5 interesting facts you may not have known about water

The health of almost every other living being on Earth relies on water to survive.

Both the human brain and a living tree is made up of about 75% water, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The abundance of water is in danger as climate change continues to worsen.

Read more in the Original Article:

5 interesting facts you may not have known about water – ABC News (go.com)

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DRIED UP: Texas cities in fear of running out of water

AUSTIN, Texas — As the Western U.S. suffers under its worst drought in a millennium, the government of Texas, a state that faces its own unique set of dangers from extreme weather, is at last turning to deal with the threat that climate change poses to its long-term water supply.

Read more in the Original Article:

DRIED UP: Texas cities in fear of running out of water | The Hill

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BVRT Utility Holding Company (BVRT) Subsidiary Enters into Long-Term Water Supply Agreement, Bringing Water to the City of Mustang Ridge, Near Austin, Texas

With this Agreement executed, Camino Real Utility, a wholly owned subsidiary of BVRT, begins work to bring potable water for the future growth of the Mustang Ridge area.

SAN ANTONIO, TX.— BVRT Utility Holding Company (BVRT) announced today that Camino Real Utility (Camino Real), a wholly owned subsidiary of BVRT, has entered into a long-term water supply agreement with the Guadalupe Blanco River Authority (GBRA), a water conservation and reclamation district established by the Texas Legislature that oversees water resources for ten counties.

The GBRA water supply agreement involves four off-takers, including Camino Real, and plans to extend a potable water pipeline from the City of Lockhart to the City of Mustang Ridge and surrounding areas. Under the agreement with GBRA, in the project’s initial phase, Camino Real will receive up to 2,419 acre-feet of potable water annually, enough for approximately 6,000 new homes.  Future phases are expected to bring additional water every five years.  Camino Real, which has already begun engineering and construction for a regional water resource recovery and reuse system for Mustang Ridge, will be the potable water utility service provider for new development in this fast-growing area south of the Austin Bergstrom Airport.

Camino Real will invest over $60 million to bring potable water to Mustang Ridge, including $43.5 million to GBRA for the pipeline and $20 million for the local water distribution system.   Of the four off-takers in the pipeline project, Camino Real is the only investor-owned utility participating in the project. This is the largest public-private partnership that GBRA has undertaken to date.

By partnering with Camino Real, the City of Mustang Ridge has facilitated the means to safely, reliably, and affordably provide essential utility services without the City having to make the capital investments or take on the risk.  “The City of Mustang Ridge is happy to partner with BVRT in bringing essential utilities to our city and the surrounding communities, providing services was a necessity for growth but would have been difficult to achieve without the hard work and investment by BVRT. We would like to thank BVRT and welcome Camino Real Utilities to our community,” said Mustang Ridge Mayor David Bunn.

“This represents a milestone for BVRT and Camino Real. Since we began our journey in 2013, we have endeavored to enhance the quality of life in our service areas and communities. This new partnership with GBRA will enable us to make an even greater positive impact on the local community and region,” said BVRT’s Chief Executive Officer, Steven Greenberg.

About BVRT Utility Holding Company

BVRT is a San Antonio, Texas-based utility development company that owns and operates six water resource recovery utilities that serve growing communities outside of Austin and San Antonio. The Company focuses on green field developments and public-private partnerships with emerging communities.  It is actively and energetically pursuing additional opportunities to build and enhance water and wastewater infrastructure in all areas of the Texas Triangle.

BVRT’s investment is made possible through the backing of its majority investor, Texas Water Service, which is a subsidiary of California Water Service Group.  Texas Water Service is investing funds to enable BVRT to continue to build its water and wastewater infrastructure.

 

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Robots vs. Fatbergs: High-Tech Approaches to America’s Sewer Problem

Cash-strapped U.S. cities are turning to drones, artificial intelligence and other innovations to help inspect and fix the country’s aging underground arteries of waste.

View the full article here.

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Wastewater Treatment Plant Operations — 4 Key Operational Issues

Source: Genesis Water Technologies

Clean water is a necessary resource for life, business, and the environment in which we live throughout the world.

