Oman Daily Observer

Greywater reuse offers economic, environmen­tal benefits for Oman

BIG SAVING: The system can reduce dependence on expensive desalinate­d seawater

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT

Dec 8: Greywater treatment and reuse has the potential to dramatical­ly reduce the nation’s dependence on expensive seawater desalinati­on for household potable water consumptio­n, according to a scientist at Sultan Qaboos University (SQU).

Greywater, which is defined as wastewater from non-toilet plumbing fixtures such as showers, basins and taps, accounts for roughly 80 per cent of potable water consumed within a domestic household. Greywater is distinct from blackwater, which is wastewater from toilets and bidets.

According to Dr Mushtaque Ahmed ( pictured), a researcher at the College of Agricultur­e & Marine Science, studies conducted by SQU have proven greywater to be safe for reuse in households once suitably processed in potable treatment systems that cost no more than RO 600 apiece.

Even if 20,000 households — representi­ng less than 5 per cent of the total number of water connection­s in the Sultanate — decide to instal greywater treatment systems, the aggregate investment cost would total around RO 12 million.

But savings generated as a result of reduced desalinati­on water demand will average around 20,000 cubic metres/day, which is equivalent to the capacity of a modest size seawater desalinati­on plant, the cost of which is exponentia­lly higher than the aggregate cost of installing greywater treatment systems, Dr Ahmed explained.

The importance of greywater reuse was one of several options that the SQU researcher outlined in a talk delivered on the concluding day of the INTEX Oman Forum held at the Oman Convention & Exhibition Centre. The 2-day forum, which was held on the sidelines of the ongoing INTEX Oman Expo, has been organised by Global Exhibition­s & Conference­s LLC.

In his presentati­on, titled ‘More Water for Oman: Where are the Sources?’, Dr

Greywater, which is defined as wastewater from nontoilet plumbing fixtures such as showers, basins and taps, accounts for roughly 80 per cent of potable water consumed within a domestic household.

Ahmed also looked at opportunit­ies for the treatment and reuse of, among other resources, wastewater, saline water, and oil-contaminat­ed produced water.

Greywater treatment and reuse, he emphasised, also makes good economics based on numerous studies that looked at the environmen­tal benefits of this process. Citing the case study involving 20,000 homes with reuse capacity, an estimated 29,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions linked to global warming, will be saved every year as a result of the reduced dependence of gas-based water desalinati­on, he noted.

Furthermor­e, treatment systems are simple to instal, robust and easy to maintain. They typically involve simple filtration systems, as charcoal and chlorine dosing components for purificati­on.

With around one cubic metre of water (costing around 600 baiza) saved on average by a standard household, there is good potential for recouping investment costs within a reasonable timeframe.

The resultant savings to the government, which will not have to procure additional seawater desalinati­on capacity correspond­ing to the volumes reused, amount to a “win-win” for all stakeholde­rs, he added. JAKARTA: Shaikh Abdullah bin Nasser al Bakri, Minister of Manpower, met on Thursday Ali Rabiei, Iranian Minister of Cooperativ­es, Labour and Social Welfare, on the sidelines of the 16th Asia and the Pacific Regional Meeting (APRM) of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) in Indonesia.

The two sides discussed means of enhancing the joint cooperatio­n through the Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU) signed between them in a bid to benefit from the MoU in exchanging expertise in the fields of labour, vocational training and social insurance.

— ONA

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