4.7 Article

Salt vulnerability assessment methodology for municipal supply wells

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 531, Issue -, Pages 523-533

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.11.004

Keywords

Road salt; Water quality; Vulnerability; GIS; Groundwater; Chloride

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. City of Toronto
  3. City of Guelph
  4. City of Cambridge
  5. City of Waterloo
  6. Region of Waterloo
  7. County of Wellington
  8. Grand River Conservation Authority
  9. Ontario Ministry of Transportation
  10. Ontario Research Fund
  11. G360 Centre for Applied Groundwater Research
  12. Environment Canada
  13. Ontario Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change
  14. Salt Institute

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De-icing agents containing chloride ions used for winter road maintenance have the potential to negatively impact groundwater resources for drinking water supplies. A novel methodology using commonly-available geospatial data (land use, well head protection areas) and public accessible data (salt application rates, hydrometric data) to identify salt vulnerable areas (SVAs) for groundwater wells is developed to prioritize implementation of better management practices for road salt applications. The approach uses simple mass-balance terms to collect chloride input from 3 pathways: surface runoff, shallow interflow and baseflow. A risk score is calculated, which depends on the land use within the respective municipal supply well protection area. Therefore, it is plausible to avoid costly and extensive numerical modeling (which also would bear many assumptions, simplifications and uncertainties). The method is applied to perform a vulnerability assessment on twenty municipal water supply wells in the Grand River watershed, Ontario, Canada. The calculated steady-state groundwater recharge chloride concentration for the supply wells is strongly correlated to the measured transient groundwater chloride concentrations in the case study evaluation, with an R-2 = 0.84. The new method provides a simple, robust, and practical method for municipalities to assess the long-term risk of chloride contamination of municipal supply wells due to road salt application. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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