Groundwater is a critical strategic resource supporting agricultural production and ecological security in the transboundary river basins of Northeast China. However, intensified climate variability and rapid agricultural expansion over the past two decades have imposed increasing pressure on regional groundwater systems. In this study, we integrated GRACE-derived terrestrial water storage anomalies, GLDAS land surface data, meteorological datasets, land-use information, and agricultural statistics to construct a comprehensive assessment framework consisting of groundwater storage anomalies (ΔGWS), the GRACE Groundwater Drought Index (GGDI), and sustainability indicators—REL (Reliability), RES (Resilience), VUL (Vulnerability), and SI (Sustainability Index). By integrating GRACE-derived groundwater dynamics with sustainability indicators (REL, RES, VUL, and SI), enabling a basin-scale, long-term assessment of groundwater sustainability across Northeast China’s transboundary basins, and clarifying the relative roles of climatic variability and intensive human water use. We systematically examined the spatiotemporal evolution of groundwater conditions in the Heilongjiang, Suifen, Tumen, and Yalu River basins from 2002 to 2022, and quantified the relative roles of climatic and anthropogenic drivers. The results indicate that groundwater storage exhibited pronounced seasonal fluctuations alongside a persistent downward trend, with GGDI remaining predominantly negative after 2018, reflecting the development of structural groundwater drought. The SI declined markedly from 0.32 to 0.06, and areas with extremely low sustainability accounted for more than 90% of the study region in recent years. MIC-based dependence analysis showed that sown area (MIC = 0.98) and nighttime light intensity (MIC = 0.92) were the dominant drivers of groundwater degradation, exerting far greater influence than precipitation or potential evapotranspiration. These patterns highlight that policy-driven agricultural expansion and increased irrigation demand have surpassed natural recharge capacity, becoming the fundamental cause of long-term groundwater depletion. This study underscores the urgency of promoting agricultural green transformation, optimizing crop planting structures, improving irrigation efficiency, and enhancing ecological conservation to rebuild groundwater resilience. Moreover, coordinated cross-border groundwater monitoring and management will be essential for ensuring the sustainable use of water resources in Northeast Asia’s transboundary river basins.
Liu et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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