An Overview of long-term groundwater development and management – 20 years of Hermanus wellfields

Hermanus was originally supplied from springs and groundwater until the De Bos Dam was built in the 1950s. Due to increasing water demand, the municipality commenced wellfield development in 2002. The first wellfield comprised 3 boreholes, of which one borehole was later decommissioned due to reduced yield. Three additional boreholes were drilled recently to ensure abstraction capacity within the licence limits. A second wellfield was developed in the Hemel-en-Aarde Valley north of Hermanus. To ensure the sustainable management of the shared resource and minimise environmental impacts, a monitoring committee was established with all relevant roleplayers, other users, civil society, environmental groups and various commenting and regulatory authorities. A comprehensive monitoring network was established to assist with the scheme’s management and ensure that environmental impacts are minimized. The long-term monitoring (up to 20 years) shows that the groundwater abstraction from the Gateway Wellfield does not impact the environment and other users or increase the risk of saline intrusion. Identified impacts have been mitigated with the assistance of the monitoring committee. The municipality aims to provide at least half of the town’s water demand from groundwater and establish conjunctive use operation between surface water from the De Bos Dam and groundwater from these wellfields. The wellfields ensured sufficient water for the municipality when De Bos Dam’s water levels declined significantly during the Western Cape droughts in 2011 and 2017. The presentation will provide examples of the long-term monitoring records and trends.

Presenter Name
Kornelius
Presenter Surname
Riemann
Area
South Africa
Conference year
2023