Companies and utilities that utilize sustainable, effective, and efficient solutions within their wastewater treatment plant operations play a primary role in ensuring safe, and clean water that is either reused or discharged without harm back to the environment.

Operational expertise and adaptability has been of one of the primary values in treatment facilities and this has fostered innovation in both the industrial and water utility sectors. Over the past few years, advances have been accomplished in the process of integrating and optimizing wastewater treatment plant operations but problems still remain.

1. Personnel

What is the issue?

Treatment operators in wastewater treatment facilities must be adequately trained and certified for these positions. These individuals are kept on alert throughout the day and night. They are responsible for coordinating and managing everything from valves to pipe leaks as well as instrumentation and electrical systems. This job is especially challenging during changes in source water quality and seasonal water flow rate variations.

What is the solution to this issue?

There will always be a need for the physical presence of staff to be responsible for the oversight of activities accomplished at water and wastewater treatment facilities. In fact, plant operations management can account for up to 30% or higher of the operational costs of a facilities wastewater treatment plant. Emerging technologies such as bio-organic flocculants and specialized electrochemical treatment technologies can be sustainably used and driven to optimize integration of automation and labor. This assists in the reduction of the plant labor requirements required while optimizing plant efficiencies.

2. Energy Consumption

What is the issue?

Energy consumption is one of the biggest expenses in operating a wastewater treatment plant for an industrial or water utility client. The generation and subsequent treatment of wastewater is estimated to deplete around 3% of a modern nation’s electrical power supply, or on average an anticipated 61 tWh (terawatt hours) of power each year. In domestic wastewater treatment applications, the largest proportion of energy is utilized in the biological aeration process. This energy usage in the aeration process is typically in the range of about 50–60% of overall plant usage.

What is the solution?

Modifications in the biological treatment processes have the potential to dramatically reduce the energy demand at a treatment plant while enhancing treatment performance metrics. Some examples of solutions include: the use of integrated head works screens in primary treatment; sustainable bio-organic liquid flocculants for efficient suspended solids clarification, and jet aeration diffusion systems providing up to 40% reduction in energy consumption over coarse bubble and surface diffusion systems in aeration basins.

3. Sludge Generation

What is the issue?

Sludge is the residual solid particles generated during the phases of the wastewater treatment process. This process includes mechanical, biological and chemical treatment. A critical environmental cost consideration for wastewater treatment operators is the disposal of excess sludge produced during the wastewater treatment process with the limitations of pH adjustment and (HAZMAT) restrictions.

What is the solution?

Sustainable, safe, and long term solutions for the deposition of sludge solids produced by domestic and industrial wastewater treatment plants are an essential part of a sustainable treatment facility. The utilization of sludge solids containing useful non-toxic organic matter and nutrients in agriculture is known as the most beneficial. Modern treatment technologies such as specialized jet aeration diffusion technology are even able to reduce the burden of sludge by lowering its production by at least one half.

4. Footprint

What is the issue?

Conventional activated sludge treatment has many issues — one of the largest is its land footprint. Activated sludge wastewater treatment plants are more costly to construct due to the extensive civil works construction involved.

These systems also occupy significant land areas to accommodate the many large tanks and basins required for clarification, aeration, and post-treatment.

What is the solution?

Advanced technologies that use smaller aeration basins by increasing the amount of biomass via the addition of flexible media for biofilm attachment (such as IFAS or MBBR) can reduce the treatment plants footprint. Additional, electrochemical coagulation technologies are especially known as an integral part of a facilities decentralized treatment system serving both industrial and water utility clients especially in areas of high population density. This smaller treatment plant footprint translates into lower land cost savings, but it also means lower capital cost resulting in (less concrete, steel, and equipment).

While there are several more issues facing wastewater treatment plants including stricter regulatory requirements, the above points are the 4 important topics we find customers dealing with on a consistent basis.

