Water Harvesting, Savings & Conservation
Water Harvesting, Savings & Conservation -
This short paper deals with issues that surround water
harvesting, savings and water conservation techniques. In the
UK less than five percent of tap water is currently used for cooking
and drinking, with each person using less than 17.15 litres per
day for 'life sustaining' purposes. This means that 95% of the water
household's use is for non-potable purposes like flushing the toilet,
washing machines and dishwashers, and watering the garden.
| The UK has the highest water
consumption per capita (343 litres per day) of any European
country. That equates to 18,000 million litres of water used
each day. Ninety-five percent of this is used for non-potable
purposes but it is still being passed through the expensive
water purification process and stored in massive land-consuming
reservoirs.
In industry, where the proportion of non-potable water usage
is just as high, the potential environmental and financial
savings are considerably more. It is estimated that water
bills cost more than 1% of company business turnover. One
potential solution exists in the installation of a 'parallel'
system of water supply, with one for drinking water and one
for non-drinking water. This conservation technology is normally
referred to as 'water harvesting' and is more than catching
the natural rainfall and reusing it. A number of methods of
water harvesting are being developed, such as the development
of permeable pavements and sub-bases that retain and clean
storm water run-off. |
Improving Environmental
Performance |
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The built environment provides two main catchment areas - the roof
of a building and the associated hard landscaping, such as roads,
car parks and paved areas. The incorporation of these hard landscaped
areas around buildings has changed the course of natural drainage,
often intensifying the effects of flooding worse.
The UK's Building Regulations state that 'paved areas around a
building shall be so constructed as to be adequately drained…providing…an
adequate soak-away or some other adequate infiltration system…where…methods
of drainage other than connection to a public surface water sewer
are encouraged where they are technically feasible'.
The incorporation of a water harvesting system to satisfy these
requirements can produce both environmental and financial benefits.
This is particularly significant, as it will help to hold off some
of the costs of the EC Water Framework Directive, which is likely
to add further costs for users.
Extracted from a Groundwork Search & Send publication.
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