You are on page 1of 12

        

IWA Publications

      

Sign up to our mailing list Contact us Login Register Your basket

Site navigation

Sustainability in Water Supply

This article serves as a general reference for sustainable water supply systems. The scope remains global
and macroscopic, though there may be regional differences depending on the water sources available in
a particular setting. What is considered “sustainable” in one location may be a challenge to sustainability
elsewhere.

Sustainable water systems should provide adequate water quantity and appropriate water quality for a
given need, without compromising the future ability to provide this capacity and quality. Water systems
in the realm of sustainable development may not literally include the use of water, but include systems
where the use of water has traditionally been required. Examples include waterless toilets and waterless
car washes, whose use helps to alleviate water stress and secure a sustainable water supply.

Accessing the sustainability features in water supply, that is to say, the three-fold goals of economic
feasibility, social responsibility and environmental integrity, is linked to the purpose of water use.
Sometimes, these purposes compete when resources are limited; for example, water needed to meet
the demands of an increasingly urban population and those needs of rural agriculture. Water is used (1)
for drinking as a survival necessity, (2) in industrial operations (energy production, manufacturing of
goods, etc.), (3) domestic applications (cooking, cleaning, bathing, sanitation), and (4) agriculture.
Sustainable water supply is a component of integrated water resource management, the practice of
bringing together multiple stakeholders with various viewpoints in order to determine how water should
best be managed. In order to decide if a water system is sustainable, various economical, social and
ecological considerations must be considered.

The Basics: Water Sources

Surface water
Surface freshwater is unfortunately limited and unequally distributed in the world. Almost 50% of the
world's lakes are located in Canada alone (UNEP, 2002). In addition, pollution from various activities
leads to surface water that is not drinking quality. Therefore, treatment systems (either large scale or at
the household level) must be put in place.

Structures such as dams may be used to impound water for consumption. Dams can be used for power
generation, water supply, irrigation, flood prevention, water diversion, navigation, etc. If properly
designed and constructed, dams can help provide a sustainable water supply. The design should
consider peak flood flows (historical and projected for climate change), earthquake faults, soil
permeability, slope stability and erosion, silting, wetlands, water table, human impacts, ecological
impacts (including wildlife), compensation for resettlement, and other site characteristics. There are
various challenges that large-scale dam projects may present to sustainability: negative environmental
impacts on wildlife habitats, fish migration, water flow and quality, and socioeconomic impacts resulting
from resettled local communities. A sustainability impact assessment should therefore be performed to
determine the environmental, economic and social consequences of the construction.

Groundwater

Groundwater accounts for greater than 50% of global freshwater; thus, it is critical for potable water
(Lozan et al, 2007). Groundwater can be a sustainable water supply source if the total amount of water
entering, leaving, and being stored in the system is conserved. There are three main factors which
determine the source and amount of water flowing through a groundwater system: precipitation,
location of streams and other surface-water bodies, and evapotranspiration rate; it is thus not possible
to generalize a sustainable withdrawal or pumping rate for groundwater (USGS, 1999). Unsustainable
groundwater use results in water-level decline, reduced streamflow, and low water quality, jeopardizing
the livelihood of effected communities. Various practices of sustainable groundwater supply include
changing rates or spatial patterns of ground-water pumpage, increasing recharge to the ground-water
system, decreasing discharge from the groundwater system, and changing the volume of groundwater in
storage at different time scales (USGS, 1999). A long-term vision is necessary when extracting
groundwater since the effects of its development can take years before becoming apparent. It is
important to integrate groundwater supply within adequate land planning and sustainable urban
drainage systems.

Rainwater Harvesting

Collecting water from precipitation is one of the most sustainable sources of water supply since it has
inherent barriers to the risk of over-exploitation found in surface and groundwater sources, and directly
providesdrinking water quality. However, rainwater harvesting systems must be properly designed and
maintained in order to collect water efficiently, prevent contamination and use sustainable treatment
systems in case the water is contaminated. A number of drinking water treatments exist at point-of-use,
each with advantages and disadvantages. These include solar treatment, boiling, using filters,
chlorination, combined methods such asfiltration and chlorination, flocculation and chlorination.
Although technically given the Earth's surface and precipitation, rainwater harvesting can meet global
water demand, the solution can most practically be a supplement to sustainable water supply systems
given a level of uncertainty (especially with climate change), and competing land-use applications.

