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State of Environment Reporting
Where
is Groundwater Use the Heaviest in British
Columbia?
Number
of Heavily Used Aquifers in British Columbia


SOURCE:
Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection, Water, Air and Climate
Change Branch, Groundwater Section, 2001. NOTES: The number in each
circle represents the number of aquifers of concern within the given
area. The BC Water Quality Status Report, 1996, describes in more
detail the state of water quality in some aquifers. Most information
is collected in areas where population is reliant on groundwater
use. Little is known about groundwater in British Columbia outside
these areas.
Where
is groundwater use the heaviest in British
Columbia?
-
Groundwater is a major source of water
for drinking and crop irrigation in British
Columbia.
- The
provincial government has identified and
classified 438 groundwater reservoirs
(aquifers) based on their level of development
and vulnerability to contamination, and
on geological and water use criteria.
Since 1996, 246 aquifers have been added
to the inventory.
- Heavily
used aquifers are those where the extraction
rate is high relative to the natural recharge
rate. This designation is applied to 35
aquifers (up from 17 in 1996). Most are
in the Fraser Valley or Southern Interior
and on the East Coast of Vancouver Island.
- Heavy
use puts water quality at risk. Excessive
groundwater withdrawals in coastal regions
are causing salt-water intrusion and groundwater
quality degradation in some areas of the
Gulf Islands and the Saanich Peninsula.
- Continued
aquifer classification mapping will likely
identify additional heavily used aquifers.
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