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Abstract:
The Global Gravity-based Groundwater Product (G3P) developed a satellite-based groundwater storage anomaly (GWSA) data set as a prototype for a future product within the EU Copernicus Climate Change Service. In Copernicus, there is no service available yet to deliver data on this fundamental resource, nor is there any other data source worldwide that operationally provides information on changing groundwater resources in a consistent way, observation-based, and with global coverage. Therefore, G3P developed the global data set of groundwater storage variations as a cross-cutting extension of the existing Copernicus portfolio. G3P capitalizes from the unique capability of GRACE and GRACE-FO satellite gravimetry, and from other satellite-based water storage compartments (WSCs) to provide a data set of groundwater storage change for large areas with global coverage. G3P is obtained by using a mass balance approach, i.e., by subtracting satellite-based WSCs from GRACE/GRACE-FO monthly terrestrial water storage anomalies (TWSA). For a consistent subtraction of all individual WSCs from GRACE-TWSA, the individual WSCs are filtered in a similar way as GRACE-TWSA. G3P groundwater variations are provided for almost two decades (from 2002 to 2020), with a monthly resolution, and at 0.5-degree spatial resolution globally.The GWSA is evaluated against in-situ groundwater observations, using 13 large aquifers worldwide with available in-situ groundwater observations. Results show a high correlation between the variations of in-situ groundwater data and G3P-based GWSA for most of the aquifers, such as the Ogallala aquifer, Floridan aquifer, Paris Basin, South of Outer Himalayas aquifer.