Reclaimed Water

Reclaimed water, or water recycled from human use, can also be a sustainable source of water supply. It
is an important solution to reduce stress on primary water resources such as surface and groundwater.
There are both centralized and decentralized systems which include greywater recycling systems and
the use of microporous membranes. Reclaimed water must be treated to provide the appropriate
quality for a given application (irrigation, industry use, etc.). It is often most efficient to separate
greywater from blackwater, thereby using the two water streams for different uses. Greywater comes
from domestic activities such as washing, whereasblackwater contains human waste. The characteristics
of the two wastestreams thus differ.

Desalinization

Desalinisation has the potential to provide an adequate water quantity to those regions that are
freshwater poor, including small island states. However, the energy demands of reverse osmosis, a
widely-used procedure used to remove salt from water, are a challenge to the adaptation of this
technology as a sustainable one. The costs of desalination average around 0.81 USD per cubic meter
compared to roughly 0.16 USD per cubic meter from other supply sources (USGS, 2010). If desalination
can be provided with renewable energies and efficient technologies, the sustainable features of this
supply source would increase. Currently, desalinationincreases operational costs because of the needed
energy (and also carbon dioxide emissions); this in turn raises the cost of the final product. In addition,
desalination plants can have negative impacts on marine life, and cause water pollution due to the
chemicals used to treat water and the discharge of brine.

Bottled Water

Bottled water is a 21st century phenomenon whereby mostly private companies provide potable water
in a bottle for a cost. In some areas, bottled water is the only reliable source of safe drinking water.
However, often in these same locations, the cost is prohibitively expensive for the local population to
use in a sustainable manner. Bottled water is not considered an “improved drinking water source” when
it is the only potable source available (UN, 2010). When sustainability metrics are used to access bottled
water, it falls short in many situations of being a sustainable water supply. Economic costs, pollution
associated with its manufacturing (plastic, energy, etc.) and transportation, as well as extra water use,
makes bottled water an unsustainable water supply system for many regions and for many brands. It
takes 3-4 liters of water to make less than 1 liter of bottled water (Pacific Institute, 2008).

Potable Water

Potable water requires some of the strictest standards of quality in terms of bacteriological and
chemical pollutants. These standards are often governed by national governments; international
recommendations can be found from the World Health Organization
(http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/dwq/guidelines/en/index.html). Drinking water must be
freshwater and should be free of pathogens and free of harmful chemicals.

Water in Industry

Water is used in just about every industry. Industrial water withdrawls represent 22% of total global
water use (significant regional differences). Its use is notable for manufacturing, processing, washing,
diluting, cooling, transporting substances, sanitation needs within a facility, incorporating water into a
final product, etc. (USGS, 2010). The food, paper, chemicals, refined petroleum, and primary metal
industries use large amounts of water (USGS, 2010). A sustainable water supply in industry involves
limiting water use through efficient appliances and methods adapted to the particular industry.
Rainwater harvesting on-site (including the creation of large pond-like structures), as well as recycling
water in industrial processes, can provide a sustainable water supply for industry without straining
municipal water supplies. Industry releases organic water pollutants, heavy metals, solvents, toxic
sludge, and other wastes into water supply sources. Industry thus has a dual responsibility for internal
sustainable water supply and the protection of external water supply sources.

Water in Agriculture

Agriculture uses the largest amount of freshwater on a global scale. It represents roughly 70% of all
water withdrawal worldwide, with various regional differences. In the United States, for example,
agriculture accounts for over 80% of water consumption (USDA, 2010). The productivity of irrigated land
is approximately three times greater than that of rain-fed land (FAO, 2010). Thus, irrigation is an
important factor for sustainable agriculture systems. In addition, global food production is expected to
increase by 60% from 2000 to 2030, creating a 14% increase in water demand for irrigation (UN, 2005).
Agriculture is also responsible for some of the surface and groundwater degradation because of run-off
(chemical and erosion-based). It thus has a dual role in sustainable water supply: (1) using water
efficiently for irrigation and (2) protecting surface and groundwater supply sources. Techniques for
sustainable water supply in agriculture include organic farming practices which limit substances that
would contaminate water, efficient water delivery, micro-irrigation systems, adapted water lifting
technologies, zero tillage, rainwater harvesting, runoff farming, and drip irrigation (efficient method that
allows water to drip slowly to plant roots by using pipes, valves, tubes and emitters).

