Abstract

Different types of managed aquifer recharge (MAR) schemes are widely distributed and applied on various scales and for various purposes in the European countries, but a systematic categorization and compilation of data has been missing up to now. The European MAR catalogue presented herein contains various key parameters collected from the available literature. The catalogue includes 224 currently active MAR sites found in 23 European countries. Large quantities of drinking water are produced by MAR sites in Hungary, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Germany, Finland, Poland, Switzerland and France. This inventory highlights that, for over a century, MAR has played an important role in the development of European water supply and contributes to drinking-water production substantially. This development has occurred autonomously, with “trial-and-error” within the full range of climatically and hydrogeologically diverse conditions of the European countries. For the future, MAR has the potential to facilitate optimal (re)use and storage of available water resources and to take advantage of the natural purification and low energy requirements during MAR operations. Particularly with respect to the re-use of wastewater treatment-plant effluent and stormwater, which is currently underdeveloped, the use of MAR can support the public acceptance of such water-resource efficient schemes. Particularly for the highly productive and urbanized coastal zones, where the pressure on freshwater supplies increases by growing water demand, salinization and increased agricultural needs for food production (such as along the Mediterranean and North Sea coasts), MAR is expected to be increasingly relied on in Europe.

Highlights

  • Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) describes the intentional recharge and storage of water into an aquifer for subsequent recovery or for environmental benefits

  • There is a large variety of different MAR types, which can be classified based on the recharge and storage technique into four major groups (Table 1).Enhanced infiltration techniques rely on gravitational infiltration and percolation, and include different surface-spreading methods, point/ line recharge and in-channel modifications

  • Web pages of MAR operators account for 25%, presentations for 14%, technical reports and documents for 10%, reports from governmental and non-governmental projects 4%, and personal communication with specialists and operators, and newspaper articles account for 5%

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Summary

Introduction

Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) describes the intentional recharge and storage of water into an aquifer for subsequent recovery or for environmental benefits. Hydrogeol J (2017) 25:1909–1922 of first operation and closure, reason for closure, operational scale, aquifer properties (hydraulic conductivity, target aquifer thickness), horizontal aquifer passage, residence time during subsurface passage, recovery rate/share of bank filtrate, source water type and end-use.

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