CHAPTER 15 | FRESHWATER RESOURCES |
TOILET TO TAP
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CORE MESSAGE
Freshwater is a precious but limited resource, and is essential to life. Some regions consume water faster than it is replenished. And unfortunately, water is not evenly distributed across the globe; many people worldwide lack access to enough clean water. Methods are available to recover and purify otherwise dirty water, but we also need to use water more wisely.
GUIDING QUESTIONS
After reading this chapter, you should be able to answer the following questions:
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One of the most exciting moments in Shivaji Deshmukh’s career as a water engineer came one bright, sunny day in January 2008. He had gathered with staff from the Orange County Water District (OCWD) in Anaheim, California, to watch for the first time as former sewage water, cleaned using state-of-the-art techniques, was pumped into underground drinking water sources. It was the beginning of a groundbreaking project designed to help save the region from ongoing, and frightening, water shortages.
“It’s basically this drought-proof supply of water,” says Deshmukh. “Nobody else has done it. Nobody thought a community could support it, because they would be too grossed out by it.”
The water that Deshmukh and other engineers watched seep into the region’s underground water stores that day in 2008 was treated wastewater—including sewage and used water from homes and industrial sites. Understandably, when many residents first heard about the project, they were concerned.
But that same month, Deshmukh and other OCWD staff attended a dedication ceremony at the water treatment plant in Fountain Valley, California, along with hundreds of other people, including various community groups, to honour the massive project. Having that support from the community was key to the project’s success, says Deshmukh—but getting it hadn’t been easy.