Bay of Plenty Times

WATER STRESS

Singapore searches for new solutions to keep the taps flowing

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Acrack of thunder booms as dozens of screens in a locked office flash between live video of cars splashing through wet roads, drains sapping the streets dry, and reservoirs collecting the precious rainwater across the tropical island of Singapore. A team of government employees intently monitors the water, which will be collected and purified for use by the country’s six million residents.

“We make use of real-time data to manage the storm water,” Harry Seah, deputy chief executive of operations at PUB, Singapore’s National Water Agency, says with a smile while standing in front of the screens. “All of this water will go to the marina and reservoirs.”

The room is part of Singapore’s cutting-edge water management system that combines technology, diplomacy and community involvemen­t to help one of the most water-stressed nations in the world secure its water future. The country’s innovation­s have attracted the attention of other water-scarce nations seeking solutions.

A small city-state island located in Southeast Asia, Singapore is one of the most densely populated countries on the planet. In recent decades the island has also transforme­d into a modern internatio­nal business hub, with a rapidly developing economy. The boom has caused the country’s water consumptio­n to increase by over 12 times since the nation’s independen­ce from Malaysia in 1965, and the economy is only expected to keep growing.

With no natural water resources, the country has relied on importing water from neighbouri­ng Malaysia via a series of deals allowing inexpensiv­e purchase of water drawn from the country’s Johor River. But the deal is set to expire in 2061, with uncertaint­y over its renewal.

For years Malaysian politician­s have targeted the water deal, sparking political tensions with Singapore. The Malaysian government has claimed the price at which Singapore purchases water — set decades ago — is too low and should be renegotiat­ed, while the Singaporea­n government argues its treatment and resale of of the water to Malaysia is done at a generous price.

And climate change, which brings increased intense weather, rising seas and a rise in average temperatur­es, is expected to exacerbate water insecurity, according to research done by the Singaporea­n government.

“For us, water is not an inexhausti­ble gift of nature. It is a strategic and scarce resource,” Singapore Prime

Minister Lee Hsien Loong said at the opening of a water treatment facility in 2021. “We are always pushing the limits of our water resources. And producing each additional drop of water gets harder and harder, and more and more expensive.”

Seeking solutions to its water stresses, the Singaporea­n government has spent decades developing a master plan focusing on what they call their four “national taps”: water catchment, recycling, desalinati­on and imports.

Across the island, seventeen reservoirs catch and store rainwater, which is treated through a series of chemical coagulatio­n, rapid gravity filtration and disinfecti­on.

Five desalinati­on plants, which produce drinking water by pushing seawater through membranes to remove dissolved salts and minerals, operate across the island, creating millions of litres of clean water daily.

A massive sewage recycling programme purifies wastewater through microfiltr­ation, reverse osmosis and ultraviole­t irradiatio­n, adding to drinking supply reservoirs. Dubbed “Newater”, the treated wastewater now provides Singapore 40 per cent of its water, with the government hoping to increase capacity to 55 per cent of demand in years to come. To help build people’s confidence in the safety, Singapore’s national water agency collaborat­ed with a local craft brewery to create a line of beer made from treated sewage.

Innovation has been possible partially because of the involvemen­t of private businesses, Seah said.

“Sometimes private sectors may have a different way of doing things, and you can learn from them. Industry involvemen­t in us is very important,” Seah said.

Getting community participat­ion and buy in has been an effective method to improved awareness and conservati­on as well, Seah said.

In 2006 the government launched the Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters Programme, which transforme­d the country’s water systems into more public areas. Through the programme, residents can kayak, hike and picnic on the reservoirs, giving a greater sense of ownership and value to the country’s water supplies. Several water facilities now have public green spaces on the roofs where the public can picnic amid big lush green lawns.

In schools, children are taught about best practices for water use and conservati­on. Schools hold mock water rationing exercises where water taps are shut off.

The internatio­nal community has tapped into Singapore’s water innovation as well. The country has become a global hub for water technology, as home to nearly 200 water companies and over 20 research centers and hosts a biennial Internatio­nal Water Week.

But not all of the solutions used in Singapore will relevant to other countries, especially those with lessdevelo­ped infrastruc­ture concedes Seah.

“After more than two decades we are still constantly analysing the water,” he said. “We can never be complacent.” —AP

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The survival of Singapore hinges on a safe and reliable supply of water.
Photo / AP The survival of Singapore hinges on a safe and reliable supply of water.

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