Recycle used water

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Recycle used water

Recycle used water01. Water flow quantity improvement

General description

Urban and industrial used water can be reused for urban irrigation and cleaning, agriculture, aquiculture, or environmental uses like aquifer recharge or stream flows.

Applicability

Reuse recycled water decreases the pressure over the water resources and environmental contamination and is a sustainable alternative for water supply. Especially in countries with problems of water scarcity, the renewal of water contributes to secure the availability of the resource, and at the same time avoids the degradation of water quality and quantity. Sometimes water recycling emerges from the need to eliminate or decrease wastewater discharge to the ocean, an estuary, or a stream.

The scope of this measure starts with household re-use (for laundry, toilets…) without purifying treatments, and extents up to agricultural or environmental use at watershed scale.

The quality criteria for each use are defined by the competent organism of each country regarding to microorganisms, turbidity, suspended matter, and other pollutants. There are 5 main uses, which can be divided in different subcategories:

  • Urban (irrigation of landscaped areas, ornamental landscape uses, dust control and concrete production, fire protection, toilet flushing in commercial areas, etc)
  • Agrarian (agriculture, aquiculture, pastures, etc)
  • Industrial (cooling water, boiler make-up water, industrial process water)
  • Recreational (golf camp irrigation, recreational and aesthetic impoundments)
  • Environmental:
  • Groundwater recharge
  • Surface water flow augmentation
  • Enhance/restore wetlands and create artificial wetlands.

Reclaimed water reuse requires a conservative approach for water quality standards, at least with groundwater recharge for indirect potable reuse, where there is still some uncertainty about long-term health effects of contaminants, and chemical and microbiological safety has to be ensured. Thus, indirect potable reuse has lower social acceptance, and is necessary to improve public information, document better the benefits of water reuse, and impulse further research and innovate technology.

Expected effect of measure on (including literature citations):

  • HYMO (general and specified per HYMO element)
  • physico � chemical parameters
  • Biota (general and specified per Biological quality elements)

Temporal and spatial response

Pressures that can be addressed by this measure

Cost-efficiency

Case studies where this measure has been applied

Useful references

Other relevant information