Domestic registered boreholes under review
All remaining registered domestic boreholes, about 450, are being reviewed, on top of about 200 installations that were ordered to be shut down two weeks ago.
The Malta Resources Authority is pursuing a campaign to eliminate domestic boreholes that do not fall in line with the law after years of encouraging borehole owners to register with the government.
Domestic boreholes are generally used to fill swimming pools or water large private gardens. Although the practice is not legal, many owners believed that registering the borehole could allow them to regularise their position.
The boreholes that have been ordered to stop extracting water were illegal but others may be exempt by law, which leaves some leeway in particular circumstances.
Boreholes can be retained if there is no pump or mechanical device installed to extract groundwater or if they are in an area that cannot be provided with a constant water supply by the Water Services Corporation.
They can also remain if, by means of an affidavit, users declare they are used solely for domestic purposes, the abstraction yield does not exceed one cubic metre per day and the water is extracted from the perched aquifer.
‘Courageous’ move
Also, if owners can prove they are “cultural property” under the Cultural Heritage Act, they may be allowed to keep them.
The 200 letters issued are for those boreholes that are not exempted according to the mentioned regulation. The rest are still being processed so that a decision can be taken as to whether they qualify for exemption, an MRA spokesman said.
Since 1997, there has been a drive to register domestic, commercial and agricultural boreholes, with the intention of clamping down on abuse. The continuous exercise resulted in 7,992 boreholes being registered: 6,623 agricultural, 652 domestic, 344 commercial, and 373 that were either already blocked or not registered for any particular use.
Two weeks ago, The Times reported the MRA had issued enforcement letters to 200 households, saying the boreholes must be “closed, sealed and decommissioned” in line with a number of conditions.
“Each person notified has to submit a declaration and a detailed method statement certified by an architect within 60 days from the date of the letter, confirming that this groundwater source has been closed in accordance with these technical requirements,” the MRA spokesman said.
The regulator can also carry out inspections and verifications on site to confirm that the groundwater source was closed in accordance with the formal notice.
The government’s decision was welcomed by water expert Marco Cremona who has been campaigning against the illegal extraction of water for years. He said this was a “courageous” and “positive” move by the government, showing that concrete action was finally being taken.
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Mr ALFRED MICALLEF
May 17th 2011, 07:48
Swimming pools are never emptied and the water used is for topping the evaporated water
which amounts to less than one small bowser a year. The owners use boreholes only
beacuse it is more convenient than ordering a bowser. Many times the bowser operators
are not interested in supplying an occasional buyer like a pool owner therefore sometimes
it is frustrating to buy a bowser of water. This is the reason why pool owners use boreholes,
only as a matter of convenience.
Mr Paul Caruana
May 16th 2011, 10:49
A step in the right direction.....however, one should note that we are talking about 200 out of a total of almost 8000 KNOWN boreholes - who knows how many are still (and never will be) unregistered?
To make things worse, we are closing down those boreholes which extract least water! Unfortunately, it is the agricultural and commercial boreholes which extract by far the bulk of aquifer water (excluding the WSC).
I am not sure that we have the guts to take the really hard decisions when it comes to these remaining boreholes. Remember, time is running out - we cannot procrastinate further. If extraction continues at current rates, our freshwater aquifier will be done for within a few more years!