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Original article from WaterOnline.com

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The Water Research Foundation Wins DOE Grant To Improve Energy Efficiency And Resource Recovery At Water Resource Recovery Facilities

October 6, 2021

Last week, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy awarded a $2.2M project to The Water Research Foundation to lead a critical project, Crossing the Finish Line: Integration of Data-Driven Process Control for Maximization of Energy and Resource Efficiency in Advanced Water Resource Recovery Facilities. This project will develop and demonstrate data-driven process controls in full-scale facilities for five promising process technologies that provide a whole-plant approach and offer substantial energy and resource recovery benefits. The five applications that will be investigated are:

  • Carbon diversion: High-rate contact stabilization
  • Biological nutrient removal: ammonia-based aeration control/ammonia vs. NOx control + mainstream partial denitrification with anammox
  • Disinfection with peracetic acid
  • Phosphorus recovery: MagPrex
  • Holistic biosolids optimization

The research team*, led by WRF, includes HRSD (Hampton Roads Sanitation District – VA), DC Water, Metro Water Recovery (Metro) (CO), U.S. Military Academy West Point, University of Michigan, Northwestern University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Black & Veatch.

The project also includes a Utility Advisory Committee comprised of nine participating utilities:
Charlotte Water, City of Boulder, Raleigh Water, Clean Water Services (OR), Delta Diablo (CA), Great Lakes Water Authority (MI), Hillsborough County Public Utilities (FL), Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago, New York City Department of Environmental Protection.

“We are excited to receive this funding and lead such a distinguished research team,” said Peter Grevatt, CEO of The Water Research Foundation. “This unique project will provide water resource recovery facilities with a toolbox of approaches to improve their energy efficiency while protecting public health and the environment.”

This project is funded as part of DOE’s Water Security Grand Challenge (WSGC). The WSGC is a White House initiated, U.S. DOE-led framework to advance transformational technology and innovation to meet the global need for safe, secure, and affordable water.

*pending contract negotiations

Source: The Water Research Foundation

Original Article from Wateronline.com

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Surging Water Stress Catapults Global Decentralized Containerized/Packaged W&WWT Systems Demand

Water and energy-as-a-service is likely to have a high adoption rate in the next 2 to 3 years, finds Frost & Sullivan

Santa Clara, CA /PRNewswire/ – Frost & Sullivan’s recent analysis, Global Decentralized Containerized/Packaged Water and Wastewater Treatment (W&WWT) Systems Growth Opportunities, finds that rapid urbanization across regions is contributing to water stress worldwide. This is compelling authorities in charge of water and sanitation globally to explore decentralized solutions, pushing the demand for decentralized containerized/packaged W&WWT systems and ensuring water sustainability and circular economy. As a result, the decentralized containerized/packaged W&WWT systems market is estimated to garner $7.92 billion in revenue by 2026 from $5.22 billion in 2020, an uptick at a 7.2% compound annual growth rate. However, the COVID-19 pandemic caused the 2020 year-on-year growth rate to dip to -2.2%. It is likely to recover gradually from the second half of 2021 and expected to recuperate fully to pre-COVID levels by the end of the year.

For further information on this analysis, please visit: http://frost.ly/62w

“In two to five years, decentralized W&WWT systems will register a focused investment as part of smart city infrastructure to reduce the stress on centralized infrastructure,” said Paul Hudson, Energy & Environment Research Analyst at Frost & Sullivan. “Further, from a solution-type perspective, both—decentralized containerized/packaged WWT and WT systems—will contribute roughly at the same rate to expedite the overall industry’s growth over the forecast period.”

Hudson added: “Water and energy-as-a-service is emerging and likely to have a high adoption rate in the next two to three years. The business model combines WWT with energy production from sludge, a wastewater byproduct. This model is expected to record high adoption in North America and fast-growing markets such as Asia-Pacific.”

Globally, exploring decentralized solutions to improve water sustainability presents lucrative growth prospects to decentralized containerized/packaged W&WWT systems market participants. Players should explore the following:

Chemical-free membrane operation: Solution providers should work closely with membrane manufacturers to customize membranes for chemical-free operations and reduce chemical consumption.

Solar-powered containerized/packaged W&WWT systems: Solar or renewable-powered treatment systems are forecast to record high adoption among municipal/domestic and commercial customers in MEA and Latin America.

Competitive value-added solutions and services: Companies can offer complimentary modular/packaged conveyance systems or as a value-add to enhance market penetration and improve the value proposition.

