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Would you drink recycled sewage water?

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  • 6 min read

In fact, 63% of The Guardian readers claimed they would in a 2013 poll by the journal. In another survey on adult Americans, 49% said they would try recycled sewage water and 38% said that they were uncertain (Rozin et al., 2015). However, the same survey found that people are still more disgusted by drinking recycled water than drinking tap water, and 1 in 6 of the people surveyed said they wouldn’t drink it at all.

Drinking recycled sewage water could help solve water shortage problems. Photo by Daria Shevstova on Pexels

To be fair, drinking sewage water has historically spread mass infection and disease. Think cholera outbreaks or polio. However, it is well-established that current methods of treating sewage water are safe, and achieve drinking water quality guidelines. In fact, recycled sewage water has been used as drinking water in Namibia for more than 50 years.

Why do we need it?

Access to water is a problem for 1.1 billion people worldwide (WWF, n.d.). That’s around 1 in 7 people, and it’s not just developing countries.

Causes of this include pollution of fresh-water lakes and rivers as well as climate change drying up water supplies and causing irregular weather patterns, such as droughts in some areas or floods elsewhere (WWF, n.d.). All of these factors affect our ability to source fresh water. Additionally, agriculture consumes more than 70% of freshwater, where a large amount of this water is wasted due to inefficient or leaky irrigation systems.

Climate change can cause existing water supplies to dry up. Photo by Pixabay on Pexels

Fresh water is also vital to many of the world’s fragile ecosystems, such as wetlands. Relying on naturally occurring freshwater stores to supply drinking water can also damage these ecosystems.

Recycling sewage water is a solution to this. Some benefits include:

  • Increasing accessibility to clean water and reducing demands on freshwater supply
  • Economic benefits through reducing costs for discharging wastewater and water consumption costs
  • Reduced environmental impact through decreasing stresses of freshwater diversion on ecosystems, decreasing discharge into water bodies, preventing pollution, and creating energy savings (EPA, 2017)

How is sewage water recycled?

In general, plants treat wastewater in three stage (Steen, 2018):

  1. Wastewater treatment
  2. Waste recycling phase
  3. Drinking water treatment

Most wastewater is treated before being released into the environment. This is to reduce pollutants. Additionally, drinking water undergoes treatment before reaching taps and households.

However, the main process used to recycle water happens at the waste recycling plant. Water purification involves first straining remaining solids in wastewater through microfiltration (Cho, 2011). In this process, water moves through microscopically small membrane pores.

After this, reverse osmosis occurs. This is the process where most innovation in water recycling occurs. In this step, only water molecules are able to pass through a ‘semi-permeable membrane’, whilst most other contaminating particles, such as salt, bacteria, microbes, and viruses are unable to pass through (PureTec Water, n.d.). To get the water particles through this membrane though, pressure needs to be applied to ‘push’ it through. This process is able to turn salt water and contaminated water into pure water, as shown in Fig 1.

Fig 1: A diagram of reverse osmosis used to purify wastewater (PureTec Water, n.d).

After this, the water is disinfected as an extra precaution. This is usually done through common treatments, such as applying ultra violet (UV) light and adding hydrogen peroxide.

How can we get the public to accept recycled sewage water?

First of all, do not call it recycled sewage water.

Studies show that people aren’t disgusted by drinking recycled water, because they distrust the technology behind it. Their disgust is more psychological (Rozin et al., 2015). In a Californian poll, 90% of people supported drinking recycled sewage water that had been labelled ‘purified water’ (Tobin, 2017). ‘Recycled water’ got 87% of support, whilst ‘reclaimed water’ got 82% of support.

Additionally, educating people on the water recycling process through public awareness campaigns and demonstrating how the water recycling plant works can also help. 89% of Californians surveyed by Xylem Inc. in 2016 said that learning about the treatment process made them more willing to use recycled water.

Treated water is perfectly safe to drink. Photo by Ivan Bandura on Unsplash

Interestingly, people are also more comfortable if the treated wastewater passes through a river or lake before entering pipes that connect to households, as opposed to direct travel from wastewater treatment plants to drinking water treatment plants (Rozin et al., 2015). As a result, some plants move treated water to reservoirs and allow it to sit there for an average of six months before being added to drinking water supplies (Cho, 2011).

However, switching to recycled sewage water as a source of drinking water may not be so much of a choice – it’s more of a need. As drought-plagued areas adapt to water shortages by diversifying water supplies, it is likely that people will just need to become comfortable with drinking recycled sewage water. This is already happening in Singapore, Namibia, parts of Australia, California, Texas, and more (Veolia, 2020).

Where next?

At the very least, we should use recycled water for household activities, such as watering plants, flushing toilets, and industry activities. Normalising water recycling and building the appropriate infrastructure to support this will be an important step for all countries to work on to create a sustainable future.

In particular, transitioning to using recycled sewage water for human activity will support the UN Sustainable Development Goal 6 – Water and Sanitation. To learn more about Sustainable Development Goals, visit the THRIVE Project’s blog, and engage in the conversation about creating a thrivable future!

Author

  • Anita Lin

    Anita is studying Science with a Major in Mathematics at UQ, Brisbane. She has an interest in STEM (Science, Maths and Engineering mainly), particularly the theory, techniques scientists are using to better understand the world, and how this translates into policy and practice.

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