Abstract

Urban metabolism, a process of material, energy and water flows, consumption or transformation in the cities and outflows of wastes, has impacts on the shallow groundwater. This study addressed the relationship between the urban metabolic system and well water physicochemical and bacteriological quality in the coastal cities of Cotonou and Lomé. A participatory transdisciplinary approach, involving non-academics and academics stakeholders was used to analyse urban inflows and outflows related to groundwater quality. Standard methods were used to measure well water quality from 100 seasonal samples. Waste management revealed poor sanitation and hence a linear urban metabolism with no solid and liquid wastes and excreta recycling. This form of city metabolism reinforced by the seawater inflow is the main source of groundwater quality deterioration in Cotonou and Lomé. The principal water types Ca2+–Mg2+–Cl-– SO2-4 (48.21%), Na+–K+–Cl-–SO2-4 (65.9%) and the Gibbs diagram suggested water-rock interactions and dominance of cations exchange on the hydrogeological compositions, also seasonally controlled by saltwater intrusion or anthropogenic salinization. The water quality index on the range of 35.90 to 169.60 in Cotonou and 82.94 to 364.68 in Lomé indicated well water very poor quality to unsuitable for drinking. Moreover, the bacteriological quality was bad due to total coliforms (112 - 1812; 1 - 1000 UFC/100 mL respectively in Cotonou and Lomé), Escherichia coli (40 - 780; 1 - 112 UFC/100 mL), faecal enterococci/streptococcus (18 - 736; 1 - 118 UFC/100 mL). The findings could help to sustain groundwater quality by controlling the pollution sources linked to urban metabolism.

Highlights

  • The concept of urban metabolism borrows the biological definition of metabolism and applies it as a model to describe the way in which cities sustain their functions by transforming materials and energy [1]

  • This study established the relationship between each component of the steps of urban metabolism with groundwater quality

  • Groundwater contamination is associated with solid, liquid wastes and excreta

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The concept of urban metabolism borrows the biological definition of metabolism and applies it as a model to describe the way in which cities sustain their functions by transforming materials and energy [1]. Depending on the mode of waste management, a city can be characterized by either a linear metabolism model (no waste recycling) or a circular metabolism model (waste recycling and reuse) [3] [4] [5]. A linear metabolism can be essentially characterized by a single use of resources in the city and their return to the environment in the form of waste [6]. The nuance is a possible intermediate mode where there is recycling of some wastes, but the treatment is neither linear nor circular. Whatever the form, it has impacts on urban water systems

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.