Groundwater: CalEnviroScreen

Framework / Assessment
Summary

California Communities Environmental Health Screening Tool ("CalEnviroScreen") is intended to support assessments of the potential environmental pollution effects on communities, including disadvantaged communities, in order to support reduction in disparities and threats to health. The groundwater component of CalEnviroScreen provides a relative ranking of communities' groundwater condition and so should not be considered an absolute indication of health risk or cumulative effects.

General Information
Sustainability Goal

Goal 4. Improve quality of drinking water, irrigation water, and in-stream flows to protect human and environmental health.

Domain

Water Quality = The chemical and physical quality of water to meet ecosystem and drinking water standards and requirements.

Social benefits and equity = The health, economic, and equity benefits realized from a well-managed water system, including management of water withdrawal and water renewal.

What is it?

Groundwater describes water in soil and sub-soil substrates (e.g., aquifers) that is replenished across various time-frames by surface water that percolates to these underground reservoirs. Groundwater interacts with surface water through natural (hydrologic connectivity and flow; Barlow and Leake, 2012) and artificial (over-pumping and discharge) pathways. For this water to be useable to meet human needs (e.g., drinking, irrigation) it must meet the same kinds of water quality requirements as surface water. This indicator is one way to represent threats to groundwater quality. The indicator describes whether or not an area contains “threats” to groundwater according to CalEnviroScreen (CalEPA, 2013).

Why is it important?

Groundwater is the primary source of drinking water for many communities in California. Groundwater resources are also under threat from over-use and contamination from surface water and soil contamination. Degradation of groundwater quality jeopardizes use of this resource for drinking water. California’s Drought Contingency Plan (DWR, 2010) depends on groundwater as part of its “Conjunctive Management and Groundwater Storage” and “Recharge Area Protection” strategies. In order for these measures to function as part of the overall plan, then groundwater quality must be high enough to support human use.

Nitrates are the primary (most extensive) contaminant in groundwater originating from human activities. Nitrates from fertilizer application in agricultural and urban areas can leach into groundwater and will penetrate and spread according to the underlying geology. Other contaminants can also affect groundwater, including organic chemicals originating from past and current industrial and commercial activity. This contamination may spread underground in “plumes”, which are areas of increasing concentration as contaminated groundwater naturally moves underground, or the chemicals themselves diffuse through the ground and/or water. Various agencies track these contaminants in groundwater and in drinking water wells originating from groundwater as a way of understanding risk to communities from drinking water contamination.

What can Influence or Stress Condition?

Groundwater naturally varies in quality based on underlying geology and interaction with percolating surface water. Groundwater contamination by any chemical will decrease or increase due to penetration of less or more-contaminated water, respectively. Groundwater concentrations of nitrate increase due to leaching of nitrate from various agricultural and urban activities, such as: surface application of fertilizer, confined animal feeding operations, and septic tanks. In mining and urban areas, commercial and industrial activities can result in inorganic and organic chemicals leaching into local and regional groundwater. In areas where these resources are particular valuable or threatened, wells may be used to extract and treat contaminated water, usually at great expense. In other areas, introduction of captured storm-water or surface water could be used to dilute contaminants in groundwater.

Target or Desired Condition

The desired target condition is for groundwater to be free of artificial contaminants. The undesired condition is for groundwater to violate drinking water standards set by environmental regulatory or health agencies, or to pose a risk of violation.

The CalEnviroScreen 1.0 project is a systematic look at the environmental threats to health (e.g., from poor air quality) to people in California (OEHHA, 2012). The CalEnviroScreen suite of indicators includes threats to groundwater as one type of threat to health. The groundwater threat score is based upon current or past leaks from underground storage tanks for chemicals. The project analysts used tank locations in the SWRCB’s GeoTracker database (http://waterboards.ca.gov) and rated each site based on type and cleanup status. Scoring here was the corollary to the groundwater threat score and was equal to 100 - threat percentage score.