This issue contains 4 sections.
Situation of ground water
Ground water is rainwater that has seeped into the substrate. It is important for the production of drinking water and prevents agricultural and wildlife areas from drying out. The quality of ground water is good in 60% of the water bodies. Elevated nitrate concentrations is a problem. The quantity of ground water is general good, although locally some wildlife areas suffer from a lowered ground water table.
Ground water that is very deep in the earth moves very slowly (a few metres a year). As it moves, the ground water is naturally purified – pollutants and harmful bacteria are removed. This creates water of a good quality that is suitable for preparation as drinking water.
Quality standards for ground water
There are quality standards that pertain to ground water as well. These standards are recorded in the
Decree on Quality Standards and Monitoring for Water (2009, in Dutch). They are based on the
Water Framework Directive (in Dutch) and the
Ground Water Directive. The Ground Water Directive requires member states of the European Union (EU) to guarantee the chemical quality of the ground water.
More about this issue
Responsible ministry
All about Water management
- Water top sector
- Administrative Agreement on Water Affairs
- Water quality
- Wadden Sea
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Delta Programme
- The aim of the Delta Programme
- Delta decisions
- Approach of the Delta Programme
- Working on the delta
- Administrative, legal and financial bearings of the Delta Programme
- Frameworks: MIRT, Sneller en Beter project, international perspective
- Working method of the Delta Programme
- State of affairs in the decision-making process
- Contact
- Water innovations