Recycled water. It’s used in a variety of everyday situations — irrigation, factories, toilets. As one of the driest continents on earth, we’ve become used to it. But what about drinking it? The mere thought of taking a big swig of recycled effluent is enough to send even the strongest of stomachs rushing to the shops to stock up on Mount Franklin.
But is it as dangerous as people think? And, with large parts of Australia coming out a big drought, should we be even worrying about it?
Where does recycled water come from?
Recycled water comes from a range of different sources. It can come from rain caught on roofs or through water tanks, from stormwater that has been caught after hitting the ground, through grey water from use in the home and through effluent treated from a sewage treatment plant. Currently, most water agencies have water recycling programs in operation.
Where is recycled currently water currently used?
In Australia, recycled water is being used in many ways that don’t involve drinking, including to water household and municipal gardens, flush household toilets, irrigate recreational parks, in the cooling of power stations and in the irrigation of agriculture and horticulture.
Will we be drinking it soon?
As yet no states are drinking recycled water, although there have been some trials. In south-east Queensland, plans are afoot for recycled water to be introduced into the drinking water supply when dam levels reach the 40% trigger level. At the moment it appears that is unlikely in the foreseeable future, after strong winter rains filled their dams to capacity. In parched towns such as Toowoomba, residents have so far blocked plans to introduced recycled drinking water.
Over in WA, a $50 million trial started today for recycled water to be filtered and stored between 120 and 220 metres underground before being pumped back into the water supply. If that trial is successful, Perth residents could be drinking recycled water as early as 2015.
How does it work?
Purifying water for drinking involves a three-step treatment process consisting of microfiltration, reverse osmosis and ultraviolet light.
In microfiltration, the treated used water is passed through fibres that work as microscopic filters. Each fibre can filter out anything above 0.1 microns in size. Reverse osmosis involves applying pressure for water to flow through a membrane, which removes dissolved materials. Finally, the water is passed through an ultraviolet light as a safety back-up to remove any bacteria or viruses left behind.
Under the WA plan, water would not then pumped into the supply, but would instead be stored in bores underground and monitored for its purity.
Is it dangerous?
According to experts from the Advanced Water Management Centre at the University of Queensland, no it’s not.
In a paper released recently they wrote that, “from a scientific standpoint, the addition of purified recycled water to the drinking water supply, based on our own research and similar studies elsewhere, does not appear to impose any additional risk, and an argument could be posed that the recycled water is of higher quality than the current conventional water sources”.
Do they drink it overseas?
There is currently a water recycling project in Orange County, California. In a project similar to the WA trial, municipal waste water is purified then injected into the water table. According to its website, the OC Groundwater Replenishment System has produced more than 50 billion litres of drinking water since it opened in 2008.
Singapore’s water agency currently mixes recycled water (which it has dubbed NEWater) with regular water in the reservoirs before it undergoes conventional treatment at the waterworks for supply to the public for potable use. At the moment about 1% of Singapore’s total daily water consumption is recycled water pumped into reservoirs. That amount is planned to increase to about 2.5% by 2011 next year.
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