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  • 1
    Description / Table of Contents: This book offers an overview of key findings in groundwater management in context against the legislative milestones, Until recently, focus on groundwater mainly concerned its use as drinking water and as an important resource for industry (e.g. cooling waters) and agriculture (irrigation). It has, however, become increasingly obvious that groundwater should not only be viewed as a drinking water reservoir, but that it should also be protected for its environmental value. In this respect, groundwater represents an important link of the hydrological cycle through the maintenance of wetlands and river flows, acting as a buffer through dry periods. Hence, deterioration of groundwater quality may directly affect other related aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. The groundwater legislative framework under the EU Water Framework Directive and the newly adopted Groundwater Directive establishes criteria linked to environmental objectives which have to be met by 2015 following successive operational steps including characterisation, risk assessment (analysis of pressures and impacts), monitoring and design of programmes of measures. These milestones require that sound technical and scientific information be made accessible to water managers, which is so far still not sufficiently streamlined. In this context, this book describes the groundwater legislative milestones and presents series of research and development activities that aim to directly support them. It has, therefore, the ambition to become a vehicle liaising policy requirements and available scientific knowledge in this area
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 796 p , Online-Ressource , 197 b&w, ill
    Edition: RSC eBook Collection 1968-2009
    Language: English
    Note: Ebook , Foreword: Preface: 1. General introduction: The need to protect groundwater-- 2. Science-policy integration needs-- 2.1. Science-policy integration for common approaches linked to groundwater management in Europe-- 2.2. Transferring scientific knowledge to societal use: clue from the AQUATERRA integrated project-- 2.3. Groundwater management and planning: how can economics help?-- 3. Groundwater regulatory framework-- 3.1. EU Groundwater policy-- 3.2. US Drinking Water Regulation: Overview of the Ground Water Rule-- 4. Stakeholder's interactions-- 4.1. Principles of the Common Implementation Strategy of the WFD - The WG Groundwater-- 4.2. The Pilot River Basin network - examples of groundwater-related activities-- 4.3. The HarmoniCA initiative-- 4.4. Linking public participation to adaptive management-- 5. Groundwater characterization and risk assessment-- 5.1. Groundwater characterization and risk assessment in the context of the EU Water Framework Directive-- 5.2. Groundwater quality background levels-- 5.3. Groundwater age and water quality vulnerability-- 5.4. Characterization of groundwater contamination and natural attenuation potential at multiple scales-- 5.5. Improved risk assessment of contaminant spreading in fractured underground reservoirs-- 5.6. Groundwater risk assessment at contaminated sites (GRACOS): Test methods and modeling approaches-- 5.7. INCORE - Integrated concept for groundwater remediation-- 6. Groundwater monitoring-- 6.1. Groundwater monitoring in the policy context-- 6.2. Screening methods for groundwater monitoring-- 6.3. Quality assurance for groundwater monitoring-- 7. Groundwater pollution prevention and remediation-- 7.1. Prevention and reduction of pollution of groundwater pollution at contaminated megasites: integrated management strategy, and its application on megasite cases-- 7.2. Forecasting natural attenuation as risk-based groundwater remediation strategy-- 7.3. Diffuse groundwater quality impacts from agricultural land-use - Management and policy implications of scientific realities-- 8. Integrated river basin management-- 8.1. IWRM principles for groundwater in the WFD context-- 8.2. System approach to environmentally acceptable farming-- 8.3. WATCH - Water catchment areas: Tools for management and control of hazardous compounds-- 9. Groundwater status assessment-- 9.1. Methodology for the establishment of groundwater quality standards-- 9.2. Pesticides in European Groundwaters: biogeochemical processes, contamination status and results from a case study-- 9.3. Evaluation of the quantitative status of groundwater-surface water interaction at a national scale-- 10. Modeling-- 10.1. Conceptual models in river basin management-- 10.2. Modeling reactive transport of diffuse contaminants: identifying the groundwater contribution to surface water quality-- 11. Conclusions - Further policy and research needs-- 11.1. SNOWMAN - An alternative for transnational research funding-- 11.2. Groundwater ecosystems research & policy needs-- 11.3. Towards a science-policy interface (WISE-RTD) in support of groundwater management and its links to EU-research funding programmes-- 12. Appendices-- Appendix I - Outline of Water Framework Directive-- Appendix II - Outline of Groundwater Directive.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-03-30
    Description: Coastal global oceans are expected to undergo drastic changes driven by climate change and increasing anthropogenic pressures in coming decades. Predicting specific future conditions and assessing the best management strategies to maintain ecosystem integrity and sustainable resource use are difficult, because of multiple interacting pressures, uncertain projections, and a lack of test cases for management. We argue that the Baltic Sea can serve as a time machine to study consequences and mitigation of future coastal perturbations, due to its unique combination of an early history of multistressor disturbance and ecosystem deterioration and early implementation of cross-border environmental management to address these problems. The Baltic Sea also stands out in providing a strong scientific foundation and accessibility to long-term data series that provide a unique opportunity to assess the efficacy of management actions to address the breakdown of ecosystem functions. Trend reversals such as the return of top predators, recovering fish stocks, and reduced input of nutrient and harmful substances could be achieved only by implementing an international, cooperative governance structure transcending its complex multistate policy setting, with integrated management of watershed and sea. The Baltic Sea also demonstrates how rapidly progressing global pressures, particularly warming of Baltic waters and the surrounding catchment area, can offset the efficacy of current management approaches. This situation calls for management that is (i) conservative to provide a buffer against regionally unmanageable global perturbations, (ii) adaptive to react to new management challenges, and, ultimately, (iii) multisectorial and integrative to address conflicts associated with economic trade-offs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
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