
Audio By Carbonatix
When Ghanaians hear the word galamsey, many of us immediately picture destroyed farmlands, brown rivers, abandoned pits, and communities struggling with the damage left behind by illegal mining activities. We can clearly see the scars. The rivers change colour. The land is scarred. Farmers lose their livelihoods as a result. Communities are affected by this.
However, another form of resource abuse is occurring quietly beneath our feet. It does not always leave muddy rivers behind. It does not always make headlines. Its damage may not be seen immediately. Yet, if we ignore it, it can threaten our homes, schools, farms, businesses, health, and national water security.
I call it Groundwater Galamsey.
Groundwater Galamsey is the uncontrolled, unscientific, and poorly documented drilling of boreholes without proper hydrogeological investigation, professional supervision, water-quality testing, pumping tests, borehole completion records, or submission of data for national planning. It happens when anyone with access to a drilling rig enters a community, drills into the ground, collects payment, and leaves without asking the most important question: What exactly have we done to this hidden water resource?
Groundwater may be hidden, but it is not unlimited. It may lie beneath private land, but it is not only a private matter. It is a part of Ghana’s national water security system. Every borehole taps into a larger natural system, and when that system is misused, the consequences do not stop at one household or compound.
Groundwater is not guesswork
For many people, a borehole is simply a deep hole in the ground that brings water. However, to a hydrogeologist, a borehole is much more than that. It is a carefully designed access point into an aquifer.
An aquifer is a rock formation or geological material that can store and transmit groundwater. In some parts of Ghana, groundwater is found in weathered rocks. In other places, it occurs in fractures within hard crystalline rocks. In coastal areas, it may be stored in sandy or sedimentary layers; however, these areas may also be vulnerable to salinity and seawater intrusion when groundwater is over-pumped.
This means that groundwater does not occur by chance. It is controlled by the nature of the rocks, the presence of fractures, depth of weathering, rainfall, recharge, topography, land use, and the number of boreholes already drawing water nearby.
So, drilling a borehole should never be a matter of guesswork, convenience, or “bring the rig and let us try.” This should be based on science.
A borehole drilled without proper investigation may fail. It may produce very little water, work for a few months and then decline, or interfere with nearby boreholes. It could be drilled in a location where contamination can easily enter, exposing families to health risks. Worse still, it may provide no useful data to help Ghana understand and manage its groundwater resources.
Owning a rig is not the same as understanding groundwater
We need to speak frankly about this issue. Borehole drilling has become a rapidly growing business in Ghana. Many homes, churches, schools, hotels, factories, farms, and real estate developers now depend on boreholes because of the unreliable public water supply or growing water demand. This demand has created opportunities, and there is nothing wrong with that. Private drilling companies help many people access water. However, the problem begins when drilling becomes only a commercial activity without scientific responsibility.
A person may own a drilling rig but may not understand the groundwater. A company may know how to drill a hole but may not know how to interpret the geology, identify the aquifer, design the borehole properly, protect it from contamination, conduct a pumping test, estimate a safe pumping rate, or prepare a borehole completion report.
Drilling is not merely a mechanical activity; it is a scientific and engineering process. It requires knowledge of hydrogeology, geophysics, drilling methods, borehole construction, water quality, public health, and environmental protection. Without these, borehole drilling becomes a gamble. When many people gamble with the same hidden resource, the result can become a national crisis.
The danger is not always immediate
One reason why groundwater galamsey is dangerous is that its effects may not be immediately apparent. A poorly sited or constructed borehole may produce clear water initially. The household may be happy. A school may celebrate. A hotel or factory may reduce its dependence on public water supply. A community may feel relieved. But beneath the surface, problems may already be developing.
If a borehole is not properly sealed, dirty surface water can enter it. Drilling too close to a septic tank, pit latrine, refuse dump, drainage channel, cemetery, fuel station, polluted stream, or mining area can lead to contamination slowly reaching the water. Without a pumping test, the installed pump may be too strong for the aquifer. If many boreholes are drilled too close together, they may compete for the same groundwater. Without a water-quality test, people may drink water that looks clean but contains harmful substances. This is why we must stop assuming that clear water is safe water. Some contaminants cannot be seen with the eye. Nitrate, fluoride, arsenic, lead, mercury, excessive salinity, iron, manganese, and microbial contamination may be present even when water looks clean. In some cases, the health effects may appear only after years of exposure. Water quality testing should therefore not be treated as optional. A borehole is not safe simply because water flows from it.
