Sanitation and water regeneration, keys to the water resilience of cities

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Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
18 November 2023 Saturday 09:25
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Sanitation and water regeneration, keys to the water resilience of cities

READ TEXT IN CATALAN

Moving towards a more sustainable world requires everyone's efforts. The climate and natural resources emergency poses a challenge for essential services such as drinking water and sanitation, which are key to the sustainability of cities. Taking care of them is essential for people's health and the preservation of the environment.

On November 19, World Sanitation (or Toilet) Day is celebrated, with the motto “Accelerating change.” There are still 3.5 billion people in the world living without safe toilets and 2.2 billion without drinking water. Children are the most vulnerable to the triple threat of unsafe water, unsafe sanitation and poor hygiene.

The United Nations (UN) approved the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015, with the aim of eradicating poverty and guaranteeing minimum services to the world's population. For everyone to have safe drinking water and toilets by 2030 – the promise of SDG 6 – the world must work, on average, five times faster on sanitation targets, six times faster on water targets, and three times faster. times faster in hygiene, according to the UN. In many countries, the acceleration rate must be several times higher than the average.

Based on the availability of water and the innovation that the hydraulic siphon and domestic cisterns connected to a common drainage network represented in its day, sanitation is a lifesaver that prevents the transmission of diseases and facilitates the health of spaces. It is a cornerstone of public health and plays a fundamental role in protecting the environment.

Climate change, with extreme weather events (floods and droughts) and rising sea levels, can damage a vital system for cities. The current context of drought and structural water shortage in the metropolitan area of ​​Barcelona forces us to seek, and above all, to urgently implement effective and sustainable solutions. The Catalan Water Agency (ACA) estimates that the current water deficit in the metropolitan region is 2 m3/s, equivalent to 60 hm3 per year. A deficit that will double in 2027 (4 m3/s and about 125 hm3 per year) and will reach 6 m3/s in 2039 (approximately 190 hm3 per year). Taking into account that during 2022 a total of 217 hm3 of drinking water was distributed in the metropolitan area to satisfy all demand, this region is clearly in a structural water emergency situation.

Aigües de Barcelona is committed to new sources such as regenerated water, which is what comes out of the treatment plants and undergoes additional treatment to be suitable for new uses, such as urban, environmental, industrial or agricultural. The company, an international benchmark in the circular economy, regenerated 50 hm3 of water in 2022, equivalent to the water consumption of almost 1,250,000 people for one year. Regeneration allows us not to depend on rain, reduce the extraction of water from surface and underground resources (rivers and aquifers) and also, very importantly, reduce the water footprint, since it is not necessary to transport it from anywhere else. The energy cost of reusing regenerated water is much lower than that of desalination.

Reclaimed water is currently being pumped from the Baix Llobregat regeneration station upstream of the river to Molins de Rei to be reused as pre-drinking water. In this way, regenerated water is provided to the river so that the Sant Joan Despí water treatment plant can capture it downstream and treat it again to convert it into drinking water and continue the water cycle.

Thus, in a drought situation like the current one, 19% of the water resource corresponds to surface water (mainly rivers), 23% to groundwater (wells and aquifers), 33% to desalinated water and 25% to to regenerated water; while in a normal year, 95% of the water resources for the metropolis of Barcelona are linked to the weather, that is, surface and underground water.

The hummingbird is the symbol of this year's World Sanitation Day, using an old Guarani fable in which this small bird wants to put out a large fire by carrying drops of water in its beak. A powerful symbol that shows that our action can help solve a big problem.

Climate change forces us as society and cities to transform to be more resilient and sustainable. To accelerate this change, everyone must make their contribution.