Assessing the impact of groundwater abstractions on river flows

Author:

Kirk S.1,Herbert A. W.2

Affiliation:

1. Environment Agency, National Groundwater and Contaminated Land Centre Olton Court, 10 Warwick Road, Olton, Solihull, West Midlands B92 7HX, UK stuartkirk@environment-agency.gov.uk

2. Environmental Simulations International Priory House, Priory Road, Shrewsbury SY1 1RU, UK

Abstract

AbstractGroundwater abstractions affect the water balance in catchments of rivers in hydraulic continuity with groundwater and may lead to reductions in river baseflow. The Environment Agency issues licences for groundwater abstractions and takes into account the risk of such adverse impacts when deciding whether to grant licences and what conditions to associate with each licence. Assessing the impact of a particular licence is a difficult task, but analytical solutions to idealizations of the complex river-aquifer interaction can help guide such judgements. This paper presents a brief review of available analytical solutions and discusses their applicability to real groundwater systems. The most useful analytical solutions (developed by Theis, Hantush and Stang) have been incorporated into a spreadsheet and a new methodology has been made available to support Environment Agency hydrogeologists working in abstraction licensing. This offers a consistent approach to making an initial evaluation of the impact of groundwater abstraction on river flow that may be applied across the diverse hydrogeological systems found throughout the Environment Agency Regions of England and Wales. The use of analytical solutions in this methodology inevitably represents a significant simplification of what is generally a very complex issue, and the limitations of the new methodology are emphasized.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

Reference27 articles.

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2. Bullock A. Gustard A. Irving K. Young A. (1994) Low flow estimation in artificially influenced catchments, Institute of Hydrology, National Rivers Authority, R&D Note, 274.

3. Risk assessment for a proposed groundwater abstraction scheme in Strathmore, north east Scotland: a modelling approach;Chen;Journal of the Institute of Water and Environmental Management,1997

4. Modelling river-aquifer interactions at the Spey Abstraction Scheme, Scotland: implications for aquifer protection

5. (1999) Impact of groundwater abstractions on river flow: user manual, Solihull, National Groundwater and Contaminated Land Centre Report, NC/06/28. Environment Agency.

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