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RAISING NONFARM
WATER PRODUCTIVITY
Chapter 7. Raising Water Productivity
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
Nonfarm water use is dominated by the use
of water simply to wash away waste from factories and households
or to dissipate heat from thermal power plants. The use of water
to disperse wastes is an outmoded practice that is getting the world
into trouble. Toxic industrial wastes discharged into rivers and
lakes or into wells also permeate aquifers, making waterboth
surface and undergroundunsafe
for drinking. And they are destroying marine ecosystems, including
local fisheries. The time has come to manage waste without discharging
it into the local environment, allowing water to be recycled indefinitely
and dramatically reducing both urban and industrial demand.
The current engineering concept for dealing with human waste is
to use vast quantities of water to wash it away in small amounts,
preferably into a sewer system where it will be treated before being
discharged into the local river. There are four problems inherent
in this "flush and forget" system: it is water-intensive; it disrupts
the nutrient cycle; most of humanity cannot afford it; and it is
a major source of disease in developing countries.
As water scarcity spreads, the viability of water-based sewage systems
will diminish. Water-borne sewage systems take nutrients from the
land and dump them into rivers, lakes, or the sea. Not only are
the nutrients lost from agriculture, but the nutrient overload has
led to the death of many rivers, including nearly all of those in
India and China. Water-based sewage also contributes to dead zones
in coastal oceans. Sewer systems that dump untreated sewage into
rivers and streams, as so many do, are a major source of disease
and death.34
Sunita Narain of the Centre for Science and Environment in India
argues convincingly that a water-based disposal system with sewage
treatment facilities is neither environmentally nor economically
viable for India. She notes that an Indian family of five, producing
250 liters of excrement in a year and using a water toilet, requires
150,000 liters of water to wash away the wastes.35
As currently designed, India's sewer system is actually a pathogen-dispersal
system. It takes a small quantity of contaminated material and uses
it to make vast quantities of water unfit for human use, often simply
discharging it into nearby rivers or streams. Narain says both "our
rivers and our children are dying." India's government, like that
of many other developing countries, is hopelessly chasing the goal
of universal water-based sewage systems and sewage treatment facilitiesunable
to close the huge gap between services needed and provided, but
unwilling to admit that it is not an economically viable option.
Narain concludes that the "flush and forget" approach is not working.36
This dispersal of pathogens is a huge public health challenge. Worldwide,
poor sanitation and personal hygiene claim 2.7 million lives per
year, second only to the 5.9 million claimed by hunger and malnutrition.37
Fortunately there is an alternative to the use of water to wash
away human waste: the composting toilet. This is a simple, waterless
toilet linked to a small compost facility. Table waste can also
be incorporated in the composter. The dry composting converts human
fecal material into a soil-like humus, which is essentially odorless
and is scarcely 10 percent of the original volume. These compost
facilities need to be emptied every year or so, depending on their
design and size. Vendors periodically collect the humus and market
it for use as a soil supplement, returning the nutrients and organic
matter to the soil and reducing the need for fertilizer.38
This technology reduces residential water use, thus cutting the
water bill and lowering the energy needed to pump and purify water.
As a bonus, it also reduces garbage flow if table waste is incorporated,
eliminates the sewage water disposal problem, and restores the nutrient
cycle. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency now lists several
brands of dry toilets for use. Pioneered in Sweden, these toilets
are used in widely varying conditions, including Swedish apartment
buildings, U.S. private residences, and Chinese villages.39
At the household level, water can be saved by using appliances that
are more water-efficient, including showerheads, flush toilets,
dishwashers, and clothes washers. Some countries are adopting water
efficiency standards and labeling for appliances, much as has been
done for energy efficiency. As water costs rise, as they inevitably
will, investments in composting toilets and more water-efficient
household appliances will become increasingly attractive to individual
homeowners.
For cities, the most effective single step to raise water productivity
is to adopt a comprehensive water treatment/recycling system, reusing
the same water continuously. With this system, a small percentage
of water is lost to evaporation each time it cycles through. Given
the technologies that are available today, it is quite possible
to comprehensively recycle urban water supplies, largely removing
cities as a claimant on water resources.
At the industrial level, one of the largest users of water is the
energy sector, which uses water to cool thermal power plants. As
fossil fuels are phased out and the world turns to wind, solar,
and geothermal energy, the need for cooling water in thermal power
plants will diminish. In the United States, for example, thermal
cooling of power plants accounts for 39 percent of all water withdrawals.
With each coal-fired power plant that is closed as a new wind farm
comes online, water use for thermal cooling drops, freeing up water
for food production.40
Many of the industrial processes now used belong to a time when
water was an abundant resource. Within the steel industry, for example,
water use efficiency may vary among countries by a factor of three.
Much of the water used in industry just washes away waste. If this
is stopped, and more and more companies move into zero-emissions
industrial parks, water use in industry could drop dramatically.41
The new reality is that the existing water-based waste disposal
economy is not viable. There are too many factories, feedlots, and
households to simply try and wash waste away. It is ecologically
mindless and outdatedan
approach that belongs to an age when there were many fewer people
and far less economic activity.
ENDNOTES:
34. Sunita Narain, "The Flush Toilet
is Ecologically Mindless," Down to Earth, 28 February 2002, pp.
28-32.
35. Ibid.
36. Ibid.
37. Ibid.
38. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Water Efficiency Technology
Factsheet-Composting Toilets," information sheet (Washington, DC:
September 1999).
39. Ibid.
40. Noel Gollehon, William Quinby, and Marcel Aillery, "Water Use
and Pricing in Agriculture," in USDA, Agricultural Resources and
Environmental Indicators 2003 (Washington, DC: February 2003), Chapter
2.1, p. 2.
41. Postel, op. cit. note 15, pp. 136-45.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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