Domestic Water Uses

The average household needs an estimated 20-50 liters of water per person per day, depending on
various assumptions and practices (Gleick, 1996). Reducing water use through waterless toilets, water
efficient appliances, and water quantity monitoring, is an important part of sustainability for domestic
water supply. Efficient piping systems that are leak-free and well insulated provide a network that is
reliable and help to limit water waste. The aforementioned potable water supply sources, with their
sustainability features and sustainability challenges, are all relevant to other domestic uses. Since water
quality standards are not as strict for household uses as for drinking, there is more flexibility when
considering sustainable domestic water supply (including the potential for reclaimed water use).

Conclusions

A water supply system will be sustainable only if it promotes efficiencies in both the supply and the
demand sides. Initiatives to meet demand for water supply will be sustainable if they prioritize measures
to avoid water waste. Avoiding wastage will contribute to reducing water consumption and,
consequently, to delaying the need for new resources.

On the supply side, it is fundamental to enhance operation and maintenance capabilities of water
utilities, reducing non-revenue water (NRW), leakages, and energy use, as well as improving the capacity
of the workforce to understand and operate the system. It is also necessary to ensure cost-recovery
through a fair tariff system and “intelligent” investment planning. In addition, all alternatives to increase
the water supplymust be analysed considering the entire life cycle.

On the demand side, the adoption of water efficient technology can considerably reduce water
consumption. Investments in less water intensive industrial processes and more efficient buildings lead
to a more sustainable water supply. Concrete possibilities of economic savings, social benefits (such as
the involvement of different sectors of society to reach a common objective, environmental awareness
of the population, etc.) and a range of environmental gains make the adoption of water efficient
technologies viable.
Sustainable water supply involves a sequence of combined actions and not isolated strategies. It
depends on the individual’s willingness to save water, governmental regulations, changes in the building
industry,industrial processes reformulation, land occupation, etc. The challenge is to create mechanisms
of regulation, incentives and affordability to ensure the sustainability of the system.

References

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). (2010). Water Use in Agriculture.
Retrieved from http://www.fao.org/ag/magazine/0511sp2.htm

Gleick, Peter H. (1996). Basic Water Requirements for Human Activities: Meeting Basic Needs.” Water
International 21, 2: 83-92.

US Geological Survey. (2010). Industrial Water Use. Retrieved from


http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/wuin.html

United States Department of Agriculture. (2010). Irrigation and Water Use. Retrieved from
http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/WaterUse/

Lozan, Grassl, et al. (2007). The water problem of our Earth: From climate and the water cycle to the
human right for water.

UN Water for Life Decade. (2005). United Nations Department of Public Information (32948—DPI/2378
—September 2005—10M).

UNEP. (2002). Vital Water Graphics: An Overview of the State of the World's Fresh and Marine Waters.
Retrieved from http://www.unep.org/dewa/assessments/ecosystems/water/vitalwater/.
Pacific Institute. Water Content of Things. The World's Water 2008-2009.

United Nations (WHO and UNICEF). (2010). Progress on Sanitation and Drinking Water Update 2010.
Retrieved from http://www.unicef.org/media/files/JMP-2010Final.pdf.

USGS. (2010). Thirsty? How 'bout a cool, refreshing cup of seawater? Retrieved from
http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/drinkseawater.html.

USGS. (1999). Sustainability of Ground-Water Resources. Retrieved from


http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/circ1186/pdf/circ1186.pdf.

Waite, Marilyn. (2010). Sustainable Water Resources in the Built Environment. IWA Publishing: London.

Resources

Many of the issues in this article are covered in the book, Sustainable Water Resources in the Built
Environment, published in 2010, written by Marilyn Waite.

