Editorial
Banning new boreholes is not enough
Seven months after taking office, the new Minister for Resources has begun to tackle what is probably one of Malta's most serious and life-threatening challenges: what to do about Malta's water supply and security. And, yet, it does not seem that the government really has any hurry in addressing the matter.
A 12-month moratorium has been placed over applications and permits for new water boreholes to be drilled in order to allow the government to take stock of the scale of (mostly illegal) extraction from the water table. The moratorium has been made in order to establish the number of boreholes that have been drilled since 1997.
In 1997, the Water Services Corporation had been officially notified of 6,000 boreholes but, since then, many more have been drilled. Incredibly, no official track record has been kept of how many, despite the fact that the 1997 legal notice laid down hefty fines for those who failed to notify the authorities. A case again, presumably, of enforcement of the law being notable by its absence.
Successive government administrations have ignored the problem for more than a decade even if they had been warned by hydrological experts as far back as six or seven years ago that Malta's mean sea level aquifer is at severe risk of being wiped out.
The importance of water as an essential resource of all life is self-evident. It is a vital requirement for good health, sanitation and is a critical contributor to almost all industrial production. It is of vital strategic, social and economic importance. Almost 60 per cent of the water is being produced by reverse osmosis plants at great cost. These costs will increase as the availability of fossil fuel dwindles, carbon pricing begins to bite and fuel subsidies by the government are removed.
Yet, the depletion of Malta's water table by illegal extraction is a continuing and urgent problem. The onset of global warming will deplete it even further. According to the minister, we are now extracting about 34 million cubic metres a year. That figure is 11 million cubic metres higher than recommended by the Malta Resources Authority for sustainable extraction. Farmers use about 18 million cubic metres of this, some of them from illegal boreholes.
As a result of the over-extraction, the mean sea level water aquifer is already in deficit. Increasing sea water intrusion and deterioration of the water table is already happening. Within a decade water could become undrinkable. Resources Minister George Pullicino has said that "the government plans to draw up a strategic plan on water production... by the beginning of next year". Given that a so-called National Water Policy was submitted to the last Minister of Resources three or four years ago and left languishing in the in-tray, it is unconscionable that this water production strategic plan should be delayed until next year, even if we are only talking of a few months. There seems no persuasive reason - other than ministerial and bureaucratic inertia - for this vitally important subject not to have been tackled with a greater sense of urgency. The registration of boreholes and the implementation of a long over-due national water policy can - and should - go hand in hand.
It is incomprehensible why the government should have delayed so long in taking the necessary practical steps on this issue.
6 Comments
Post comment
Please sign in or create your Account to post comments.
Joseph Ellul
Oct 26th 2008, 05:44
Water water everywhere but not a drop to drink. In 1970's a scientific report stated that unless all water boreholes were plugged, the damage done to the aquifer will be unreversable in 50 years time. That said, it only allowed for the then known boreholes. 39 years on and here you are, again. The Maltese people will never learn. I suggest that every Maltese will develop a seagull water gullet that can allow you to drink salt water but excrete the salt from the side of the neck. There is still hope. The Maltese people are such a gullible nation that they still believe in fireworks competitions and killing of other living beings and do nothing to keep their children free from High blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol. YES !!!
joe attard
Oct 25th 2008, 23:15
interesting editorial for a Saturday morning. Why do we have illegal bore-holes? Why do we still have rampant illegal activities? When will we have the courage to address the root of all this?
richard paul agius
Oct 25th 2008, 15:38
Who said the P.N. will not govern, after this term in office?
Perhaps you could tell us the winning numbers of the next Super 5 lottery !!!
l Galea
Oct 25th 2008, 13:03
It's a shame on how much rain water is being lost by going straight into the sea without building any reservoirs and dams in our valleys.
Another problem is that most households do not have a well while others only have what can be considered as a small hole. Well water is better than tap water if the well is kept clean, and even if it is not used for drinking and cooking, it can still be used for cleaning and watering plants.
Households should not only be checked whether they have wells, but also that the well must be big enough to contain the amount of water that falls on the surface area of the household for two years since in an abundant year all the water may not have been used.
It is shame that people simply connect their roof water to the sewage system not only losing precious water but also sewage overflows in many areas.
apgrech
Oct 25th 2008, 12:21
The government has to find a way on how to collect a lot of the rain water that's ending up in the sea. If one just looks at B'Kara, Msida, Marsa and Qormi after a heavy rainfall, the enormous amount of water being wasted is clearly visible.
Such water can be collected and sold at a reasonable price for irrigation purposes.
Lawrence Mifsud
Oct 25th 2008, 10:52
The NP will not be governing, after the end of this term in Office....why bother, and what's the hurry?