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Water Reuse in Colorado: Increasing Opportunities

Learn about the different methods of water reuse in Colorado, including non-potable, potable, and indirect reuse. Understand the drivers for water reuse and the benefits it offers. Discover Colorado's long history and growing interest in potable reuse. Find out about the Advancing Direct Potable Reuse project and the efforts to optimize water supplies in the state.

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Water Reuse in Colorado: Increasing Opportunities

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  1. Laura Belanger, P.E. Western Resource Advocates Water Reuse in Colorado: Increasing Opportunities

  2. How is Water Reused? • By Exchange • Non-Potable (purple pipe) • Potable • De facto • Indirect • Direct All Water is Recycled Water Images courtesy of: and its members

  3. Why Reuse Water? Some Potential Drivers: • Return flows are a resource not waste • Decrease need to pursue additional supplies • Cost-effective compared to alternatives • Decreased need for transmission and pumping infrastructure • Water can be treated to ensure it is safe and reliable for any intended use • Community return flows can be higher quality water source than alternatives • Responsible use of resources, help optimize fully consumable supplies (TMDs, transferred Ag CU…) Drivers are unique to each community

  4. Colorado’sLong History of Reuse 1950s: Colorado Springs and the City of Aurora implement non-potable reuse projects 1979 through 1993: Denver Water conducts a landmark Direct Potable Water Reuse Demonstration Project 2010: The City of Aurora’s innovative indirect potable reuse Prairie Waters project comes online 2016: ~26 cities have non-potable reuse projects serving ~475 customers

  5. Colorado’s First Water Plan Governor Hickenlooper signed in December 2015. Water Plan acknowledges: • “Water conservation activities and water reuse will play an important role in balancing the need for additional water supply with strategies to lessen that need.” • “Widespread development of potable reuse will be an important facet of closing the future water supply and demand gap.” Photo credit: Cyrus McCrimmon/Denver Post

  6. Why is Interest in Potable Reuse Growing? • Increasingly cost-competitive • Regulatory and technological advances • Not seasonally or demand limited • Increased yield due to indoor return flows • Address more stringent discharge standards • Doesn’t require separate delivery infrastructure • Long history of de facto reuse by downstream users • Public acceptance Image courtesy of: and its members

  7. Advancing Direct Potable Reuse to Optimize Water Supplies & Meet Future Demands Project SUPPORTERS financial and/or in-kind workgroup participation Colorado Water Conservation Board Basin Roundtables: Metro, Colorado, South Platte & North Platte City of Aurora WateReuse Colorado Denver Water Plum Creek WRA Western Resource Advocates South Metro WSA MSK Consulting Centennial WSD CH2M Town of Castle Rock Colorado Springs Utilities Colorado Dept. Public Health & Environment Water Environment & Reuse Foundation WateReuse Association Out of state utilities & regulators Project Team:

  8. Advancing Direct Potable Reuse to Optimize Water Supplies & Meet Future Demands Proactive three- pronged approach to facilitate safe & effective DPR implementation in Colorado: • Regulatory/Technical – Develop a clear framework for potential DPR regulation • Education/Outreach - Increase public understanding &acceptance • Assessing Potable Reuse – Utilize tools to evaluate reuse at the utility level Final Report in December 2017

  9. Increasing Non-Potable Reuse Opportunities Water Quality Regulations: • Working to add approved new non-potable uses • Considering a broader overhaul of non-potable reuse regulatory framework to increase flexibility • Ensure regulators have sufficient resources Images courtesy of: and its members

  10. Reuse: Moving Forward • Reuse is critical to a reliable water future • It’s an increasing attractive supply option for those with legally reusable supplies • Many recent and ongoing regulatory and technical advances • Continue collaboration between reuse community and water supply planning/policy decision makers • A lot of work has been done, but there is still much to do Image source: Water360 Global Connections Map

  11. Thank You Laura Belanger, P.E. Water Resources EngineerWestern Resource Advocates 720-763-3718 laura@westernresources.org www.westernresources.org

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