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The Vision 

Groundwater basics were first published by Heath, Ralph C. in 1983 under some assumptions and mathematical calculations. Several authors had shared their comments and views on Groundwater till date by mentioning that it is "Poorly understood", it has "Uncertainty" and "Knowledge Gap" in various research articles.

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I'm sharing the recent two Online references of July 2025:

1. Published on 14th July 2025, carrying the statement "Poor understanding" 

2. Published on 22nd July 2025, carrying the statement "Knowledge Gap".

 

Since my research work which is published from 2014 already answer all the captions, it is decided to share the Actual Natural Science behind Groundwater to the global community through this common platform to put an end for "Groundwater - Poorly Understood, Invisible, Uncertainty, Knowledge Gap etc." 

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Ground water is no more Poorly understood or Out of sight. Instead it is full of Unbelievable Natural Science Unknowingly, This basic science is the mother for many Industrial Separation Technologies used nowadays. 

Today's Industrial Separation processes are already Inbuilt in the New basic Science of Groundwater...

 

The vision statement aims to incorporate the New Water Science in Biotechnology and Hydrology to educate the future Generations for managing the water resources in a wise manner.

Our planet earth itself is the NAture's biggest water treatment plant

The Immediate Need for New Water Science - (Reason - 1)

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“Groundwater must be fully integrated into WASH programmes to make them climate resilient”

Citation: Robertson DJ, MacAllister DJ, Gurmessa SK, Matta J, MacDonald A, McManus C, et al. (2025) Groundwater must be fully integrated into WASH programmes to make them climate resilient. PLOS Water 4(7): e0000404. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pwat.0000404 Published: July 14, 2025

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Despite groundwater’s fundamental importance, understanding and accounting for groundwater has long been an ‘invisible’ component in WASH programming and wider development planning – sidelined as a water resources issue instead of being core to ensuring sustainable service delivery [1,3,6].

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1. UN-Water. The United Nations World Water Development Report 2022: Groundwater: Making the invisible visible. Paris: UNESCO. 2022.

​3. Foster S, MacDonald A. The ‘water security’ dialogue: why it needs to be better informed about groundwater. Hydrogeol J. 2014;22(7):1489–92.

​6. Gregory A, Kelly E, Landa S, Muthike DM, Samo J, Lopez J, et al. Challenges and opportunities for enhancing groundwater data access and usability in low- and middle-income countries: insights and recommendations from WaSH researchers and practitioners. Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development. 2024;14(10):929–37.

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As a result, in many contexts there is often limited groundwater expertise or knowledge available and where it does exist, it is often under-resourced and overstretched. As such, WASH actors cannot assume effective groundwater management is in place to coordinate with. Instead, if resilience is the goal, WASH actors must be prepared to actively contribute to groundwater characterisation and management needs themselves.

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Climate change, population and economic change are placing increasing strain on WASH services, making groundwater increasingly critical for resilience. Yet for many regions, particularly in LMICs, groundwater remains poorly understood, inconsistently monitored and weakly governed. Without active integration of groundwater into WASH programming, we risk undermining or overlooking opportunities for building climate-resilience.

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Call for Research Proposals: Shallow Aquifer Management

Shallow Aquifer Management (SAM) 2.0

National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA) 

Online publication: 22nd July, 2025

 

India extracts an estimated 245 billion cubic meters of groundwater annually, which is more than China and the USA combined (in second and third place, respectively), making us the most groundwater-dependent country in the world. Managing this critical resource wisely has become essential, especially in urban areas. Yet, knowledge gaps in this subject hinder harnessing sustainable solutions. Could shallow aquifer management offer a breakthrough?

For the first time, a dedicated research call is spotlighting urban shallow aquifers — a vital water source neglected in urban planning, despite their crucial role in supporting water resilience.

 

New Water Science - The Way for Future Water Security...

The New Water Science behind Surface water and Groundwater will give answer for all field specialists throughout the globe who are still following the Hydrology basics defined under assumption from 1983 and mentioning that Groundwater is invisible, Poorly understood, explained with Uncertainties and have Knowledge Gaps.

 

The New Water Science claims that "Groundwater is no more invisible nor  poorly understood". Instead it is well studied, proved with the Actual Science and published.

 

The New Water Science links the Author's publications through a single platform under MY PORTFOLIO in the Menu.

 

All 272 water warriors, recently recognized by the Govt of India were already involved in the Groundwater Revolution as mentioned here and they are the location specific leaders of this mission - Unknowingly. 

 

They are involved only in the first aid activities which is just a part of Groundwater Operation as mentioned in the publications which should be approached technically with the New Groundwater Science available here in this web page to achieve the Permanent Solution for Flood and Drought Conditions.

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