In one of the world’s great rivers, the Mekong River, the GEF Trust Fund is investing in the invisible: its groundwater. A new 15 million USD project, led by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), bringing the transboundary Cambodia - Mekong River Delta Aquifer in lower Mekong into the spotlight, was developed and is soon to be approved.
Connecting two ecosystems of global environmental significance and socio-economic importance: the Tonle Sap area and the Mekong Delta, including some major urban areas, such as Phnom Penh and Ho Chi Minh, the Cambodia – Mekong River Delta Aquifer (CMDA) is a transboundary water body of profound importance. Home to approximately 35 million people, the Cambodia – Mekong River Delta Aquifer faces a number of challenges, which threaten livelihoods and ecosystems, with severe socioeconomic implications. Over-extraction and reduced recharge lead to a rapid water table decline, which in turn exacerbates land surface subsidence, threatening water and food security in the region. In Cambodia, in Prey Veng farmers find their wells dried out at the end of the dry season, while the Siem Reap town - the fastest growing city fueled by the tourism industry heavily depended on water abstractions - sees their Angkor’s world heritage listed temples, which are built on sand layers, tremble when water saturation is low. Moreover, declining water levels are threatening the sustainability of groundwater dependent ecosystems, such as wetlands and forests of the Mekong Delta.