Abstract

Source protection is part of a multi-solution approach for the provision of safe drinking water. In the Republic of Ireland, community-led Group Water Schemes (GWS) provide treated drinking water to approximately 69,000 rural households. Between 2009 and 2019, preliminary source protection assessments were undertaken for 70 GWS abstracting from surface water sources to provide physical catchment characterisation and untreated and treated water quality analysis. Catchment areas upstream of abstraction points varied in size, with 51.5% being less than 5 km2 and only 10.7% being larger than 100 km2. The majority (91%) of assessed GWS serve a population of less than 3000 people, and 94% supply less than 1500 m3 per day. Exceedances of the EU Drinking Water Regulations were recorded for 27 parameters, with the greatest number of exceedances due to total trihalomethanes followed by microbial contamination. The most frequent recommendation for improving GWS drinking water quality was associated with managing livestock access to local water bodies. Improving stakeholder engagement represented 38% of all recommendations made. Drinking water source protection measures and catchment-scale actions can be an additional model to assist in the delivery of Integrated Catchment Management and river basin management planning in the Republic of Ireland. For the GWS sector, challenges lie in securing resources to improve both source water and drinking water quality to deliver integrated catchment management plans for source protection.

Highlights

  • Access to clean drinking water is a basic requirement for human life, and the protection of drinking water quality is a key concern to drinking water providers

  • For the Group Water Schemes (GWS) sector, challenges lie in securing resources to improve both source water and drinking water quality to deliver integrated catchment management plans for source protection

  • This paper provides an overview of the role of the Group Water Scheme sector in delivering drinking water source protection in the Republic of Ireland and outlines the community-led actions for improving drinking water quality following the provision of preliminary drinking water source protection assessments

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Summary

Introduction

Access to clean drinking water is a basic requirement for human life, and the protection of drinking water quality is a key concern to drinking water providers. The consistent supply of wholesome drinking water is a complex system requiring appropriate treatment processes. The scale, cost, and effectiveness of such systems is determined in the first instance by the quality and stability of the raw (untreated) water source from which the supply is abstracted [1]. Effective catchment management can help decrease the contamination of drinking water sources, potentially reducing treatment costs and reducing the production of treatment by-products and helping to minimise operational costs [2].

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