Sustainable Water Resources in the Built Environment covers elements of water engineering and policy
making in the sustainable construction of buildings with a focus on case studies from Panama and
Kenya. It provides comprehensive information based on case studies, experimental data, interviews,
and in-depth research.

The book focuses on the water aspects of sustainable construction in less economically developed
environments. It covers the importance of sustainable construction in developing country contexts with
particular reference to what is meant by the water and wastewater aspects of sustainable buildings, the
layout, climate, and culture of sites, the water quality tests performed and results obtained, the design
of rainwater harvesting systems and policy considerations.

The book is a useful resource for practitioners in the field working on the water aspects of sustainable
construction (international aid agencies, engineering firms working in developing contexts,
intergovernmental organizations and NGOs). It is also useful as a text for water and sanitation practices
in developing countries.

Related Publications

Best Practice Guide on the Control of Arsenic in Drinking Water

Publication Date: Aug 2013 - ISBN - 9781843393856

Management of Change in Water Companies - Joaquim Pocas Martins

Publication Date: Jun 2013 - ISBN - 9781843391951

Arsenic in Groundwater: Poisoning and Risk Assessment - M. Manzurul Hassan, Peter J. Atkins

Publication Date: Apr 2013 - ISBN - 9781780400204

Microbial Growth in Drinking Water Distribution Systems - Dirk van der Kooij and Paul W.J.J. van der
Wielen

Publication Date: Feb 2013 - ISBN - 9781780400402

Arsenic Contamination in the World - Susan Murcott

Publication Date: Oct 2012 - ISBN - 9781780400389

Internal Corrosion Control of Water Supply Systems - Colin Hayes

Publication Date: Oct 2012 - ISBN - 9781780404547

Managing Climate Risk in Water Supply Systems - Casey Brown and M. Neil Ward

Publication Date: Oct 2012 - ISBN - 9781780400587


Channels: Industry & water, Water resources / environment, Water supply & treatment

Share this page:

36

Sign up to our mailing list

View by category

Developing countries

Health issues

Industry & water

Policy & governance

Urban water

Utility / network management

Wastewater, reuse & sludge

Water resources / environment

Water supply & treatment

Archive

May 2016 (30)

June 2016 (6)

July 2016 (3)

August 2016 (3)

December 2016 (1)

January 2017 (1)

February 2017 (1)

March 2017 (10)

April 2017 (1)


May 2017 (8)

August 2017 (1)

September 2017 (5)

October 2017 (4)

November 2017 (9)

December 2017 (2)

January 2018 (4)

February 2018 (5)

March 2018 (9)

April 2018 (15)

May 2018 (4)

June 2018 (5)

July 2018 (1)

August 2018 (1)

September 2018 (10)

October 2018 (11)

Pages

1 2 3 next › last »

Classic Papers from the WaterWiki

Filter by Subject

Developing countries (37)

Health issues (32)

Industry & water (32)

Policy & governance (42)

Urban water (20)


Utility / network management (33)

Wastewater, reuse & sludge (72)

Water resources / environment (63)

Water supply & treatment (53)

The latest from

@IWApublishing

RT @IWAPublishing: LAST CALL FOR OA AMBASSADORS!! Don't miss this opportunity to join our
community of OA Ambassadors and help to sha… https://t.co/jFuSkhKYSn — 22 hours 47 min ago

LAST CALL FOR OA AMBASSADORS!! Don't miss this opportunity to join our community of OA
Ambassadors and help to sha… https://t.co/jFuSkhKYSn — 1 day 30 min ago

The 51st Editor's Choice Paper from Water Science & Technology has been chosen!🎉🌊 Find out what the
editor had to… https://t.co/E5iGh5WYry — 2 days 22 min ago

Contact us

Sign up to our mailing list

Terms & conditions

Privacy

Cookies

RSS

Twitter

LinkedIn

RSS

IWA Publishing:

Republic – Export Building, 1st Floor, 2 Clove Crescent, London, E14 2BE, UK

Telephone: +44 207 654 5500

Fax: +44 207 654 5555

Email: publications@iwap.co.uk
© Copyright 2021 IWA Publishing.

You might also like