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Hydrochemical Evolution of Groundwater Under Landfill Leachate Influence: Case of the Tangier Municipal Site

Author

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  • Mohamed-Amine Lahkim-Bennani

    (Research and Development in Applied Geosciences Laboratory, Faculty of Science and Technology of Tangier, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, Tangier 90090, Morocco)

  • Abdelghani Afailal Tribak

    (Research and Development in Applied Geosciences Laboratory, Faculty of Science and Technology of Tangier, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, Tangier 90090, Morocco)

  • Brunella Bonaccorso

    (Department of Engineering, University of Messina, Villaggio S. Agata, 98166 Messina, Italy)

  • Haitam Afilal

    (Research and Development in Applied Geosciences Laboratory, Faculty of Science and Technology of Tangier, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, Tangier 90090, Morocco)

  • Abdelhamid Rossi

    (Research and Development in Applied Geosciences Laboratory, Faculty of Science and Technology of Tangier, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, Tangier 90090, Morocco)

Abstract

Sustainable groundwater management is critical in semi-arid coastal regions, where municipal landfills pose a severe threat to aquifer integrity and long-term water security. However, there is still a lack of seasonally resolved hydrogeochemical monitoring around newly established landfills, particularly in rapidly urbanizing Mediterranean settings. This study assesses the hydrogeochemical impact of the newly operational Tangier Landfill and Recovery Center on local groundwater resources to inform sustainable remediation strategies. A combined approach was applied to samples collected in dry and wet seasons, using Piper and Stiff diagrams to trace facies evolution together with a dual-index assessment based on the Canadian (CCME-WQI) and Weighted Arithmetic (WAWQI) Water Quality Indices. Results show that upgradient waters remain of Good–Excellent quality and are dominated by Ca–HCO 3 facies, whereas downgradient wells display extreme mineralization, with EC up to 15,480 µS/cm and Cl − and SO 4 2− exceeding 1834 and 2114 mg/L, respectively. At hotspot sites P4 and P8, As reaches 0.065 mg/L and Cd 0.006 mg/L, far above the WHO drinking-water guidelines. While the CCME-WQI captures the general salinity-driven degradation pattern, the WAWQI pinpoints these acute toxicity zones as Very poor–Unsuitable. The study demonstrates that rainfall intensifies toxicity through a seasonal “Piston Effect” that mobilizes stored contaminants rather than diluting them, underscoring the need for seasonally adaptive monitoring to ensure the environmental sustainability of landfill-adjacent aquifers.

Suggested Citation

  • Mohamed-Amine Lahkim-Bennani & Abdelghani Afailal Tribak & Brunella Bonaccorso & Haitam Afilal & Abdelhamid Rossi, 2026. "Hydrochemical Evolution of Groundwater Under Landfill Leachate Influence: Case of the Tangier Municipal Site," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-27, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:965-:d:1842834
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