Graduation date: 2007
With 97% of the world’s freshwater resources stored underground, the connection
between groundwater resources to the metrics of space, scale and time common to the
geographic study of natural resources has not been extensively investigated by
geographers. While nearly 240 transboundary aquifers are mapped across the world,
a potential “tragedy” is brewing due to the poorly structured institutional capacity
built within river basin treaties and agreements and River Basin Organizations to
accommodate the management and governance of these transboundary aquifers.
Regimes to manage or govern groundwater remain weak. On the basis of a survey of
400 freshwater treaties and agreements completed as part of this study, about 15%
include provisions for groundwater. Very few of the treaties and agreements address
transboundary aquifers, the coastal aquifer systems which serve as the water supplies
to an increasing number of mega cities with populations exceeding 10 million people,
the types of aquifers that store groundwater and respond differently to intensive
exploitation, or the three dimensional boundaries of the resource or user domains.
Recognized as a common pool resource, groundwater resources serve as an example
of a “pure” common pool resource. This is because of the difficulty in excluding
users and because of the subtractability of the resource as groundwater is pumped or
artificially drained from the subsurface. Yet the management and governance of
groundwater resources is challenging and increasingly conflictive not only due to its
hidden nature, but also because of the difficulty in placing boundaries around the
groundwater resources and user domains. These domain boundaries are three dimensional and change with time. Drawing these domain boundaries is supremely
political and morph with changing social and cultural values. The present work
incorporates an interdisciplinarity and broad systems approach to explore the
geography of groundwater to provide context to an inventory of global groundwater
resources and user domains. On the basis of surveys of international law and national
policies focusing on groundwater, a previously unrecognized typology was derived
for the boundaries for groundwater resources and user domains. This work found that
(1) traditional approaches to defining groundwater domains focus on predevelopment
conditions, referred to herein as a bona-fide “commons” boundary; (2) groundwater
development creates human-caused or fiat “hydrocommons” boundary where
hydrology and hydraulics are meshed, and (3) the social and cultural values of
groundwater users define a fiat “commons heritage” boundary acknowledging that
groundwater resources are part of the “common heritage of humankind”. The
significance of this typology is that it is difficult to aggregate demographic, social,
and economic data within specific boundaries for groundwater resources for detailed
geographic analyses, much less develop international regimes, without agreement on
the fundamental unit of analysis. Given the complexity of the geologic and political
setting of global groundwater resources, a new paradigm of “post-sovereign
governance” was examined as part of this study to assess the applicability of global
groundwater governance as opposed to international regimes, including the
recognition of the geographic overlap between groundwater and ocean resources
through an evaluation of the applicability of a law of the sea model for multilateral
collaboration regarding groundwater resources through the Law of the Hidden Sea.