Water accounting

"Water accounting is the systematic study of the current status and trends in water supply, demand, accessibility and use. Water accounting provides the foundation of sound water management decisions: “You can't manage what you don't know." Given the fugitive nature of water, water accounting is a great challenge" (FAO, n.d).

Sources

Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). (n.d): Knowing water better: towards fairer and more sustainable access to natural resources - KnoWat. https://www.fao.org/in-action/knowat/water-accounting/en. last accessed [9 September 2024]

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Counting every drop: How space technology is rewriting water accounting and auditing

At sunrise in Bundelkhand, Northern India, farmer Ramesh Patel walks across a cracked wheat field, where the delayed and weak monsoon has left his crops wilting and wells running dry. Over the past five years, wells have sunk several meters, and groundwater levels in the region have fallen steadily for more than two decades (CGWB 2021; Niranjannaik et al. 2022). He is not alone: farmers, water managers, industries, and hydropower operators around the world face the same urgent question—how much water do we really have?  

Project / Mission / Initiative / Community Portal

Mekong Dam Monitor

The Mekong Dam Monitor is an online platform which uses remote sensing, satellite imagery, and GIS analysis to provide near-real time reporting and data downloads across numerous previously unreported indicators in the Mekong Basin. The platform is freely available for public use on the Mekong Water Data Initiative website and all research inputs are public-access resources.