OneWaterSF Embracing, envisioning, practicing & advancing | Page 18

14 San Francisco has already had great success in implementing a number of projects and programs that embody the OneWaterSF philosophy. Yet many challenges lie ahead. Climate uncertainty gives us the potential for more frequent and prolonged droughts that threaten the stability of our existing water supplies, as well as periods of intense storms that can overwhelm our sewer system. Expanding water recycling and reuse programs will result in increased energy requirements for advanced treatment. And, in California, we are continually challenged by the need to plan for disruptions in service that can occur from natural disasters such as earthquakes or wildfires in our watersheds. OneWaterSF challenges each of us to adopt a new way of doing business. The holistic approach requires collaboration across traditional organizational boundaries within the SFPUC and with external partners, so that our programs and projects contribute to the OneWaterSF Vision. It requires us to utilize advances in technology and encourages innovation in problem solving so that projects and programs optimize our operations, and we are more thoughtful about how we harness and utilize our finite resources. With OneWaterSF, we strengthen our common purpose. These approaches are consistent with the SFPUC’s 2020 Strategic Plan. With OneWaterSF, we can maximize the efficient use of our resources and recognize the potential of all resources within our system. It also allows us to look holistically at our system for efficiencies, project synergies and opportunities to harness clean energy, and to match the right water for the right use. If we view future challenges through this lens, new opportunities for innovative resource management emerge. The next phase of OneWaterSF activities will focus on implementation, with the development of the OneWaterSF Implementation Roadmap. The Roadmap will: For example, advances in water treatment technology allow us to purify water to levels that weren’t possible 20 years ago. Under OneWaterSF, these advances provide an opportunity to explore purified water as an option for directly increasing our water supplies. A holistic approach to stormwater management under OneWaterSF, coupled with the latest water treatment technology, allows us to consider opportunities for collecting rainwater for both nonpotable and potable purposes. This innovative view can benefit both water supply and protect the quality of the Bay and Ocean waters. Additionally, resource recovery has the potential to harness highenergy resources from the wastewater stream so that we can utilize these resources to supplement energy requirements, including those that may be needed for advanced water purification processes. These opportunities become obvious through OneWaterSF. Develop recommendations related to research and Identify new opportunities for projects and programs under OneWaterSF; development; Suggest partnerships for research or project implementation; and Identify policy needs to help further OneWaterSF. The Roadmap will also prioritize short-term and long-term activities and will be designed as a living document to enable the SFPUC to continue expanding the OneWaterSF approach. The Roadmap will be the next step in advancing OneWaterSF to help the SFPUC fulfill our shared vision of creating a more resilient and reliable future for San Francisco. Transbay Transit Center (image courtesy of the Transbay Joint Powers Authority [TJPA] and Project Architect: Pelli Clarke Pelli) Advancing OneWaterSF