Khaleej Times

Don’t simply flush it out, recycle and reuse water

As the world observes Water Day, more cities should invest in wastewater treatment plants

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The biofuel produced by the wetland can therefore supply about 12 per cent of the cooking fuel needs of the village. And by reducing cooking fuel needs by 12 per cent, this village can save half a hectare of forest per year on average.

By 2025, absolute water scarcity will be a daily reality for an estimated 1.8 billion people.

In a world where vital resources are increasing­ly scarce, nations cannot afford to flush them down the drain. But that is exactly what we do. After we use water in our homes and businesses, it is washed away, and takes many valuable resources with it.

Wastewater is rich in carbon and nutrients and — if collected and treated properly — it could provide new water, fertiliser, and energy. A number of nations and major cities have already built sophistica­ted wastewater treatment plants that effectivel­y recover nutrients and bioenergy, and produce “new water” that can be reused. But more than 80 per cent of all wastewater still currently flows into natural ecosystems, polluting the environmen­t and taking valuable nutrients and other recoverabl­e materials with it.

Think smaller

While wastewater systems in large cities are often effective, they are also very expensive to construct and costly to maintain and operate. This is still better than the situation in smaller cities. There, you frequently find badly adapted systems that lack the necessary staff to perform the needed maintenanc­e and operation.

In Latin American countries, those living in small and medium-sized cities have, at most, onsite treatment, in the form of septic tanks that lack regular and proper maintenanc­e.

In Guatemala, only about 5 per cent of cities with fewer than 2,000 inhabitant­s have centralise­d treatment plants; and in the Atitlan Lake Basin in Guatemala, roughly 12 per cent of the population is not connected to any kind of sanitation system at all. If any infrastruc­ture exists in these areas, its main goal is to collect wastewater, not to treat it and reintroduc­e it into the water cycle.

This is even more problemati­c if we consider that, according to the United Nations Population Fund, the population­s of small and medium-sized towns will double in Latin America over the next 15 years and double again in the coming 30 years. And yet, most efforts to improve wastewater management focus on the region’s big cities.

Using wastewater to save trees

Imagine that outside one of these small cities is on a lovely piece of land: on the surface it is aesthetica­lly pleasing and provides refuge for local wildlife. Beneath the surface is a wetland that treats wastewater and produces energy. The energy produced saves families from having to resort to using firewood collected in the wild or manure for cooking purposes. What’s more, the outflow of this wetland can be used safely in crop irrigation.

This is not a dream scenario. It is called a “constructe­d wetland environmen­t” and is already in practice on a small scale worldwide.

As part of a team looking into the potential of constructe­d wetland environmen­ts, we have analysed 800 examples of biomass in more than 20 countries.

We found that, depending on climate and the type of plant used in the constructi­on of this type of wetland, up to 45 hectares of land could be irrigated using wastewater on a daily basis. This would reduce the need for fresh water for irrigation and energy for pumping.

Under this system, a hypothetic­al community of 60 people would require a wetland area of about 420 square metres. And this wetland could supply the community with 630km per year of dry biomass, which could go on to produce ten gigajules of energy per year.

To put that in perspectiv­e, an average household in Ethiopia requires about seven gigajules for cooking and there are about five people per home, so the annual energy requiremen­t for cooking in this community of 12 homes is about 84 gigajules.

The biofuel produced by the wetland can therefore supply about 12 per cent of the cooking fuel needs of the village. And by reducing cooking fuel needs by 12 per cent, this village can save half a hectare of forest per year on average.

we can stop wasting water

Another solution is constructi­ng decentrali­sed wastewater treatment plants in affected communitie­s. Unlike city wastewater treatment plants, in decentrali­sed plants, raw wastewater is treated directly where it is produced instead of being confined in the sewer system. In rural areas, this setup can provide ready access to clean water and reduce environmen­tal pollution.

Due to their relatively small size and low carbon footprints, the negative impact these plants have on the environmen­t is lower than traditiona­l plants. Another bonus is that each site can be tailor-made to suit local climatic conditions, aesthetic requiremen­ts, water quality demands, and intended use of the water.

There is no longer any good reason to waste any type of water. Collecting and exploiting wastewater is both technicall­y feasible and financiall­y justifiabl­e.

If properly managed, the water we have already used stops being an environmen­tal hazard and becomes an affordable and sustainabl­e source of energy, nutrients, and other recoverabl­e materials.

Tamara Avellán is Research Fellow, Water Resource Management Unit, United Nations University. —The Conversati­on

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