Smart Internet of Things (IoT)-based control and monitoring systems: Equipping treatment systems with off-the-shelf IoT solutions will enable original equipment manufacturers to offer real-time diagnostics, preventive maintenance, and performance optimization solutions, thereby ensuring the rate on return and long-term sustainability.

Global Decentralized Containerized/Packaged Water and Wastewater Treatment (W&WWT) Systems Growth Opportunities is the latest addition to Frost & Sullivan’s Energy & Environment research and analyses available through the Frost & Sullivan Leadership Council, which helps organizations identify a continuous flow of growth opportunities to succeed in an unpredictable future.

About Frost & Sullivan
For six decades, Frost & Sullivan has been world-renowned for its role in helping investors, corporate leaders and governments navigate economic changes and identify disruptive technologies, Mega Trends, new business models, and companies to action, resulting in a continuous flow of growth opportunities to drive future success. Contact us: Start the discussion.

Source: Frost & Sullivan

Copyright 2021 PR Newswire. All Rights Reserved

Original Article from WaterOnline.com

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We are looking for an experienced Sales Engineer/Business Development Manager!

BVRT Utility Holding Company, LLC, is a leading provider of water and water resource recovery services in the Central Texas area, headquartered in San Antonio, TX. BVRT owns and operates assets in water-related infrastructure utilities and operations. We are dedicated to working with regional and local water authorities, communities, developers and landowners to provide water and water resources recovery services within Central Texas.

The successful candidate has or will:

  • Responsible for the execution of annual sales plans to support revenue and profit objectives of BVRT.
  • Identify, develop and close new business opportunities.
  • Manage the business development effort, generate and qualify leads for subsequent development, perform key account planning and maintain favorable business relationships with key accounts.
  • Prepare proposals, execute business development strategy, provide input into the estimating process, and generate market intelligence for capture and subsequent analysis.
  • Assist in the development of marketing communications and product portfolio decisions, coordinate pilot projects and spearhead management of customer service.
  • Bachelor’s degree with a concentration in Engineering, Construction Management, Business Management or another related field.
  • Minimum of 5 years utility, real estate development, construction related Engineering/Sales/Operations experience in the Water/Wastewater Industry.
  • Ability to work at a fast pace, balance a large number of sales opportunities and work tasks simultaneously, and maintain accuracy of work and timeliness of deadlines.
  • Demonstrated success developing a territory and building relationships with clients, contractors, and engineering firms.
  • Strong interpersonal skills with the ability to motivate and communicate, and strong people management and decision-making skills required.
  • Solid working experience with MS Office Suites required experience with a CRM tool a plus.
  • Ability to meet overnight travel requirements of 1-2 nights per week.

We offer a competitive salary with career growth opportunities and a full benefits package.

BVRT Utility Holding Company is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Equal opportunity is a sound and just concept to which BVRT is firmly bound. BVRT will not engage in discrimination against, or harassment of, any person employed or seeking employment with BVRT on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, non-disqualifying disability, status as a protected veteran or other characteristics protected by law.

Please send resume and cover letter to recruiting@bvrtwater.com.

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Wastewater Treatment And Water Resource Recovery Facilities (WRRFs) 

Updated:
09-10-2020

INTRODUCTION

l resource in the world. Municipalities and military installations must manage and steward wastewater from multiple potential sources, including sanitary and household, commercial, institutional, manufacturing, industrial, construction, and storm water. Management and treatment can vary from small onsite treatment and discharge to large-scale water resource recovery facilities with collection systems and pumping stations, treatment processesoil-water separators, recycling, energy recovery, and reuse.

View of outdoor river

The need for community wastewater collection and treatment systems globally is an evolving one, beginning over 200 years ago in the US. Initially, efforts were focused on collection and disposal and were driven by the need to reduce human disease. That era was followed by a focus on the elimination of gross water pollution effects, allowing native marine organisms to return to normal growth patterns and allowing full human recreational use. Finally, community wastewater collection and treatment systems have begun to redefine wastewater as a resource with valuable products to be extracted through treatment. In the United States wastewater and storm water treatment discharges are governed by the Clean Water Act.

