Climate change challenge
The high temperatures and the accompanying extreme drought were one of the hottest topics last summer. The particularly explosive nature of the issue can be illustrated using the municipality of Lauenau in Lower Saxony as an example: After consumption had been too high for days, the water supply collapsed last summer. Until well into the fall, the approximately 4,000 inhabitants were instructed to use water as sparingly as possible.
But even in the previously quite humid northern Black Forest, the persistent dry phases can no longer be ignored. With delivery peaks of up to 30,000 m³ per day, the water supply of Stadtwerke Pforzheim (SWP) set new records. The amount of groundwater recharge, on the other hand, is continuously decreasing. Since 2002, there has not been a single year in which the groundwater level has recovered. The interplay of shrinking groundwater reserves and rising consumption poses new challenges for SWP’s drinking water load management, especially in the summer months. This is because, in addition to the city of Pforzheim, surrounding communities are also supplied by the SWP water network; with an upward trend in consumption.
The status quo
Currently, SWP obtains its raw water from the drinking water protection areas in the Nagold Valley and the Enzauen. In addition, the Pforzheim water is supplied with long-distance water from the Bodenseewasserversorgung (BMV). The important resumption of drinking water supply from the Grössel Valley is targeted before summer 2021 by repairing the transport pipeline along the water pipeline route.
The central location for water treatment is the Friedrichsberg waterworks. In the modern drinking water treatment plant, the water from the various wells is filtered in an ultrafiltration plant and by reverse osmosis, softened and fed into the water network.
This treatment plant already represents an important step in the direction of a modern water supply, but at the same time it also reveals problems that are more likely to worsen than improve in the (near) future: Drinking water is becoming scarcer, and the load of nitrates, hormones and other contaminants is increasing. Even if the contamination with hormones and nitrates in particular is not yet a noteworthy problem in Pforzheim, SWP is closely monitoring current developments. In particular, the global increase in water contaminated with so-called perfluorinated and polyfluorinated alkyl compounds (PFAS, PFT or also PFC), such as those used in fire extinguishing foams, impregnation sprays or in the textile and paper industry, is now even occupying the attention of politicians. These compounds can accumulate in human tissue over the long term and have very low biodegradability.
The SWP water management strategy
The development described above is contrary to the value that drinking water has — or should have. The preamble to the EU Water Framework Directive states that:
“Water is not a common commodity, but an inherited good that must be protected, defended and treated accordingly.”
As a network operator and water supplier, SWP therefore sees it as its duty to follow these principles and explicitly align its water management accordingly.
To meet these future challenges in water supply, SWP presents its water management strategy. This strategy is based on several pillars: The preservation of supply security, economic efficiency, customer friendliness. In addition, aspects of corporate management, political levels and man-made climate change must also be taken into account.
Particular attention must be paid to securing the supply through a stable water network, increasing the region’s own water production, and protecting resources and the environment or ensuring the (hydro-)geological conditions that enable a healthy groundwater table.
The aim of the strategy is to ensure in the long term that
- the rate of water recharge increases again
- the water quality is improved and pollutants are prevented from entering the groundwater,
- to pass on the accumulated know-how to the following generations as well as to the surrounding communities and to support them, and
- the existing water protection areas and zones according to §51 of the Water Resources Act are secured and extended,
in order to enable a regional and sustainable water management and to be able to do without the supplementation of long-distance water in the long term.
The focus is in particular on supplying the citizens of Pforzheim and the surrounding communities with healthy, clean drinking water and sustainably satisfying the increasing demand.
To accomplish this, current laws protecting wells and springs must be enforced and the input of any pollutants as well as land sealing — especially where groundwater resources exist and are used — must be minimized. This is the only way to reduce dependence on energy-intensive external water purchases and to increase water production from the wells in the lower Enzauen.
Central to the project are tangible investments in the transport system, for example in the water supply pipeline from the Grössel Valley or on the Davosweg. Optimizing the existing network is also part of the water management strategy.
Because, this much is certain: The own water resources are sufficiently available. Whereas in recent years the SWP obtained only 36% of its total drinking water from regional springs and wells, the goal is to increase this to 70% of its own water production by 2030.
For the citizens and the SWP as a supplier, this means a preventive and sustainable step towards crisis prevention in the region. By implementing clearly defined water management and climate strategies, the SWP pursue the protection of the livelihood of people and nature in our region. This sustainable protection goal must not be eclipsed by commercial planning in water protection areas. These are always associated with soil sealing and massive interventions in the fissured subsoil, as well as with the application of substances that are harmful to the environment and water bodies. As a consequence, they represent a sustained potential threat to the basic security of the water resources of our fellow citizens. Clean drinking water is more than a commodity — it is a vital resource and a fundamental human right.