Implications of the Melamchi water supply project for the Kathmandu Valley groundwater system

Author:

Thapa Bhesh Raj12,Ishidaira Hiroshi1,Gusyev Maksym3,Pandey Vishnu Prasad2,Udmale Parmeshwar4,Hayashi Masaki5,Shakya Narendra Man6

Affiliation:

1. Interdisciplinary Research Center for River Basin Environment (ICRE), University of Yamanashi, Takeda 4-3-11, Kofu, Yamanashi 400-8511, Japan

2. International Water Management Institute (IWMI) – Nepal Office, Durbar Tole, Pulchowk-3, Lalitpur, Nepal

3. International Centre for Water Hazard and Risk Management (ICHARM), Public Works Research Institute (PWRI), Tsukuba, Japan

4. Department of Civil and Earth Resources Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto 615-8540, Japan

5. Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, 2500 University Dr. NW Calgary, Alberta, T2N 1N4, Canada

6. Department of Civil Engineering, Institute of Engineering, Tribhuvan University, Pulchowk, Lalitpur, Nepal

Abstract

Abstract To meet the demand deficit in Kathmandu Valley, the Government of Nepal has planned to supply an additional 510 million liters per day (mld) of water by implementing the Melamchi Water Supply Project (MWSP) in the near future. In this study, we aim to assess the spatial distribution of groundwater availability and pumping under five scenarios for before and after the implementation of the MWSP using a numerical groundwater flow model. The data on water demand, supply infrastructure, changes in hydraulic head, groundwater pumping rates, and aquifer characteristics were analyzed. Results showed that groundwater pumping from individual wells ranges from 0.0018 to 2.8 mld and the average hydraulic head declined from 2.57 m below ground level (bgl) (0.23 m/year) to 21.58 m bgl (1.96 m/year). Model simulations showed that changes in average hydraulic head ranged from +2.83 m to +5.48 m at various stages of the MWSP implementation, and −2.97 m for increased pumping rates with no implementation of the MWSP. Regulation in pumping such as monetary instruments (groundwater pricing) on the use of groundwater along with appropriate metering and monitoring of pumping amounts depending on the availability of new and existing public water supply could be interventions in the near future.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Water Science and Technology,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference43 articles.

1. Large area hydrologic modeling and assessment part I: model development;Journal of the American Water Resources Association,1998

2. CBS (2012). National Population and Housing Census 2011 (National Report). Government of Nepal, Central Bureau of Statistics, Kathmandu, Nepal.

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