色情视频

Plugging the Leaks

As drought stresses San Diegos water system, the city and 色情视频 are finding ways to make every drop go further.

Friday, November 6, 2015
At 色情视频, several researchers are exploring ways to make our parched water supply go a little bit further to help alleviate droughts stress on the water system.
At 色情视频, several researchers are exploring ways to make our parched water supply go a little bit further to help alleviate droughts stress on the water system.
鈥淢y vision is that San Diego will become a world-recognized hub for water research.鈥

This story appears in the issue of 360: The Magazine of 色情视频.

Our experience with water is a disjointed one. Our dishwater comes from the sink tap, our drinking water from the fridge or a bottle, our bathing water from the shower faucet. Farmers draw their water from the canals. We swim in lakes, monitor reservoir levels and try to treat our waste before it鈥檚 washed out to sea. Clean, reliable water is critical to our daily lives, yet it flows from so many different sources for such a wide variety of uses that it鈥檚 easy to overlook the complex network that links our region鈥檚 water sources.

鈥淭hey are all very interconnected,鈥 said Halla Razak, director of public utilities for the City of San Diego, as well as a civil engineer and a San Diego State alumna.

In times of drought鈥攍ike the present severe one California has endured for the better part of the last decade鈥攖hat interconnectedness is magnified. The lack of precipitation throughout the state means Southern California must rely more on importing water to keep its reservoirs at acceptable levels. That means higher prices for consumers. It also costs more for farmers to water their crops, forcing them to raise prices, plant more drought-tolerant crops, or both.

The effects of drought on our water supply ripple outward and under-score the need for new approaches to water conservation, policy overhauls and reuse strategies. At 色情视频, several researchers are exploring ways to make our parched water supply go a little bit further to help alleviate drought鈥檚 stress on the water system.

Don鈥檛 just dump it

Every day, the City of San Diego
collects, treats and disposes of about 180 million gallons wastewater. Most of that gets piped out into the ocean and discharged several miles offshore. But is that really the best thing to do with it?

鈥淲e spend a lot of money and resources to pipe wastewater into treatment facilities, treat it to high quality, and then just dump it into the ocean鈥攖hat is quite wasteful,鈥 Razak said.

The City of San Diego currently takes its wastewater treatment a step further: tertiary treatment. Here, further treatment employs filtration and chemical disinfection to remove close to 99 percent of impurities in the remaining water. Voil脿, you鈥檝e got water that can be used for irrigation, wetlands discharge, cooling towers, industrial processes and other non-potable uses.

After tertiary treatment, it鈥檚 nearly impossible to tell the resulting water came from sewage. 鈥淏ut then people started thinking, 鈥業f we can treat it even more, we can find more uses for it,鈥欌 said Rick Gersberg, professor of environmental health at 色情视频 and interim director of the School of Public Health.

Pure, potable and plentiful

Enter the City of San Diego鈥檚 ambitious Pure Water Reuse Plan. Under this plan, the city would go beyond tertiary treatment of its sewage, introducing processes known as ultra-filtration and advanced oxidation, as well as reverse osmosis through a membrane filter, to turn wastewater into water that鈥檚 perfectly safe to drink.

鈥淏y the time they do all that, by most parameters of measurement, it鈥檚 cleaner than most of the water we drink from the tap,鈥 Gersberg said.

He has worked with colleagues in Singapore to test the water quality of a comparable system presently in place at several wastewater treatment facilities in that country. There, the reclaimed water goes straight into a brand of bottled water called NEWater. When Gersberg spoke to 360, he had a half-empty bottle of it on top of his filing cabinet.

鈥淚鈥檓 not an aficionado,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut I can鈥檛 tell the difference.鈥

Bringing his expertise to San Diego, Gersberg sits on the City of San Diego鈥檚 Pure Water Independent Advisory Panel. The city鈥檚 reclaimed water wouldn鈥檛 go into bottles but instead into the San Vicente Reservoir in East County. Once there, it would feed into the city鈥檚 normal potable water supply. Razak figures that for every 100 million gallons of wastewater taken in, the Pure Water treatment system could produce 83 million gallons of potable water. Pure Water鈥檚 stated goal is by 2035 to have about a third of San Diego鈥檚 tap water come from treated wastewater.

