Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies

Novel technologies allow to reuse or recycle water for on-site applications such as toilet flushing, showering, or hand washing at the household- or building-scale. Many of these technologies have now reached technology readiness levels that require for verification and validation testing in the fie...

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Main Authors: Eva Reynaert, Angelika Hess, Eberhard Morgenroth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Water Research X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000074
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spelling doaj-f8fcfe56a5794f46a21f1d47dcdfdd2e2021-05-08T04:23:58ZengElsevierWater Research X2589-91472021-05-0111100094Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologiesEva Reynaert0Angelika Hess1Eberhard Morgenroth2Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland; ETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland; Corresponding author.Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland; ETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, SwitzerlandEawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland; ETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, SwitzerlandNovel technologies allow to reuse or recycle water for on-site applications such as toilet flushing, showering, or hand washing at the household- or building-scale. Many of these technologies have now reached technology readiness levels that require for verification and validation testing in the field. Results from such field tests of decentralized water reuse systems have been published over the past few years, and observed performance is often compared to quality targets from water reuse frameworks (WRFs). An inspection of ten recent journal publications reveals that targets from WRFs are often misinterpreted, and the emphasis of these publications is too often on demonstrating successful aspects of the technologies rather than critically evaluating the quality of the produced water. We hypothesize that some of these misinterpretations are due to ambiguous definition of scopes of WRFs (e.g., “unrestricted urban reuse”) and unclear applicability for novel recycling systems that treat the water for applications that go beyond the reuse scopes defined in current WRFs. Additional challenges are linked to the verification of WRF quality targets in small-scale and decentralized systems under economic and organizational constraints. Current WRFs are not suitable for all possible reuse cases, and there is need for a critical discussion of quality targets and associated monitoring methods. As the scope of water reuse has expanded greatly over the past years, WRFs need to address new applications and advances in technology, including in monitoring capacities.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000074On-site non-potable water reuseDecentralizedRegulatory and legal frameworksGuidelinesStandardsField test
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva Reynaert
Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
spellingShingle Eva Reynaert
Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
Water Research X
On-site non-potable water reuse
Decentralized
Regulatory and legal frameworks
Guidelines
Standards
Field test
author_facet Eva Reynaert
Angelika Hess
Eberhard Morgenroth
author_sort Eva Reynaert
title Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
title_short Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
title_full Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
title_fullStr Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
title_full_unstemmed Making Waves: Why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
title_sort making waves: why water reuse frameworks need to co-evolve with emerging small-scale technologies
publisher Elsevier
series Water Research X
issn 2589-9147
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Novel technologies allow to reuse or recycle water for on-site applications such as toilet flushing, showering, or hand washing at the household- or building-scale. Many of these technologies have now reached technology readiness levels that require for verification and validation testing in the field. Results from such field tests of decentralized water reuse systems have been published over the past few years, and observed performance is often compared to quality targets from water reuse frameworks (WRFs). An inspection of ten recent journal publications reveals that targets from WRFs are often misinterpreted, and the emphasis of these publications is too often on demonstrating successful aspects of the technologies rather than critically evaluating the quality of the produced water. We hypothesize that some of these misinterpretations are due to ambiguous definition of scopes of WRFs (e.g., “unrestricted urban reuse”) and unclear applicability for novel recycling systems that treat the water for applications that go beyond the reuse scopes defined in current WRFs. Additional challenges are linked to the verification of WRF quality targets in small-scale and decentralized systems under economic and organizational constraints. Current WRFs are not suitable for all possible reuse cases, and there is need for a critical discussion of quality targets and associated monitoring methods. As the scope of water reuse has expanded greatly over the past years, WRFs need to address new applications and advances in technology, including in monitoring capacities.
topic On-site non-potable water reuse
Decentralized
Regulatory and legal frameworks
Guidelines
Standards
Field test
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589914721000074
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