbetrieb fur Wasserwirtschaft, Kuesten-und Naturschutz (NLWKN) (provision of groundwater heads/salinities, river levels/discharges), Oldenburg-Ostfriesischer Wasserverband (OOWV) (provision of geologic data and abstraction rates) as well as regional water works (provision of abstraction rates). We thank L. Karrasch and B. Siebenhuener for fruitful collaboration within the SALTSA project. Simulations were performed at the University of Oldenburg HPC Cluster ROSA, located at the University of Oldenburg (Germany) and funded by the DFG through its Major Research Instrumentation Programs (INST 184/225-1 FUGG) and the Ministry of Science and Culture (MWK) of the Lower Saxony State. The DFG is thanked for SALTSA project funding (MA 3274/9-1) within the Special Priority Programme (SPP-1889) "Regional Sea Level Change and Society (SeaLevel)." Research related to this article further benefited from funding of the projects WAKOS (BMBF; support code 01LR2003E) and the DFG research unit FOR 5094: The dynamic deep subsurface of high-energy beaches (DynaDeep) (GR 4514/3-1).

FundersFunder number
DFG through its Major Research Instrumentation ProgramsINST 184/225-1 FUGG
Ministry of Science and Culture (MWK) of the Lower Saxony State
DFGMA 3274/9-1
WAKOS (BMBF)01LR2003E
DFG research unit FOR 5094: The dynamic deep subsurface of high-energy beaches (DynaDeep)GR 4514/3-1

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
      SDG 13 Climate Action
    2. SDG 15 - Life on Land
      SDG 15 Life on Land

    Keywords

    • climate adaptation
    • coastal hydrogeology
    • land subsidence
    • numerical modeling
    • saltwater intrusion
    • sea-level rise

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