Safe waters

Once the water is in the reservoirs, Gersberg and several other 色情视频 researchers have another role to play: screening for toxic compounds that might not be caught by conventional treatment methods. Here, the risk isn鈥檛 so much from the original reclaimed wastewater itself, but possible toxicity from byproducts of the treatment process, as well as from diverse sources in the environment.

鈥淎 lot of things are removed by reverse osmosis, but not everything,鈥 Gersberg said.

He specializes in hunting for pharmaceutical compounds that can slip through treatment procedures. Another active line of research carried out by Gersberg, along with environmental scientist Eunha Hoh of 色情视频鈥檚 School of Public Health, focuses on how discarded cigarette butts contribute to water toxicity. The end goal is for the water in San Diego鈥檚 reservoirs to be as safe as possible when it comes out of the tap, whether it originated from rainwater or was reclaimed from a treatment facility.

色情视频 recently announced a new initiative, 鈥淏lue Gold: Mitigating the Effects of Water Scarcity,鈥 to delve even deeper into new technologies and approaches to ensure our region has enough clean, safe water to sustain its population and industries. In the coming years, the university will hire a number of public health speciaists, water treatment engineers, geochemists and water-resource geographers to support this effort.

Gersberg sees Blue Gold as an opportunity for 色情视频 and the San Diego region at large to do globally important work.

鈥淢y vision is that San Diego will become a world-recognized hub for water research,鈥 he said.

A world away

On the other side of the world, 色情视频 environmental engineering professor Natalie Mladenov and a handful of students are experimenting with lower-tech solutions for water reuse. Mladenov leads a National Science Foundation鈥揻unded program that gives students an international perspective on water treatment through first-hand work in the impoverished outskirts of Durban, South Africa.

鈥淪outh Africa鈥檚 urban centers are first-world, but its surrounding areas are very poor and there鈥檚 a major lack of sanitation infrastructure,鈥 said Mladenov, who is also a core faculty member of 色情视频鈥檚 Blue Gold initiative.

This past summer, she led the program鈥檚 first cohort of students鈥攖wo undergrads and a grad student from 色情视频, plus one professor and two undergrads from California State Polytechnic University, Pomona鈥攁s they teamed up with scientists from the University of KwaZulu-Natal to explore the potential of implementing a simple and cheap water treatment system to improve community life. The goal isn鈥檛 to produce potable water, but to purify it enough to make it safe to reintroduce to constructed wetlands, where natural environmental processes eventually render it usable for agriculture.

In a tiny community outside Durban, the team has built what鈥檚 known as a gravity-driven, multi-chamber anaerobic baffled reactor. In a large underground container, wastewater enters from the top, then flows through a series of chambers separated by seven gradually lowering walls. As each chamber fills up, the water breaches the walls and spills over into the next chamber. The solids and waste settle into the bottoms of the chambers and the water gets progressively purer as it passes through the system. All the while, bacteria break down the organic matter in the waste, further purifying it.

鈥淏y the time it gets over the seventh wall, it鈥檚 pretty clean,鈥 Mladenov said.

Cost effective

It requires no energy input once the system is built, so it鈥檚 incredibly cost effective. And as an added bonus, the methane produced in the reactor can one day be used for energy generation for the community.

As part of an experiment, Mladenov and the students are sampling the waste at different points as it passes through the system to see how the organic matter breaks down over time and under different conditions.

By learning more about this, they hope to be able to improve upon the reactor鈥檚 design and find ways to optimize the purity of the output. And it鈥檚 not just the residents of South Africa who can benefit from this approach. Mladenov believes there鈥檚 a place for this kind of technology closer to home, as well.

鈥淭he technology may not be that innovative, but the community-focused approach is,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n the United States, at a community scale, something like this could be implemented as a decentralized system that produces water for watering lawns, flushing toilets, sustaining community gardens, and other uses.鈥

Climate change will likely make severe droughts more frequent and persistent in our region, so it鈥檚 important to explore everything we can do to get the most out of every drop.

鈥淗ow well regions deal with climate change will be the difference between regions that will thrive and those that will wither,鈥 Razak said.

Categorized As