In 2018, a total of 74% of EU groundwater bodies were assessed to be in "good chemical status". Agriculture has been identified as a major contributor to poor status due to nitrate and pesticide pollution.[2]
Background
The European Union first published legislation specifically for groundwater protection in 1979 (Directive 80/68/EEC) to limit the discharge of certain toxic substances from industrial sources.[3][4]
Between 1991 and 1995, calls to implement measures avoiding long-term deterioration of freshwater sources by the year 2000 were recognised, as well as requests from the European Council to revise Directive 80/68/EEC due to concerns that groundwater resources remained seriously endangered by both pollutants and growing water extraction.[5][6]
In 1996, an action programme was adopted by the European Commission, introducing controls on abstraction of freshwater, and identifying the need to monitor freshwater quality and quantities.[3][6] The European Parliament and Council subsequently requested the Commission to establish a framework for European water policy, leading to the adoption of the Water Framework Directive (WFD) in October 2000. The WFD aims to ensure a balance between extraction and recharge of groundwater, but resolving quality standards for chemical status was a complex challenge, requiring the proposal and adoption of a "daughter" directive clarifying the criteria for chemical status measures and pollution trends, This new Groundwater Directive was adopted in December of 2006.[3]
Objectives
The GWD provides the detailed procedures for meeting the WFD's environmental objectives for groundwater quality.[8]
The specific measures include: criteria for the assessment of good groundwater chemical status; and criteria for the identification and reversal of upward trends in the concentration of pollutants.[9]
Member states are required to establish threshold values for all pollutants and pollution indicators. The directive specifies a minimum list of pollutants that must be considered to identify groundwater bodies that are at risk of not meeting good chemical standards as determined by the WFD. Both the list of pollutants and quality standards are to be reviewed every six years.[10]
Quality Standards
The Water Framework Directive outlines strategies to prevent and control pollution of groundwater. It mandates the adoption of measures with conductivity and pollutant concentration parameters to achieve good groundwater chemical status. In particular, groundwater bodies must not exhibit effects of saline or pose significant damage to ecosystems dependent on the body to be considered "good status".[11]
The Groundwater Directive addresses these quality standards with the following list of pollutants:
The quality standard specifies a total value for the sum of all individual pesticides detected and quantified in the monitoring procedures.[10]
Threshold Values
Member States are required to establish threshold values for all pollutants and indicators. The threshold values should be based on interactions between groundwater and dependent ecosystems; interference with legitimate uses of groundwater; pollutants that are characterised as risky; hydro-geological characteristics including information on natural background levels and water balance.
A minimum list of pollutants and indicators are specified for which Member States must consider establishing threshold values:[10]
Description
Pollutants or indicators
Substances or ions or indicators which may occur naturally and/or as a result of human activities
Member States are required to identify significant upward trends in groundwater bodies that are at risk in accordance with the WFD. The Groundwater Directive mandates the usage of statistical methods, such as regression analysis, for time series of individual monitoring points.
Measures to reverse upward trends are expected to be implemented once pollutant concentration reaches 75% of the values specified by the GWD's quality standards.[1]
^Frollini, E.; Preziosi, E.; Calace, N.; Guerra, M.; Guyennon, N.; Marcaccio, M.; Menichetti, S.; Romano, E.; Ghergo, S. (2021), "National Library of Medicine: Groundwater quality trend and trend reversal assessment in the European Water Framework Directive context: an example with nitrates in Italy", Environmental Science and Pollution Research International, 28 (17): 22092–22104, doi:10.1007/s11356-020-11998-0, PMC8106612, PMID33411302