The ground water in aquifers is accessible from wells and springs, but many of those aquifers are not being recharged by surface water, and depletion continues without meaningful controls. When aquifers seize to be the dominant source of fresh water, humans will have to rely more and more on surface water, which currently is only a small fraction of the world’s supply of liquid fresh water. Conservation measures and alternative sources such as desalination are successfully being applied.
Some scientists consider the availability of fresh water resources to potentially be a greater global problem than that of climate change.
Wikipedia Water Resources USGS Water Resources GreenFacts
In the Middle East and other parts of the world, desalination plants extract potable water from seawater where energy supplies are abundant. There are 13,080 desalination plants in operation worldwide. In Japan, India and Russia, nuclear reactors coupled to desalination plants are being used as a source of large quantities of potable water.
The city of Las Vegas has floated the idea of building desalination plants in California or Mexico in exchange for a greater share of the Colorado River water.
Supporting Websites WaterandWastewater.com Carlsbad Desalination Project Clear Water Solutions
In addition in some places like California, there is opposition to desalination plants because of the potential effect on the salinity of coastal waters as the salty brines extracted from the process are returned to the ocean.
Opposing Websites Environmental Science and Technology World Wildlife Fund EcoGeek