4.7 Article

Increasing Water System Robustness in the Netherlands: Potential of Cross-Sectoral Water Reuse

Journal

WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
Volume 35, Issue 11, Pages 3721-3735

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11269-021-02912-5

Keywords

Water stress; Water reuse; Water system robustness; Wastewater

Funding

  1. Joint Research Programme of the Dutch and Flemish drinking water companies (BTO)

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Water reuse has the potential to significantly reduce groundwater extraction volume and alleviate pressure on groundwater systems. Integrated analysis of water quality demands, health and safety aspects, technological requirements, regulations, public perception, and environmental impacts is crucial for successful implementation of water reuse.
Water reuse has the potential to substantially reduce the demand on groundwater and surface water. This study presents a method to evaluate the potential of water reuse schemes in a regional context and demonstrates how water reuse propagates through the water system and potentially reduces pressure on groundwater resources. The use of Sankey diagram visualisation provides a valuable tool to explore and evaluate regional application of water reuse, its potential to reduce groundwater and surface water demand, and the possible synergies and trade-offs between sectors. The approach is demonstrated for the Dutch anthropogenic water system in the current situation and for a future scenario with increased water demand and reduced water availability due to climate change. Four types of water reuse are evaluated by theoretically upscaling local or regional water reuse schemes based on local reuse examples currently in operation in the Netherlands or Flanders: municipal and industrial wastewater effluent reuse for irrigation, effluent reuse for industrial applications, and reuse for groundwater replenishment. In all cases, water reuse has the potential to significantly reduce groundwater extraction volume, and thus to alleviate the pressure on the groundwater system. The water-quantity based analysis is placed in the context of water quality demands, health and safety aspects, technological requirements, regulations, public perception, and its net impact on the environment. This integrative context is essential for a successful implementation of water reuse in practice.

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