As population and climate pressures increase, safe water and water infrastructure will only become more important. According to the EPA’s 2012 Clean Watersheds Needs Survey, 238.2 million people in the United States were serviced by Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTW), with a projected increase of over 10% by 2032. In excess of 300 billion cubic meters of municipal wastewater is produced annually in the world. The desire to protect human health, recover and conserve resources while adapting to a changing landscape, including new technologies and aging infrastructure, will drive more advanced wastewater treatment. With the ability to recover valuable resources from wastewater, such as phosphorus, nitrogen, and biogas, as well as conserving water for reuse, drinking, agriculture, cooling or industrial use, POTWs are now aptly referred to as water resource recovery facilities as they continue to recover valuable resources through wastewater treatment.

Part of a wastewater treatment facility

Part of a wastewater treatment facility

DESCRIPTION

Wastewater Collections Systems
Collections Systems refer to the system of underground pipes and maintenance structures that transport wastewater to water resource recovery facilities. These systems include gravity pipes, manholes, lift stations, force mains and more as they collect and transport residential and commercial waste.

An aerated lagoon for water treatment

An aerated lagoon

Tractor moving biosolids in field
Putting biosolids to work in agriculture
Storm water flowing in runoff
Storm water runoff during an intense storm

Wastewater Treatment Processes
Wastewater treatment refers to the removal of pollutants from wastewater before discharge to a waterbody. This includes physical processes such as sedimentation and filtration, chemical processes such as precipitation and biological processes like aerated lagoons or activated sludge.

Resource Recovery
Water resource recovery facilities present a unique opportunity to reduce energy demands, lower costs and increase production of renewable energy by creating valuable products out of traditional waste streams. For water resource recovery facilities, these resources include water, energy, nutrients (phosphorus and nitrogen) and biosolids.

Biosolids
Biosolids are the nutrient rich organic material resulting from the treatment of domestic waste at a water resource recovery facility. Through biosolids management, solid residue from wastewater treatment is processed to reduce or eliminate pathogens and minimize odors, forming a safe, beneficial agricultural product in accordance with regulatory requirements that can be used as fertilizer and other products.

Storm Water
Storm water refers to a heavy quantity of water, such as rain or snow, that falls to the surface of the Earth which becomes polluted as it picks up, carries, and transports various pollutants (oil, grease, chemicals, sediment, nutrients, pathogens) along streets, drains, open channels, and storm sewer systems. Most of the untreated runoff eventually is discharged into nearby waterbodies. However, in combined sewer systems, storm water flows with wastewater and is treated at a water resource recovery facility.

Oil-Water Separation
Oil-water separation refers to the physical separation of oil-water mixtures into their separate components. Oil-water separators vary widely and are chosen based on performance parameters and operation conditions. Proper oil-water separation is necessary to prevent contamination to storm sewer and sanitary sewer systems.

EMERGING ISSUES

Storm Water
Storm water is a growing source of water pollution in many watersheds across the country. As urban areas grow and severe weather becomes more common, the issue of storm water management will only escalate in importance because of decreases in natural land cover and the expansion of impervious surfaces, such as rooftops, sidewalks and roadways. These surfaces exacerbate runoff because they change the permeability of the landscape — preventing rainwater from soaking in or infiltrating the soil.

Resource Recovery
The concept of a circular economy has steadily been gaining traction in recent years, especially in the water sector, with the idea of taking wastewater and creating valuable products while reducing the amount of waste produced. Water resource recovery facilities (WRRFs) directly contribute to a circular economy by producing clean water, nutrients, renewable energy, and other valuable bio-based materials from wastewater.

Microconstituents 
As a result of today’s modern lifestyle and the widespread use of organic chemicals, large amounts of chemical residues from industries, agriculture, and homes are being continuously released in the environment, some of which find their way into municipal wastewater. A few examples of microconstituents that can be found in the environment are pharmaceuticals, personal care and consumer products (PPCPs), pesticides, cleaning materials, chemicals used in building materials, additives in foods and drinks, chemicals used for printing, and more. Although many microconstituents that reach WRRFs are destroyed through wastewater treatment and solids processing, some recalcitrant microconstituents and their metabolites may pass through the treatment process intact and may end up in the effluent or biosolids. In general, wastewater influents contain microconstituents in concentrations ranging from nano-g/L to micro-g/L, in effluent from non-detect to nano-g/L, and in biosolids the concentrations vary from micro-g/kg to mg/kg.

