Ocean levels have risen several inches over the last century, and  that's only likely to increase going forward. Most of that is related to  climate change — but now scientists may have discovered a hidden factor  in all this: irrigation. 
At first glance, that might seem surprising. After all, irrigation is  just moving water from one area to another, to allow people to live in  naturally dry or arid areas. The problem is that not all irrigation  comes from water already on the surface - a lot of it is now extracted  from deep underground, introducing tons of extra water that would not  otherwise be a part of the planet's water cycle.
Researchers from the US Geological Survey calculated that the last  century saw over a thousand cubic miles worth of water extracted from  underground and used for irrigation purposes. 
That was enough water to  boost ocean levels by about half an inch, accounting for 12.6% of the  total sea level rise in the 20th century.
And all this isn't likely to stop anytime soon. Ground water  extraction has skyrocketed in the last decade, with some estimates say  we're now bringing up about 34 cubic miles each year. That's enough to  increase sea levels by .016 inches each year, which is 13% of the  current rise. 
While melting ice and other climate-related factors remain  responsible for the vast majority of the sea level increase, this adds a  new wrinkle to how we use irrigation and ground water going forward.
by "environment clean generations" 

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