Every borehole must tell a story
Every properly drilled borehole should leave a scientific record. This record is not just paperwork for its own sake; it tells the story of what was found underground. A proper borehole record should include the location of the borehole, the depth drilled, the rock types encountered, the depth at which water was struck, the static water level, the pumping water level, the drawdown, the recovery, the yield, and the recommended pumping rate. It should also contain water-quality results and construction details such as casing, screen, gravel pack, sanitary seal, and borehole protection. These are not minor details; they are national water data. When boreholes are drilled without records, Ghana loses valuable information. We lose data that could help us map aquifers, identify productive groundwater zones, understand water-quality patterns, monitor groundwater levels, assess climate-change impacts, detect salinity risks, guide district planning, and protect communities from contamination. A country that drills thousands of boreholes without collecting data is like a person reading an important book and tearing out each page after reading it. The knowledge disappears.
Ghana does not lack institutions
Ghana has institutions responsible for water resources and water supply. The Water Resources Commission regulates and manages the country’s water resources, including groundwater. The Community Water and Sanitation Agency plays an important role in rural and small-town water supply. The CSIR-Water Research Institute provides research and technical expertise on water resources.
The issue is not the absence of institutions in Ghana. The concern is whether the rules are being enforced, whether the public understands the regulations, whether drillers are complying, whether borehole owners are registering their boreholes, whether District Assemblies are maintaining local borehole records, and whether borehole data is being integrated into a national groundwater information system.
Groundwater Galamsey is not only a drilling problem; it is a governance problem, a data problem, a public health problem, a planning problem, and above all, a water security problem.
The public also has a role
Most people who drill boreholes are not trying to cause harm; they simply need water. A family wants reliable water at home, a school needs water for pupils, a church needs water for its congregation, a farmer needs water for irrigation, and a business needs water to operate. These needs are real and legitimate, but the need for water should not make us careless about how we obtain it.
Before drilling a borehole, every household, school, church, business, farm, hotel, estate developer, or community should ask important questions: Was a hydrogeological assessment done? Was a geophysical survey conducted and properly interpreted? Is the driller licensed? Who is supervising the drilling? Will the borehole be properly constructed and sealed? Will a pumping test be conducted? Will the water be tested before use? Will a borehole completion report be provided? Will the borehole be registered? Will the data be submitted to the appropriate authority? These questions are not meant to frustrate anyone; they are meant to protect households, communities, and the nation.
A cheap borehole can become very expensive if it is poorly located, constructed, contaminated, or unsustainable. It may fail, damage pumps repeatedly, require costly treatment, expose people to unsafe water, or eventually be abandoned.
Borehole drilling must move from commerce to accountability
Private drilling companies play a crucial role in Ghana’s water future. Many communities depend on them, especially where access to safe and reliable water is challenging. The issue is not the existence of drilling companies but rather drilling without accountability. Groundwater development should not be reduced to simply “bring the rig and drill.” It must follow a responsible process:
- Study the area before drilling.
- Obtain the necessary permits.
- Engage qualified professionals.
- Follow accepted drilling standards.
- Construct the borehole properly.
- Conduct pumping tests.
- Test the water quality.
- Document the borehole.
- Register the borehole.
- Monitor the borehole over time.
This is how we transition from ordinary borehole drilling to responsible groundwater stewardship.
Why this matters for Ghana’s future
Ghana’s reliance on groundwater is likely to increase. Population growth, urban expansion, climate variability, irrigation demand, industrial development, real estate growth, and unreliable water supply will drive more people toward boreholes. If groundwater is managed well, it can support households, schools, hospitals, agriculture, industry, and climate resilience. However, if it is mismanaged, Ghana may face declining water levels, contamination, salinity, failed boreholes, public health risks, and conflicts over water access. The most concerning aspect of groundwater damage is that by the time the crisis becomes visible, it may already be difficult and costly to fix. A polluted river may begin to recover when pollution stops and restoration begins, but a contaminated aquifer may take years, decades, or even longer to recover. In some cases, full recovery may not occur within a human lifetime. That is why prevention is better than remediation.
A call to action
Groundwater is a gift, but it is also a responsibility. Government institutions must enforce existing regulations. Drillers must uphold professional standards. Borehole owners must demand proper documentation. District Assemblies must maintain local borehole inventories. Researchers must generate and share knowledge. Communities must protect their water sources. The media must help educate the public. Schools must teach children that groundwater is not magical, not infinite, and not immune to pollution.
We must stop treating groundwater as something that belongs only to those who can afford to drill. Every borehole is more than a private water source; it is an opening into a shared national resource. Galamsey has shown us what happens when natural resources are exploited without care. We see the rivers, the pits, and the destroyed lands. Groundwater Galamsey is more silent, but it is no less dangerous.
If we continue drilling blindly, failing to test water, ignoring borehole records, and treating aquifers as private property, we may quietly damage one of Ghana’s most important water reserves. The time to act is now. Drill responsibly. Test the water. Keep the records. Register the boreholes. Enforce the rules. Educate the public. Protect the aquifers. Groundwater lies beneath us, but its protection must be at the centre of Ghana’s water future.
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The writer, Prof. Yvonne Sena Akosua Loh, is with the Department of Earth Science at the University of Ghana, Legon
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