Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa Water, Sanitation May -June 2014 Vol.9 No.3 | Page 14
Wastewater Use
Wastewater Use
Figure 1: Urban Water Supply Growth, 1980—2015
3,000
Urban water supply coverage,
millions of people
cant economic benefits.
Environmental quality is
often an important
benefit of reuse programs because poorquality water is used in
agriculture instead of
being discharged into
cleaner surface water
bodies or groundwater.
Finally, water reuse may
reduce the investment
costs of developing
new resources for agriculture or other uses for
which it is substituted.
Asia
Africa
LAC
Europe
N. America
Oceania
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
2030
Source: UNDP 1998.
Based on international experience, it is increasingly
apparent that economic win-win solutions are not easy.
Instead, potential Bank investments in the water sector
need to address alternatives and consider the economic
tradeoffs, for example:
• Should a sea outfall be built to discharge wastewater
from a coastal city, if permitted by national and
regional regulations and treaties, or should wastewater be reused, possibly incurring much higher
costs for the treatment, storage, and especially the
transfer of reclaimed water?
• Should a reservoir for reclaimed water be built to
increase its availability during the irrigation season
or should treated water be discharged during the
wet season?
• Are more expensive treatment and unrestricted
irrigation preferable to simpler treatment and crop
restrictions?
POLICY AND IMPLEMENTATION
Planned reuse is not just about treatment; it requires an
integrated approach. Where the Bank lends for wastewater treatment, the planned reuse of effluent should
be integrated into the decision to invest in intensive (for
example, activated sludge) or extensive (for example,
stabilization ponds) technologies, or centralized versus
decentralized systems.
Because collection and treatment of wastewater are usually under the jurisdiction of a different sector (such as
urban water supply and sanitation) from the reuse sectors
(such as agriculture and municipalities), intersectoral coordination in planning and management is extremely important. The World Bank Country Water Assistance Strategies
offer an opportunity to ensure such coordination. On the
demand side, users should be involved in planning and
monitoring the quality of the supplied effluent. Effective
advisory/extension services are also extremely important.
Table 1: Water Treatment Gaps
Percentage of sewered
population in large cities
Percentage of sewered wastewater
that is treated to secondary level
Africa
18
0
Asia
45
35
Latin America and the Caribbean
35
24
Oceania
15
Not reported
North America
96
90
Europe
92
66
Region
Source: WHO and UNICEF 2000.
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Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • May - June 2014
Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • May - June 2014
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