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“One Water” Management

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Presentation on theme: "“One Water” Management"— Presentation transcript:

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2 “One Water” Management
Currently very siloed - capture efficiencies, improve planning, & save money Waste water Storm water Drinking water

3 “One Water” Management
Currently very siloed - capture efficiencies, improve planning, & save money Drinking water Stormwater Waste water Wastewater reuse Stormwater capture & reuse Groundwater recharge with recycled water Nutrient recovery from the waste stream

4 Other hot topics Investments in “local” water supplies (as opposed to sourcing them from long distances, as L.A. does) Recovery of energy/water/nutrients from the waste stream Greater interaction between water and energy utilities (water utilities generate waste water for cooling that energy utilities need, while energy utilities could be helping to power/heat water facilities). Difficulty pursuing conservation, as existing rate structures often mean lower water use => lower revenues.

5 Investments in watershed services
The Box Us Investments in watershed services Drinking water Stormwater Waste water Ecosystem services mentioned 1 x

6 “Green infrastructure is just for stormwater
“Green infrastructure is just for stormwater.” “Watershed planning is more of a stormwater issue.” “Drinking water protection isn’t really possible any more in most places.”

7 One water company’s views on climate change
“Our priorities regarding climate change are Harden systems via relocation and barriers against disasters; Build supply flexibility in terms of increased storage; and Tech-based adaptation (GPS markers on infrastructure like pipes was the example provided).”

8 The Utility Perspective
Thinking about stormwater regulatory requirements Weather volatility Efficiency and conservation …lots of risk aversion

9 “I think people are willing to think about green infrastructure for stormwater because stormwater is a ‘new’ problem and so there aren’t really many firmly entrenched solutions. It’s also relatively low-cost and scalable, so it’s more feasible to demonstrate.”

10 Next steps? Water Environment Research Foundation, the Water Environment Foundation, and the Center for Neighborhood Technology convening a working group on institutional barriers to ‘One Water’ including economic/financial barriers Engineers were very interested in our cost-curve work and the green infrastructure database – appetite for cost and performance data and tools to better understand ROI on green infrastructure Communication and language to the “One Water” audience


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