Water utilities have been toying with the idea of Integrated Water Cycle Management (IWCM) for over a decade. IWCM calls for integrating the objectives of providing water, wastewater and stormwater services rather than treating them as separate and mutually exclusive services. For example, by meeting some of the water demands, especially non-potable ones, by capturing and cleaning wastewater and stormwater to required water quality, and not looking upon them as waste flows to be simply drained and discharged to the waterways.
Some utilities have built recycled water schemes as a way to avoid nutrient discharge into the waterways and the associated hefty pollution charges. Some others consider IWCM approach as a response to drought but without doing much about it and finding it much easier to resort to water restrictions which lead to the killing of community green open spaces and parks as well as green yards of the households.
Development of water treatment technologies like membrane filtration, ultra-filtration and reverse osmosis that enable turning urban stormwater and wastewater streams into cleaner waters along with the interest of utilities in IWCM have fuelled a lot of policy research on the costs and benefits of IWCM. Researchers and academics have spent millions of dollars of grant funding to develop umpteen frameworks and research outputs to help us understand the concept and to articulate the social, environmental and other benefits and costs of IWCM. A recent outcome of these researches has been the launching of a website and a centre of excellence (https://waterpartnership.org.au/ Australian Water Recycling Centre of Excellence) dedicated to research on the subject of water recycling. Literature is littered with hundreds of research publications and case studies of water recycling at building scale to community scale.
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Esta historia es de la edición July - September 2019 de energyⁿ manager.
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Role Of Smart Meters In Energy Management
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Water-Food-Energy Nexus In India
In these times of agriculture crisis and falling water tables, it is important to rework policies to better address key challenges in the irrigation-power space, argues this article reproduced from TERI.
Investigating The Water-Energy Nexus (WEN) In Indian Industry
This paper attempts to provide the need, background and context for a comprehensive WEN strategic programme in Indian industry.
Wef Nexus – Applying An Inter-sectoral Lens To Meet Growing Needs
Ritu Thakur of the CDKN-Asia team and ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability, South Asia, describes how an inter-sectoral development approach in Nashik, the "backyard of Mumbai", is helping meet people's growing needs for water, energy and food.
Integrating Water Streams
This article discusses the concept and practice of Integrated Water Cycle Management, its growing relevance in the context of changing climate and customer values and also the irrelevance of the business model with which water utilities have been operating for long.
Exploring The Water-energy Nexus
There is a clear need in urban India and the countryside for concerted investigations that address the water sector's impact on energy resources, and the energy sector's impact on water resources, including development, operations and end-uses, says Hariharan Chandrashekar.
Integrated System Packages For Deep Energy Retrofits In Commercial Buildings
This article presents opportunities and challenges for implementing deep energy retrofits in commercial buildings and describes research efforts to develop scalable energy efficiency packages.
Review Of France's Roadmap For Positive-Energy And Low-Carbon Buildings And Building Clusters
France's roadmap for positive-energy and low- carbon buildings and building clusters was prepared way back in 2010 based on a study undertaken by an expert group to align with the French energy legislation adopted in 2005, with a target to lower greenhouse gas emissions by threequarters by 2050 compared to 1990 (the so-called Factor 4 objective).
‘Mean' Green
If climate change commitments are taken seriously by world governments, their industries will follow suit and drive change from unsustainable practices to sustainable practices. The energy and environment management professionals whose professional and personal lives are so directly connected to this cause have a pivotal role to play in driving change at all levels.
An Eco-Conscious Guest House's Journey Towards Energy Sustainability
This article presents the efforts of a sea-front eco-conscious guest house in Puducherry in lowering its energy footprint without compromising the services provided to the guests.