Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 32

a technology with an ability to mitigate climate change (WRC TT 649/15). A fundamental for food production and food security in contemporary water-scarce South Africa, is access to inexpensive but quality irrigation water. However, irrigation water from rivers, dams, and boreholes in the peri-urban equivalent to ~55kWh/PE/y (that is, ~1880 kgCH4/y), and >3 tonnes DW/y biomass. Furthermore, modelling of energy flows and greenhouse gas emissions of the Belmont Valley pilot-scale IAPS, revealed that an equivalent commercial system would yield –0.16 tonnes CO 2e / ML of wastewater treated, indicating IAPS with facultative pond (top) and raceways (middle) linked via a buffer to the Puricare-AOP system (bottom). 32 Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 space has become more contaminated with chemicals, bacteria, chlorides, salts, and various heavy metals. Poor water quality has a direct impact on irrigation system efficiency, harms the soil, poses a major threat for food production, and farmers struggle to find cost-effective solutions. To address irrigation water quality, Dr Derek Askew and his colleagues developed the specialised Puricare-Advanced Oxidation Process (P-AOP). In brief, advanced oxidation processes employ reactive oxidising agents such as ozone (O 3 ) and hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) or both in water treatment. Reaction of H 2 O 2 together with O 3 is termed peroxone. The peroxone process requires an O 3 generation system and a H 2 O 2 feed system and involves two essential steps: O 3 dissolution and H 2 O 2 addition. As reported in the US Environmental Protection Agency manual titled Alternative Disinfectants and Oxidants (EPA 815-R-99-014), peroxone is widely used due to its simplicity and cost-effectiveness in generation of radicals for oxidation of micropollutants, and removal of odour and colour from wastewater. Indeed, and as confirmed by Dr Derek Askew, the P-AOP implemented in South African agriculture has improved the quality of irrigation water and cleaned the irrigation systems. Furthermore, the benefits of the improved water are passed onto the soil, resulting in reduced soil compaction. The P-AOP has also been associated with reduced equipment maintenance costs, increased water infiltration, and improvement in soil aeration and biology. “Golden Pond” by Ian Laxton emphasised the suitability of IAPS for small remote communities in South Africa. More accurately, it is perhaps in the peri-urban space that IAPS may find its best fit. Sufficiently small so as not to adversely impact the region while providing a sanitation amenity that in addition delivers water for irrigation and biogas for heat and power. Peri-urban environments are considered zones of transition between rural and urban and present an opportunity to demonstrate approaches that effect sustainable service delivery and bolster community resilience. It is within these zones that full integration of the water, energy, food, and land nexus can be realised to ensure, among others, food security. Techno-economic perspective research at Rhodes University has shown that IAPS is ideally commissioned with capacity of 1–1.5ML/d (that is, ~7 500PE) and, according to the general authorisation, the user is therefore not www.waterafrica.co.za