1 / 28

Civil Infrastructure for Water, Sanitation, and Improved Health: Opportunities for Innovation

Explore opportunities for innovation in civil infrastructure for water and sanitation, addressing the global challenges of chronic waterborne diseases and lack of sanitary facilities. This article discusses the need for different solutions, barriers to implementation, and the potential of distributed coupled systems for waste management and electricity generation.

quentinj
Download Presentation

Civil Infrastructure for Water, Sanitation, and Improved Health: Opportunities for Innovation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Civil Infrastructure for Water, Sanitation, and Improved Health:Opportunities for Innovation Joseph Hughes, Ph.D., P.E., DEE Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, GA

  2. Background:Health Perspective • 4 billion people suffer from chronic water borne disease • 2.3 billion people lack sanitary facilities • 13 million children die of diarrhea annually • Others, for example Arsenic

  3. Background:Engineering Perspective • Systems for the treatment of potable water and wastewater are available • “Silver bullet” technologies do not exist • Solutions are based around water supply and water quality needs • In the developed world, water infrastructure is enormous in scale and is both capital and resource intensive

  4. The Hydrologic Cycle

  5. Water Distribution and Use Rural 4% Consumptive Use in the U.S.

  6. Core U.S. WaterCivil Infrastructure • Create water supply • Reservoirs, intake structures, well fields • Resource protection • Wastewater treatment, landfill placement, hazardous waste management, well head protection, aquifer remediation, preventing salt water intrusion • “Heavy” Infrastructure • Potable water treatment plant, wastewater treatment plants, conveyance systems, above ground storage, residuals management

  7. Engineering the Hydrologic Cycle for Improved Health Potable Storage Source River Lake/Reservoir Groundwater Distribution grid Treatment Plant Wastewater Repository River Lake/Reservoir Aquifer Treatment Plant Collection grid

  8. Potable Water Pathogens Nitrate Fluoride Arsenic Heavy metals Synthetic chemicals Secondary concerns Wastewater Oxygen demand Nutrient removal Sludge disposal Suspended solids Heavy metals Synthetic chemicals Secondary concerns Improved Health and Water Quality Parameters

  9. Essential Elements of U.S. Water Infrastructure • Water supply • Resource protection • “Heavy” infrastructure • Energy • Chemicals • Subsidies • Regulatory frameworks • Available capital • Property ownership • Social Acceptance Most are lackingin the developingworld and all are needed to translateour model…

  10. Barriers • Water supply • Shallow groundwater is limited • Urbanization focuses water demand and waste production • Increasing demand on surface water for drinking, and for wastewater discharge • Agriculture and energy • Resource protection • Externalization of water resources during development • Groundwater contamination from poor sanitation and agriculture • Coastal development and salt water intrusion

  11. Barriers • Energy • Energy is the largest operational cost in water and waste water treatment • Water and wastewater conveyance requires pumping • Wastewater treatment is energy intensive (aeration) • Residuals management can be energy intensive • Desalination • Energy demands have the greatest influence on modifications of water resources globally • Growth in energy production projected to be highest in water poor regions

  12. Barriers • Chemicals • Flocculants • Disinfectants • Subsidies • Requires that government considers clean water and appropriate sanitation in the public interest • Subsidies for agriculture impact water availability

  13. Barriers • Regulatory frameworks • Particularly important for sanitation • Wastes are inherently low value, why spend money them? • Public trust for safe water • Available capital • Typically financed by public sector • Property ownership • Access, planning, and distribution systems • Knowledge of users, and ability to bill for services

  14. Barriers • “Heavy” Infrastructure • Population growth and changing demographics • Implementation timetables are long • Reservoir development • Construction • Public acceptance • Operations and maintenance costs • Cost ineffective for small communities

  15. Are intermediatesolutions in water and sanitationpossible? Can thesebe improved? The Technology Spectrum Large, interconnected complex systems Small, distributedsimple solutions

  16. The Innovation Challenge • Most water and sanitation technologies were mature decades ago • Research focus in U.S. universities has been on advances to our water and sanitation approach • No clear, sustained, funded mandate for research and development to existing NGO’s • The need for “different solutions” has not changed • What is new that changes the solution domain?

  17. GE-in 26 years, nine generations of innovation in health care; one in power systems Jeffrey Immelt, GE Chairman and CEO

  18. Distributed Power

  19. "Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day. Give a woman microcredit, she, her husband, her children and her extended family will eat for a lifetime." Bono

  20. Together Power + Money = Opportunity

  21. Distributed Coupled Systems

  22. Waste to Electricity

  23. Direct Electricity from Waste • Advantages • Very simple and could work on small (pit latrine) to intermediate scales • Increase waste decomposition rates • Creates a valuable product • Questions • Durability, design, and scale • How to create business model

  24. hv O2 O2* C60 Materials Advances

  25. Innovation and Scaling • What scale creates a useful business model? • How rapidly can innovations be deployed? • Can solution(s) be useful universally, or will they be region specific? • What educational requirements will be needed?

  26. Summary • “Heavy” infrastructure model possesses many barriers for solving needs in the short term • Increasing demands from agriculture and energy are a serious threat to water security • Advances in energy systems, materials, biology, and micro-finance show promise for innovation in water and sanitation fields • Business models need to be integrated early in solution formulation • Success will demand collaboration and integration of health and engineering professions

More Related