EGU24-11760, updated on 09 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-11760
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

A new planning strategy for integrating surface water and groundwater management to face climate change impacts in the Dar Es Salaam Plain, Tanzania (Africa).

Francesco Maria De Filippi and Giuseppe Sappa
Francesco Maria De Filippi and Giuseppe Sappa
  • Sapienza, DICEA, Rome, Italy (francescomaria.defilippi@uniroma1.it; giuseppe.sappa@uniroma1.it)

Groundwater is considered worldwide an important and resilient reserve of freshwater for human needs. The increasing demand, combined with climate change impacts, is leading to a remarkable quali-quantitative decay of water resource, especially in many megacities of the Global South, where the rapid urban growing pushed to environmental critical issues as the case of seawater intrusion for coastal aquifers. At the same time, the uncontrolled urbanization without a territorial planning favors the runoff and places ever greater areas in hydraulic danger, increasing the risk of flooding in currently inhabited areas. Dar es Salaam, in Sub-Saharan Africa, is one of these cases: a city of more than 4 million of inhabitants, with a population growth rate of about 5 per cent per year. A high dependence on natural resources ecosystems is mainly due to hybrid rural-urban livelihoods. The urban pressure on the aquifer caused a serious threat on water quality and quantity due to saline intrusion along the coastline, with depletion of groundwater levels and contamination of pumping wells. Moreover, the increasing risk of water scarcity and flooding due to climate change is threatening the local community, with an increasing need for adaptation measures. Catchment imperviousness of Mbezi River basin increased by 41% (2003-16), causing floods, erosion, land and marine pollution.

A new vision needs to integrate the groundwater management strategies, already proposed in the context of the “Adapting to Climate Change in Coastal Dar es Salaam” (ACC-DAR) project, with surface water management too. Aim of this feasibility study is to outline a strategy for a sustainable water management in the Dar Es Salaam territory, through the planning of MAR (Managed Aquifer Recharge) solutions in specific areas. This approach could be helpful to solve or, at least, mitigate the impact of both flooding and groundwater overexploitation in the area, allowing to support stakeholders and public government in implementing local policies and proposing a more sustainable use of the resource.

 

How to cite: De Filippi, F. M. and Sappa, G.: A new planning strategy for integrating surface water and groundwater management to face climate change impacts in the Dar Es Salaam Plain, Tanzania (Africa)., EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-11760, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-11760, 2024.