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Groundwater Development and Drilling. Session 5 Protecting Groundwater Sources. 1. Session Aims. Demonstrate the potential impacts on groundwater that may affect security of the water source,
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Groundwater Development and Drilling Session 5 Protecting Groundwater Sources 1 GWD5
Session Aims • Demonstrate the potential impacts on groundwater that may affect security of the water source, • Discuss systems that must be put in place to determine whether the water supply is able to be sustained for on-going use, and • Demonstrate what issues need to be understood for on-going use 2 GWD5
Key Risks to Groundwater Question 1: What are some of the risks to the use of groundwater for emergency water supply? • Reduction of groundwater availability / Depletion of aquifer yield due to excessive drawdown, sustainability, interference from other bores • Water quality impacts - contamination in the catchment and near the bore -eg salt water intrusion, latrines, other pollutants • Protection of the bore itself -eg animals, agricultural runoff, dirty equipment, including vandalism • Contamination from up-gradient contaminants, salt water intrusion • Set up costs, time lags, proper investigation and design • Costs of pumping, maintenance of pumps and fuel supply • Interruption to power or fuel supply (related to well infrastructure and delivery–session GWD4) 3 GWD5
Reduced Yield from a Well QUIZ 2: • What factors will affect the amount of water that can be extracted from a well? • What will happen if the well is pumped at too high a rate • What happens when the pump stops? • Does this apply to all wells? • What might the long term effect of this be? 4 GWD5
Reduction in Availability Relevance to Emergency • Reduction of flow from well or spring related to the balance between the amount of water removed from an aquifer and the amount that recharges. • Unless there is adequate seasonal recharge into the aquifer, the volume of groundwater stored in the aquifer will be reduced - ultimately unsustainable supply. • If extraction is too great on a particular day, the yield of the well on that day may drop off • Changes due to pumping drawdown and recovery due to recharge need to be carefully monitored to make sure supply is maintained 5 GWD5
Water Quality Effects Groundwater potentially protected by being below the surface Potability can be influenced by: • Natural variations in salinity • Naturally occurring chemicals • Man-induced contamination 6 GWD5
Naturally occurring quality issues • Salinity • Potable (<1000mg/L) based on palatibility • Turbidity • Can be serious in hand dug wells and poorly constructed drilled wells • Dissolved Iron • Unpleasant taste and colour • Dissolved Carbonate / bicarbonate • Unpleasant taste, precipitation on pipes 7 GWD5
Natural Toxicants • High Fluoride and Arsenic occur in some groundwaters • Can be naturally occurring • Can be detrimental to health • Tend to be due to long term exposure – but requires careful assessment 8 GWD5
Contamination by Humans 9 GWD5
Microbiological contamination • The bacterium Escherichia.coli is found in the intestines of warm blooded animals, • - present in the faeces of humans • Latrines can be a source of contamination with E.coli – • Bacteria and viruses have relatively short lives in groundwater • Latrine siting is important • - not in the groundwater flow path 10 GWD5
Microbiological contamination 11 GWD5
Protection of Well surrounds Poorly maintained well head at pumping well with pathway for contamination down the well, Osire Refugee Camp, Namibia 12 GWD5
Protection of Well surrounds Filthy surrounds to shallow well and likely contamination introduced to a well by rope. Note the broken hand pump has compromised the security of the well head. To access the well buckets are used. Gassire, Eastern Chad 13 GWD5
Protection of Well surrounds Sanitary well conditions at the well head but a contamination source (pig pens) is immediately behind the fence (Nias, Indonesia, 2006). 14 GWD5
Maintenance of Aquifers and Well Infrastructure • Emergency can cause additional demand • Increased drawdown on existing wells • Over-extraction pressure on the aquifer • Too many people at a well (eg open well) can lead to contamination 15 GWD5
Repairing and disinfecting wells Litter in well after Tsunami, Band Aceh, Indonesia Rubbish removed from the base of an open well during well rehabilitation, Gassire, Chad After rubbish removal, disinfection with a chlorine solution 16 GWD5
Refurbishing well surrounds Original unsanitary well surrounds, Rehabilitated apron with drainage point bottom left. 17 GWD5
Repair of deep wells • Deep wells can be degraded by: • Microbiological contamination • – can be disinfected with chlorine solution • Casing and screen corrosion • – repair or replacement • Build up of bacterial slime (fouling) on screens • – chemical treatments • Treatment / repair of existing wells needs careful assessment and specialist inputs • Not a focus for first phase emergencies. 18 GWD5
Spring Protection Dedicated buckets and collection cell, Nias,Indonesia 19 GWD5
Monitoring • QUIZ 2: MONITORING QUIZ • Why monitor? • What to consider in a monitoring program • What type of information is collected for a groundwater source? GWD5
Monitoring Monitoring of water level, usage and quality is important fundamental to record and store the data Data must be looked at and used to make best use of the groundwater resource Monitoring groundwater levels in new water supply well GWD5