Abstract

The present paper aims at determining the status and trends of groundwater quality of 12 aquifers situated in Northwestern Algeria, especially under conditions of last drought that has affected the region using water quality index (WQI) over a period of 4 years. Multivariate statistical methods have been used jointly with conventional graphical methods, to classify the samples according to plausible levels of groundwater evolution. The computed WQI values range from 67 to 588 and therefore can be categorized into four categories: “good water” to “water unsuitable for drinking.” Overall, 36% of groundwater sites sampled in the study area had good water quality, while 53% were poor. Unfortunately, 6% of the samples indicate “very poor water quality” and 5% represent water “unsuitable for drinking purposes.” Results show that the majority of groundwater of Tafna basin fell under good water quality. Groundwater of poor and medium quality characterizes the majority of the studied aquifers of Macta basin. The result showed that the water quality at monitoring station “Ain Skhouna” fell under good water quality (Chott Chergui aquifer). Results also show that groundwater of Coastal Oranais basin showed poor water quality, very poor at some monitoring stations of Mléta Plain aquifer. It has been demonstrated that the water of some aquifers has degraded under water scarcity conditions and will continue to degrade given the ongoing and projected development in the study area. The analysis reveals that the water of some aquifers needs treatment before it is used for human consumption. The influence of salt water on the some freshwater aquifers in the study area needs special attention in terms of monitoring and for sustainable management.

Highlights

  • Algeria’s water is not always in the right place at the right time to meet the current and future needs

  • Silting of dams is another factor that strongly affects water resources in the region; and there are currently ten large dams some of which are currently facing a high rate of siltation; Fergoug and Bou‐ hanifia dams are silted over 90% and 50%, respectively (MRE 2010)

  • The main objective of this study is to understand the groundwater quality status of 12 aquifers situated in Northwestern Algeria, especially under conditions of last drought that has affected the region; an attempt has been made for the first time to evaluate overall water quality using water quality index (WQI), with the aim of identifying places with the best quality for drinking

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Summary

Introduction

Algeria’s water is not always in the right place at the right time to meet the current and future needs. Algeria lies below the desirable resource threshold of 1000 m3/year per inhabitant (Iglesias et al 2006a); it is ranked sixth among countries suffering most severely from water shortage, and it will jump. In the last two decades, Northwestern Algeria in par‐ ticular has experienced severe and persistent droughts with annual rainfall some 30 percent below average (Meddi and Hubert 2003; Touchan et al 2008; Masih et al 2014); this has affected remarkably the availability of water and over‐ all socioeconomic activities. Groundwater resources at region scale are widely used to meet agricultural, domestic and industrial water requirements. The potential for available exploitable groundwater of Northwestern Algeria basins has been esti‐ mated by ANRH (National Water Resources Agency) to 428.52 MCM though withdrawals are estimated to be 391

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