Climate Change
Climate change has directly impacted water resources by altering precipitation patterns, severe drought and floods, snowpack amount, elevation, streamflow, and rising sea levels. This has created a direct need for utilities to manage local water resources to lessen the potential impact of climate change. By increasing water reuse, developing resiliency and other actions, WRRFs can be a leader in fighting and preparing for climate change effects.

Part of a wastewater treatment facility

The impacts of climate change can be seen in these two images with flooding and erosion.
Photo Credits: U.S. EPA

Creating Resilient Water Utilities
As extreme weather events become more common, it is ever increasingly important for utilities to increase their resilience to such events. Creating Resilient Water Utilities is an EPA initiative that provides wastewater and storm water utilities with a planning process to improve resilience. It includes a risk assessment, case studies and the tools needed to develop an individualized resilient strategy guide.

Aging Infrastructure
To adequately treat wastewater and manage storm water, the public treatment work systems must continue to operate. As the infrastructure, largely built 50 years ago, begins to age and deteriorate, untreated water will discharge into the environment and the costs to repair will increase rapidly. A proactive, continuous improvement system must be adopted to combat these issues. In addition to ensuring proper wastewater treatment, updating aging infrastructure can create jobs and help offset future lost sales and GDP.

Security and Resilience for the Water Sector: Water and Wastewater Sector Specific Plan 
Providing effective wastewater treatment is critical to prevent disease, protect the environment and ensure life and the economy continues as is. To ensure security and resiliency for the water and wastewater sectors, partnerships between public and private utilities, national and state associations, state and local governments, research foundations and federal agencies are necessary. These partnerships must promote collaboration as these organizations prepare to prevent, detect and respond to physical and cyberattacks, other intentional acts and natural disasters.

The Clean Watersheds Needs Survey
The Clean Watersheds Needs Survey is conducted every four years by the EPA, states, territories and the District of Columbia. The survey collects information about publicly owned wastewater collection and treatment facilities, storm water and combined sewer overflows control facilities, non-point source pollution control projects and decentralized wastewater management. The survey provides a thorough examination of the capital costs needed to meet the Clean Water Act standards and address water quality and water quality related public health concerns.

Envision
Envision provides a consensus-based framework to assess sustainability and resilience in wastewater infrastructure. As a program, it defines the sustainable infrastructure standard, incentivizes programs to go above and beyond minimum requirements, recognizes programs that excel and has developed a common language for internal and external partners to clearly communicate. Overall, Envision’s framework ensures sustainable choices are made when planning, designing and constructing infrastructure.

RELEVANT CODES, STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

WBDG

DESIGN OBJECTIVES

Cost-EffectiveSustainable: Optimize Energy Use, Protect and Conserve Water

Organizations

Topics:
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Original article from WBDG.com
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Technologies That Can Achieve Water And Sanitation For All

By Lior Eshed

A staggering four billion people — two-thirds of the world’s population — experience water scarcity each year, and more than half lack access to safe sanitation services. The severity of this global water crisis will only increase as populations continue to rapidly grow, industries exhaust shared resources and extreme weather events exacerbate shortages. If we don’t act urgently, 700 million people could be displaced by intense water scarcity in just a few short years.

This World Water Day, the United Nations spotlighted its Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6: water and sanitation for all by 2030, through the theme “valuing water.”

How can we safeguard our most precious resource while simultaneously achieving water for all? The answer is simple: technology. Through cutting-edge advancements in water reclamation, desalination and many other technologies, water stressed regions can now invest in cost-effective, sustainable water and sanitation solutions.

While we acknowledge the amount of work still to be done, World Water Day is also a time to celebrate how far we’ve come and highlight some of the achievements we’ve made thus far in water conservation, preservation and sanitation technologies. Below are just three of the many unique technological advancements empowering water-scarce regions with control and value of their water supply.

