Published: 16:07, April 1, 2021 | Updated: 20:37, June 4, 2023
Thailand taps groundwater resources as hot season drought looms
By Reuters

This photo taken on April 1, 2021 from the website of Thailand's Department of Groundwater Resources shows four storage steel tanks of 120 cubic meters for a groundwater development project, aiming to help farmers fight drought in Ban Kut Wa village, Kalasin province, Thailand.

YASOTHON, Thailand - Facing severe drought as it enters its hottest season, Thailand has launched groundwater extraction operations in its most arid regions to tap sources deep beneath the soil, as it looks at ways to harness future supplies.

The groundwater department has sent geologists and more than 80 teams to areas not served by irrigation networks and regions typically hit by shortages as dam water levels are depleted.

In northeast Yasothon province, solar-powered water pumps and tanks have been deployed in one of 25 groundwater stations, among some 937 underground wells in the region.

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Varawut Silpa-Archa estimated 10 percent to 15 percent of Thailand’s more than 700 million litres (185 million gallons) of rainwater was beneath the ground

“The water source on the surface, when it dries up, the only source left is what is underneath us,” Natural Resources and Environment Minister Varawut Silpa-Archa said during a visit.

“The amount of groundwater underneath Thailand has been tremendous,” he said, estimating 10 percent to 15 percent of Thailand’s more than 700 million litres (185 million gallons) of rainwater was beneath the ground.

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Groundwater abstraction has been controversial in some countries, with concern about an over-reliance on underground sources instead of protecting and better managing water resources on the surface.

Some conservation groups say wildlife and flora are impacted by groundwater abstraction drying out lakes and wetlands while agriculture is consuming unsustainable amounts of water.

It can also cause aquifers to deplete and water tables to fall, while abstraction can cause land to sink, as has happened in and around the capital Bangkok.

Varawut said “every precaution” was being taken to prevent damage and sinkholes.

Despite efforts to convince farmers to cultivate crops that are less water-intensive, water demand for agriculture keeps growing. To try to harness future supplies, authorities are studying whether to develop hundreds more groundwater resources.

Organic fruit farmer La Somabutr said there were few trees left to hold water and wells dried up in March and April, so the groundwater drilling had been a game-changer.

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“It’s badly dry here,” he said. “Now we have this groundwater. I feel like I’m reborn.”