Developing Substitution Resources as Compensation for Reduced Groundwater Entitlements: The Case of the Poitou Marshes (France)

Tags:
groundwater management , irrigation , groundwater overexploitation , hydrogeological model , substitution resources , wetland

Cite as:

Douez O., du Peuty J.E., Lepercq D., Montginoul M. (2020) Developing Substitution Resources as Compensation for Reduced Groundwater Entitlements: The Case of the Poitou Marshes (France). In: Rinaudo JD., Holley C., Barnett S., Montginoul M. (eds) Sustainable Groundwater Management. Global Issues in Water Policy, vol 24. Springer, Cham.

Found at

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32766-8

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02962323

Abstract

This chapter describes the groundwater management policy implemented in the Poitou marshes, a 100,000 ha wetland located on the Atlantic coast in Western France. Similarly to other French basins, irrigated agriculture has rapidly developed since the 1980s, mainly based on groundwater exploitation. Clear signs of groundwater overexploitation appeared in 1992–1995, with the intrusion of brackish water in the aquifer. Because of the overexploitation, ecosystems were severely affected and the French Government was sued by the European Commission for noncompliance with the Bird Directive (1999). The chapter describes the progressive implementation of a groundwater management policy aiming at ensuring the long-term sustainability of an emblematic groundwater dependent wetland. To do so, the State imposed a very significant reduction in historical water entitlements. This case study illustrates the difficulties encountered in implementing this reduction, in a context of extreme competition between economic uses (agriculture, urban and touristic) and environmental objectives. The case study also reports on the complexity of developing an integrated management plan in basins where groundwater, rivers, wetlands and canals are highly interdependent. It highlights the importance of a (shared) knowledge on water resource and uses, of involving stakeholders in the different steps, and of trying to share scarcity in an equitable way.


Type:

Book Section

Authors (ordered by last name)
Olivier Douez ; Jean Eudes du Peuty ; Daniel Lepercq ; Marielle Montginoul
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