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Sustainable water supply in Swedish coastal areas – possibilities and challenges Bosse Olofsson Royal Institute of Technology, KTH NGL Annual Meeting at Äspö 2013-11- 07
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Sustainable water supply in Swedish coastal areas – possibilities and challenges

Feb 22, 2016

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Sustainable water supply in Swedish coastal areas – possibilities and challenges. Bosse Olofsson Royal Institute of Technology, KTH NGL Annual Meeting at Äspö 2013-11-07. 50% of the world’s population concentrates to a 60km wide coastal zone - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Sustainable water supply in Swedish coastal areas – possibilities and challenges

Bosse OlofssonRoyal Institute of Technology, KTH

NGL Annual Meeting at Äspö 2013-11-07

Page 2: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

• 50% of the world’s population concentrates to a 60km wide coastal zone

• Huge water stress along the coastal zone• Swedish coast stretches >2400km

Page 3: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Climate change (IPCC 2013)

• Locally higher precipitation• >2oC increase in temperature to 2100• Dry periods occur more often• Longer dry periods• Most energy stored in sea• Sea level rise (>3.2 mm/year)

(IPCC 2013)

Page 4: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Model for precipitation and temperature changes until 2100Source: Rossby Center, SMHI 2012

There are several model scenaries pointing towards similar direction

Swedish climate changes?

Page 5: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Climate change in Sweden 2050-• Increased prec.(but at least bigger variations)• Increased evapotranspiration• Longer vegetation season• Longer periods of drought• Increased competition of water• Increased costs for water treatment

Page 6: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Changed number of days per year with drough to 2100

Källa: SMHI 2013

Days/year

Page 7: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

We will need to store water for much longer periods than today

The question is where?.....

Page 8: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

200 m

Small reservoirs

Concentration of houses

Bad existing sewage systems

Rapid flows

Increasing water demand

Attractive environment

Swedish specific coastal problems

Fertilization

Pollution

Coastal erosion

Water chemical problems (Cl, Rn, U, F)

Bare rock outcrops

High hydraulic heterogeneity

Page 9: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Areas with scarcity of groundwater in sweden (for water supply with sufficient quantity and quality)

(SGU 2009)

RockTillClay

Sand

Sand and gravel

Page 10: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

A bedrock with high storage capacity but sensitive to seawater intrusion

Page 11: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Shear fracture, partly coated with minerals

•From side

•From top

The flow possibility of each fracture depends on its

•genesis•weathering conditions•mineral filling•rock stresses

Page 12: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Bedrock (0.001-0.05%)

Till (3-5%)Clay (0.01-0.1%)

Water (100%)Sand (10-40%)

Well

Well

Shear fractures

Kinematic porosity in different units

0.001 - 0.05%

Page 13: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Uses data from •SGU•SMHI•Lantmäteriet

Usually we have limited amount of data, especially high quality data

Page 14: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Till or sand and gravel

Draining tubes

Dug or drilled well

BedrockClay

Bentonite orplastic liner

Groundwater recharge

Example of method for increasing the storage

called”groundwater dams”

Page 15: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges
Page 16: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Figure 10. Vulnerable zones (encircled) of Boda-Kalvsvik.

Topographic Wetness Index (TWI) of Boda-Kalvsvik.

Development of methods to clarify suitable places for localization of subsurface dams

Based on water balances and aquifer deliniation in GIS

Page 17: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Na+

Na+

Cl-

Cl-

Cl-Na+

NO3-

Rn

Rn

Bacteria

Baltic Sea

Shortage of groundwater, often leads to deterioration

of groundwater quality

• Natural geological conditions (e.g. metals, pH, radon, alkalinity…)• Induced changes(e.g. salinization)• Pollutants (e.g. cadmium)

Page 18: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Water supply

Sewage

Älgö – Stockholm archipelago

What is the impact from sewage infiltration?

Page 19: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Bedrock (1500-2000 m3/d)

Till(15-20 m3/d)

Sand(1-2 m3/d)

=> big problems in exploitational areas. How can we get turnover time of 60 days?

Soil volume for infiltration for 1 family (ca 500 l/d)

Page 20: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Development of a risk assessment scenario at e.g Tynningö

Tynningö

Ramsö

Example 1: Nitrate and ammonium

Page 21: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Vulnerability of nitrate pollution of wells

Page 22: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

0 k m 2 0 k m 4 0 k m

Radon content in wells in the county of Stockholm

N

Rn conc. (Bq/L) 0 to 100 100 to 500 500 to 1000 1000 to 64000

0

100

500

1000

Rn

(Bq/

L)

0 k m 2 0 k m 4 0 k m

Radon risk areascalculated usingkriging.

N

(W hite areas havetoo few wells)

Rn innehåll (Bq/l) i brunnar i Stockholms län (n=5666)

11%

15%

47%

27%>1000500-1000100-500<100

Rn innehåll (Bq/l) i brunnar i Stockholms län (n=5666)

11%

15%

47%

27%>1000500-1000100-500<100

N=5666

Stockholm countyExample 2: Radon, radium and uranium

Page 23: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Testing of method(2209 wells)

Each point is representative of an area of 25 x 25 km2

A high correlation observed between median radon concentration and median RV- value.

RV-v

alue

(med

ian

valu

e)

Page 24: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Prediktion 2209 wells

Prediction of radon content in drilled wells using GIS

FRV > 0 : Low risk

-5 < FRV < 0 : Medium risk

FRV < -5 : High risk

RV-method

Page 25: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Example 3: Prediction of groundwater quality in private wells at Gotland

(Pirnia & Olofsson 2013)

Page 26: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Based on statistical analysis (ANOVA, PCA) using chemical data, geological and topographical data

Prediction of groundwater quality

(Pirnia & Olofsson 2013)

Page 27: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Future research need related to water supply in hard rock areas

• How to estimate storage and capacity without extensive drilling

• How to get a measure of heterogeneity and anisotropy without extensive test pumping

• How to characterize groundwater chemical quality, origin and turnover time with limited amount of data

• How to deliniate bedrock aquifer extension and set boarder conditions with sparce of data

• How to differentiate origin of compounds with many different sources (chloride, radon, lead, arsenic)

There is a strong need for robust assessment methods for planning and decision support locally and regionally

Page 28: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Concluding strategy• We are convinced that the

best way to develop models and techniques for generalized estimations of groundwater resources using sparce of data is to develop and test such models where there are lots of data available, such as the NGL (a.o stored in SICADA)

Page 29: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges

Thanks

Page 30: Sustainable  water  supply  in Swedish  coastal  areas –  possibilities  and  challenges