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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This paper reports on the qualitative and quantitative screening of groundwater sources for integration into the public water supply system of the Algarve, Portugal. The
results are employed in a decision support system currently under development for an integrated water resources management
scheme in the region. Such a scheme is crucial for several reasons, including the extreme seasonal and annual variations in rainfall, the effect of climate change on more frequent and long-lasting droughts, the continuously increasing water demand and the high risk of a single-source water
supply policy. The latter was revealed during the severe drought of 2004 and 2005, when surface reservoirs were depleted and the regional water demand could not be met, despite the drilling of emergency wells.
For screening and selection, quantitative criteria are based on aquifer properties and well yields, whereas qualitative
criteria are defined by water quality indices. These reflect the well’s degree of violation of drinking water standards
for different sets of variables, including toxicity parameters, nitrate and chloride, iron and manganese and microbiological
parameters. Results indicate the current availability of at least 1100 l s−1 of high quality groundwater (55% of the regional demand), requiring only disinfection (900 l s−1) or basic treatment, prior to human consumption. These groundwater
withdrawals are sustainable when compared to mean annual recharge, considering that at least 40% is preserved for ecological demands. A more accurate and comprehensive
analysis of sustainability is performed with the help of steady-state and transient groundwater flow simulations, which account for aquifer geometry, boundary conditions,
recharge and discharge rates, pumping activity and season.
(tibor.stigter@ist.utl.pt)
ality. They permit an advanced analysis of present and future
scenarios and show that increasing water demands and
decreasing rainfall will make the water supply system extremely
vulnerable, with a high risk of groundwater salinization
and ecosystem degradation.
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Keywords
Citation
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 13. (2009) pp 1185-1199
Publisher
Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union