Cost-Effective “Plant In A Box” Desalination

Despite the fact that nearly 40 percent of the world’s population lives within 60 miles of a coastline, only 1 percent of the world’s drinking water comes from desalinated sea and brackish water. So why aren’t more water scarce countries tapping into this abundant supply? While desalination is an excellent option for preserving groundwater supply and producing drinking water on a large-scale, traditional technologies can be costly and energy intensive. However, several advancements have been made, or are in the works, to significantly reduce the cost and carbon footprint of desalination — from graphene-based filters and pervaporation, to solar energy and containerized plants.

The latter of these low-cost options, containerized reverse osmosis plants, serve as end-to-end “plants in a box.” This smaller desalination technology greatly reduces energy consumption and can operate with fairly low amount of chemicals, with some solutions providing up to 20,000m3/day. For smaller countries or communities that may not be able to invest in larger, costlier desalination plants, this is an affordable, easily transportable and eco-friendly solution.

Sanitary, Chloramine-Free Water Reuse

third of the world’s biggest groundwater systems are already in distress, meaning water stressed countries will soon have little choice but to rely on water reuse as their primary water supply. As more countries turn to wastewater as a source for fresh drinking water, it’s critical that they use systems that will produce the cleanest, safest water possible. This means using reverse osmosis processes that eliminate the need for potential contaminants such as chloramine.

Conventional water reuse systems typically include chloramine as a means to control biofouling. However, chloramine is a precursor to the formation of N-nitrosodimethylamine
(NDMA) — a dangerous organic contaminant and suspected carcinogen and to the formation of other disinfection by products, such as trihalomethanes (THM). Fortunately, certain reverse osmosis technologies can now fully operate without chloramine or other contaminants. Instead of chloramine dosage to control biofouling, reverse osmosis membranes can be operated and maintained by altering the osmotic and hydraulic conditions in the pressure vessel which makes the conditions unfavorable for biofilms proliferation.

As regulations around chemicals in water treatment tighten, technologies must embrace new and sustainable solutions to ensure drinking water remains sanitary.

Eco-Efficient Brine Management

For all the good that desalination provides, it doesn’t come without its drawbacks. Its main byproduct, brine, can harm the environment if not properly discharged and in some cases, there is not access to a place that can accept the brine (usually the ocean). Increasing regulatory pressure, environmental awareness and more, larger membrane desalination plants are driving the need for better brine minimization — one of the greatest challenges currently facing the water treatment sector.

Luckily, desalination technology has evolved so rapidly in such a short period of time, making plants more efficient and environmentally friendly than ever before. Some companies have figured out ways to convert concentrated brine into useful chemicals such as sodium hydroxide, while others have drastically minimized the byproduct through achievements in reverse osmosis technology.

It is critical that industry applications in particular, which globally account for nearly 20 percent of total water withdrawals, adopt brine minimization technologies to recycle and reuse as much water as possible.

Cultivating A Sustainable Future For All

If we continue depleting our freshwater supply at the current rate, we will soon run out of water. That is, unless we turn to sustainable desalination and water reuse solutions. Israel serves as the ideal case study for how water treatment technologies can single-handedly raise a drought-ridden country out of its water crisis and transform it into a completely stable, self-sufficient water producer and consumer. Today, up to 75 percent of the country’s household drinking water comes from desalination and after its initial usage is almost totally reused again for agricultural irrigation.

Unfortunately, most developing countries are unable to follow in Israel’s footsteps, as an absence of resources and expertise prevent widespread adoption of the technologies. This means far more needs to be done to lower the cost and increase accessibility to these technologies. But how?

As the technologies outlined demonstrate, we have the knowledge and capacity to create fully water independent countries. We need to encourage collaboration and planning between governments, operators and international organizations to make thee accessible to every water scarce region. Only then can we make strides toward the UN’s goal of water and sanitation for all — through technology and working together.

Sources:
•    UN Water
•    International Water Association
•    Department of Public Policy, Tel Aviv University
•    Our World in Data

About The Author

Lior Eshed graduated from Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, with BSc and MSc degrees in environmental engineering. He started at IDE Technologies in 2015 as a process engineer and was soon promoted to team leader and member of the R&D team, where he focuses primarily on advanced reuse technologies. Currently, Lior is in charge of new products development at IDE and is an inventor of various patents in the field of water treatment.

Original Article from WaterOnline.com
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