
There is water beneath your feet right now. Deep in the earth, stored in layers of rock and sediment built up over thousands of years, sits one of humanity’s most critical resources — groundwater. For billions of people across the world, it is the water that comes out of the tap, irrigates food, and keeps industries running.
And we are pulling it out far faster than the earth can put it back.
The Invisible Drain
Groundwater abstraction simply means pumping water out of underground reservoirs called aquifers. It sounds harmless enough. What most people don’t realise is that many of these aquifers took centuries — sometimes millennia — to fill. When we drain them faster than rainfall can recharge them, we are spending a savings account that took nature thousands of years to build.
A landmark study published in Nature (Jasechko et al., 2024), analysing over 170,000 monitoring wells across 1,693 aquifer systems worldwide, found that groundwater levels have accelerated in their decline over the past four decades in 30% of the world’s regional aquifers. An earlier study by Wada et al. found that global groundwater depletion more than doubled between 1960 and 2000, driven primarily by rising water demand.
Agriculture is the biggest driver. According to the UN’s World Water Development Report, agriculture accounts for roughly 70% of all freshwater withdrawals worldwide. Add rapid urbanisation, population growth, and increasing industrial demand, and you have a recipe for a slow-moving catastrophe.
Bello’s Farm
Picture Bello, a rice farmer in a rural community. Twenty years ago, his grandfather dug a well about 15 metres deep and always found water. Bello now drills at 60 metres — and in the dry season, even that runs low.
His neighbours have done the same. So have the large commercial farms upstream. Everyone is drilling deeper, competing for the same shrinking reserve beneath the ground. No one planned this. No one coordinated it. It simply happened — one pump at a time.
This is not a fictional scenario. Versions of Bello’s story are playing out across Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, the Middle East, and even parts of the United States and Europe today — as the UC Santa Barbara research team noted, with depletion accelerating fastest in dry regions with extensive croplands.
What Happens When the Aquifer Runs Low?
The consequences go well beyond thirsty taps.
Food insecurity. Groundwater-dependent agriculture feeds a significant portion of the world’s population. As water tables fall, crop yields drop and food prices rise — hitting the poorest communities hardest.
Land subsidence. When underground water is removed, the earth above can sink. Research published in Geophysical Research Letters has confirmed measurable groundwater-linked land subsidence in cities including Mexico City, Jakarta, and Lagos. A separate study in Nature Cities found that at least 20% of urban areas in the 28 most populous US cities are already sinking, mainly due to groundwater extraction. Infrastructure cracks. Buildings tilt. Floods worsen because the land no longer sits at the same elevation it once did.
Saltwater intrusion. In coastal areas, when freshwater aquifers are depleted, seawater seeps in to fill the gap — permanently contaminating what was once drinkable water. This is already being observed along coastlines across West Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Mediterranean.
Conflicts over water. Scarcity breeds competition. Communities, farmers, and nations that share aquifer systems are increasingly in tension. Water conflicts that once seemed distant are becoming real policy emergencies.
A City Running on Borrowed Time
Consider what happened in Chennai, India, in 2019. One of India’s largest cities, home to over 10 million people, declared “Day Zero” on 19 June 2019 — the day when all four of its main reservoirs had run completely dry. Residents waited in long queues for government water tankers. Businesses and hotels shut down. Families in slums received as little as 30 litres of water per day.
As the World Resources Institute reported, the crisis was not simply about one bad monsoon. Rapid urbanisation had paved over wetlands that once allowed rainwater to percolate and recharge the aquifer naturally. Unregulated borewell drilling had depleted groundwater reserves over many years. The city did not suddenly stop receiving rainfall — the crisis was years in the making.
Chennai has since made progress. But the warning it sent to the world was stark: groundwater depletion does not announce itself until it is almost too late.
The Compounding Effect in the Next Decade
Here is what makes the coming decade particularly concerning — the effects will not stay separate. They will compound.
Climate change is already making rainfall less predictable. As wet seasons become less reliable, more people will turn to groundwater to compensate. This increases abstraction pressure at the exact moment that aquifer recharge is slowing due to shifting rainfall patterns. The UCSB study found that 90% of aquifers where declines were accelerating are located in places that have gotten drier over the last 40 years — a direct link between climate stress and groundwater loss.
At the same time, global population is still growing. Urban expansion is paving over land that once allowed rainwater to percolate down and recharge aquifers naturally. Deforestation removes the vegetation that regulates the water cycle.
Each of these pressures alone would be manageable. Together, they create a feedback loop: less recharge, more demand, deeper drilling, faster depletion, greater scarcity — which drives even more extraction. Excessive groundwater extraction is projected to impact 19% of the global population by 2040, according to the World Economic Forum.
So What Can Be Done?
The good news is that this is not inevitable. Communities, governments, and individuals are already showing what is possible.
- Rainwater harvesting at household and community scale can reduce dependence on groundwater significantly — and it was one of the key recommendations for Chennai after its 2019 crisis.
- Drip irrigation and water-efficient farming methods can cut agricultural water use by up to 50% without reducing yields, according to MIT engineers and multiple field studies.
- Groundwater monitoring and regulation — knowing how much is being taken out and by whom — is essential to managing shared aquifers fairly. Bangkok halted its severe subsidence by strictly regulating groundwater pumping and investing in alternative water sources.
- Treating and reusing wastewater reduces the pressure to extract fresh water in the first place.
- Protecting recharge zones — forests, wetlands, and open land — keeps natural replenishment working.
None of these solutions require waiting for technology that does not yet exist. They require political will, community action, and a genuine recognition that groundwater is not an infinite resource.
Conclusion
Water beneath the ground is like money in a joint bank account shared by an entire generation. Every litre extracted today is a litre unavailable tomorrow — and the account statements are rarely read until the balance hits zero.
The wells are not dry yet. But if the patterns of the last forty years continue unchecked, many of them will be within our lifetime. The time to act is while there is still water in the ground to protect.



