Water management always has been an expertise of the Dutch. Even their King has a master title in water management… Yet, their focus is partly shifting from keeping the seawater out and staying safe, to increasing and preserving freshwater levels.
The higher likelihood of severe droughts with (possible) bans on irrigation and salination in especially coastal areas, have led to various research projects and solutions to preserve freshwater in periods of abundance to increase the availability in periods of shortage.
Deltares, a Dutch research institute has trailed three different concepts in the past years in the Southwestern Delta of the Netherlands to increase the availability of freshwater and to drain brackish and salt water. Two of these involves actively controlled drainage. Actively controlled drainage is constructed in different ways:
The video below gives an impression of how actively controlled drainage works
The concepts Deltares researched in the GO-FRESH project in the Southwestern Delta of the Netherlands are: the Freshmaker concept, creek ridge Infiltration (infiltration via drainage) and Drains2Buffer (actively controlled drainage). Creek ridges are ancient or historic sandy waterways able to contain and store freshwater. Interesting is that they also calculated the cost of each of the concepts: