Report Water Framework Directive 2010: summaries of the quantitative status of groundwater bodies by WFD basin Report Water Framework Directive 2010: summaries of the quantitative status of groundwater bodies by WFD basin

Open data API in a single place

Provided by etalab

Get early access to Report Water Framework Directive 2010: summaries of the quantitative status of groundwater bodies by WFD basin Report Water Framework Directive 2010: summaries of the quantitative status of groundwater bodies by WFD basin API!

Let us know and we will figure it out for you.

Dataset information

Country of origin
Updated
2020.01.24 12:46
Created
2019.09.12
Available languages
French
Keywords
eaux-interieures, adour-garonne, rhin-meuse, donnees-qualitatives, mayotte, impact-sur-lenvironnement, qualite-de-lenvironnement, france-metropolitaine, guadeloupe, donnees-ouvertes, rhone-mediterranee, eau-souterraine, loire-bretagne, france-entiere, corse, reunion, artois-picardie, etat-du-milieu-qualite-quantite, inland-waters, passerelle-inspire, guyane, martinique, donnees-descriptives, eau, eaux-souterraines, seine-normandie
Quality scoring
145

Dataset description

These synthesis datasets provide information on the quantitative status of groundwater masses. For each mass of d'water the table contains the fields: — EURBDCode: basin code, — EUGroundWaterBodyCode: European Code, National Code (Mnemonic SANDRE), — GWB_NAME: name of mass d'water, — LinkSurfaceWaterBodies: link with surface water bodies, — LinkTerrestrialEcosystems: link with terrestrial ecosystems, — Damage: significant degradation of surface water status, — decrease: significant alteration of terrestrial ecosystems directly dependent on underground ME, — intrusion: intrusion of salt water or other water, — exceedance: excess sampling = the available groundwater resource is less than the annual average sampling calculated over long series, — Objective_BE_quant: date of #x27; goal of #x27; achievement of good quantitative status The reasons given for the exemption from #x27; achievement of good quantitative status are indicated among those described in Article 4: Article 4(4) — Disproportionate cost: Article 4(4) — Technical feasibility Article 4(4) — Natural conditions: Article 4(4) — disproportionate costs Article 4(4) -Technical feasibility: Article 4(4) — Natural conditions Article 4(5) — Disproportionate cost: Article 4(5) — Technical Feasibility Article 4(5) -Technical feasibility: Article 4(5) — disproportionate costs Article 4(6) — Accidents: Article 4(6) — Natural Causes Article 4(6) — Force Majeure: Article 4(6) — Force Majeure Article 4(6) — Natural causes: Article 4(6) — Accidents Article 4(7) — New amendment: Article 4(7) — New amendment Article 4(7) — Sustainable human development: Article 4(7) — Sustainable human development The Water Framework Directive (paragraph 2.1.2 of Annex V) defines the quantitative status of groundwater as follows: " The good condition is where the level of groundwater in the water body is such that the average annual rate of long-term capture does not exceed the available resource of the groundwater body; Therefore, the good quantitative status corresponds to the case where the groundwater level is not subject to anthropogenic changes such as: — would prevent the achievement of environmental objectives for associated surface waters; — would result in a significant deterioration of the state of these waters; — would cause significant damage to terrestrial ecosystems that depend directly on the body of groundwater (...); — would cause the invasion of salt water. " The aim is therefore to ensure a long-term balance between the volumes flowing to the benefit of other media or tablecloths, the volumes captured and the recharge of each tablecloth. In terms of quantitative management, another objective appears to be the preservation of uses, thus predominant drinking water use for groundwater. __Origin__ The summaries are developed by l'ONEMA from the data produced by the DCE basins __Partner organisations__ ONEMA [See this page on geo.data.gouv.fr](https://geo.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/490595a8111b853ded24eef77a7f1fa636da96ce)
Build on reliable and scalable technology
Revolgy LogoAmazon Web Services LogoGoogle Cloud Logo
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Some basic informations about API Store ®.

Operation and development of APIs are currently fully funded by company Apitalks and its usage is for free.
Yes, you can.
All important information such as time of last update, license and other information are in response of each API call.
In case of major update that would not be compatible with previous version of API, we keep for 30 days both versions so you will have enough time to transfer to new version. We will inform you about the changes in advance by e-mail.

Didn't find the API you need?

Let us know and we will figure it out for you.

API Store provides access to European Open Data via scalable and reliable REST API interface.
Copyright © 2024. Made with ♥ by Apitalks