1 / 20

Drinking Water

Drinking Water. 6 March 2013 Andy Case CEnv C.WEM BSc (Hons) MCIWEM. About me. Run Case Environmental, Teignmouth based environmental consultancy established in 2009 www.caseenvironmental.co.u k

jmoody
Download Presentation

Drinking Water

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Drinking Water 6 March 2013 Andy Case CEnv C.WEM BSc (Hons) MCIWEM

  2. About me • Run Case Environmental, Teignmouth based environmental consultancy established in 2009 www.caseenvironmental.co.uk • Worked in the water and environmental industry for over 10 years, including South West Water and the National Trust • Work across Devon & Cornwall and further afield looking at mainly private water supplies and related issues.

  3. Water – The Facts • 70% of the surface of the Earth is water • 98 % sea water • 1.5 % ice • 0.4 % found in aquifers, rivers & lakes • 0.1 % atmosphere, plants & animals

  4. Clean Water • 800 million don’t have access to clean water • 3.5 million die of drinking water related illness each year • 700,000 of these are children – approximately 2000 per day • In developing countries half of all hospital beds are filled with people suffering from poor quality water & sanitation.

  5. Sources • Rivers • Reservoirs • Groundwater (springs, wells and boreholes) • What about sea water?

  6. Sources - Groundwater Spring Borehole Well

  7. Source to tap? Reservoir Town ££££ Meter

  8. Typical Mains Water Treatment for Surface Sources Flash mixer Chlorine contact tank Sand filter Clarifier Carbon filter Phosphoric acid added Coagulant added pH corrected Chlorine added pH corrected To final water tank and distribution Inlet

  9. Source Water Quality • Heavy rain - spate conditions • Run-off from fields – animal waste, fertilisers, pesticides • Operation of combined sewer overflows • Diffuse pollution – pesticide degradates, nitrate • Industrial pollution • Fuel/chemical spills • Algal blooms • Saline intrusion

  10. Source Water Quantity • Needed most when less is available • Areas with the least rain have the biggest demand for water • Most rain falls in winter • Minimum abstraction levels • Recharge rates for aquifers

  11. Water Supply in the South West • Big population variation, in summer some areas can double • Seasonal rain fall expectations • Topography • 33% of the countries coastline • 2.5% of the population • Over 30 water treatment works • 600 sewage treatment plants

  12. Drinking Water & Climate Change • Many issues already surrounding production and distribution of drinking water • Very power & chemical intensive to operate & supply – if oil/gas supplies stopped we’d have no water • Importance of sustainable water management; - SUDs, allowing aquifers to recharge, limit run-off - Land management (chemicals, crops, livestock etc) - Water security.

  13. Water Use Water use has increased from 90 litres per person to 180 litres per person in 50 years – why? • People want to be cleaner • Appliances such as dish washers & washing machines • Gardening • Increased car ownership

  14. Domestic Water Use

  15. Water Saving Measures • Showering – reduce time, fit aerator to showerhead • Use washing machines/dishwashers only when full • Invest in efficient goods • Bowl in sink (washing, food preparation) • Modern toilet/water saving device • Check for leaks – not just taps but toilet overflows • Garden – grow plants that require little water, protect from wind & sun • Outside – avoid using the hosepipe

  16. Alternative Water Sources – Rain? Roof collection • Average roof size of 80m2 • Average rain fall in South West UK 800mm per m2 • Annual amount 64 m3 Other points of collection? • Patios/drives • Outbuildings

  17. Rain Water Benefits • Naturally clean • Reduce run-off/flooding, contribute to sustainable urban drainage • Potential saving £150/year • Reduce demand on mains Problems • Acidic – pH correction or plastic plumbing needed • Maintenance • Can collect debris/detritus from roof – first flush needed • Position of tank to be useful • Storage & potential bacterial concerns • Technically need to inform SWW so they can charge you sewerage

  18. Alternative Water – Grey Water • Either partially treated water or previously used water • Limited uses due to quality • Require modification of existing plumbing • Treatment required, cost implication, servicing • Potentially harmful to plants and environment depending on previous use • Microbiological issues with use – legionella etc.

  19. Way forward? • Encourage rainwater harvesting in new builds? • Sustainable Urban Drainage? • Variable rate billing? • Wash less?

  20. Questions?

More Related