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Tough choices to
make
Changes
in population, the development of towns and villages, new farming
practices and new industry all increase the demand for water.
This demand will be higher in particular regions of the UK,
such as the south-east of England. In much of the country surface
water supplies are fully developed. In some regions groundwater
may be able to address some of the shortfall, but an increase
in the use of groundwater could impact on the environment
.
Groundwater
plays an important role supporting aquatic ecosystems. It
provides the water that sustains the flow of rivers in summer
months, particularly those in areas underlain by permeable
rocks. Many of the nation’s wetlands exist because of
saturated ground resulting from a water table that is very
close to the surface. An increase in abstraction of groundwater
may cause the flow of groundwater into rivers to decrease
or the groundwater levels in the vicinity of wetlands to fall,
with potentially serious implications for their ecology and
wildlife. We have to balance the needs of the environment
against our need for water for drinking, agriculture and industry.
Water supply problems are made worse by the legacy of pollution
affecting our groundwater resources. Pollutants include nitrate,
which has increased largely due to intensive agriculture.
Because groundwater moves so slowly much of this nitrate is
still moving towards the boreholes that provide our groundwater
drinking supplies. We can treat or blend waters to reduce
nitrate concentrations in our supplies but this becomes increasingly
expensive as nitrate levels rise. So here the balance to be
made is between land use, farming methods and water supplies.
Other types of pollution, such as that
from past industrial activities, only add to the difficulties.
Here the difficult choice is often whether the cost of cleaning
up past pollution can be justified, and, if so, identifying
who should pay.
Sustainable development of our water
resources will involve tough choices if we are to be able
to provide the water that the nation requires, while protecting
the environment; new water legislation and EU-wide standards
are now in place to help provide this protection. But decisions
on groundwater use are never simple: we may all be keen to
see the impact of abstraction on river flows and wetlands
reduced, but we also want cheap and plentiful water from our
own taps; we want unpolluted water, but we also want good
value in farming products; we want urban industrial pollution
to be cleaned up, but we want local taxes to be kept low.
Key to making the right decisions are processes that take
account of your views. Agenda 21, a global action plan for
sustainable development, agreed at the Earth Summit in Rio
in 1992, asks governments around the world to work locally
with communities to help ‘meet the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of future generations
to meet their needs'. We hope that this web site will
help you understand some of the environmental and social issues
facing groundwater. |