Water Quality Management: Can we Improve Integration to Face Future Problems?

Similar documents
Multistage Benders' Decomposition applied to Multiperiod, Multicommodity Production, Distribution and Inventory System

WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT: CAN WE IMPROVE INTEGRATION TO FACE FUTURE PROBLEMS?

Multistage Benders' Decomposition applied to Multiperiod, Multicommodity Production, Distribution and Inventory System

Lublin-Vistula Case Study

Present and Future Estimates of Evapotranspiration and Runoff for Europe

Water Quality Management in Urban Areas: The Challenge for Central and Eastern Europe

THE BRISBANE DECLARATION (2007)

Lesson 3: Integration what does it mean?

Climate Change Impact on Water Availability and Use

A Meta-model for Water Quantity and Water Quality

AP Environmental Science

Chapter 1 - INTRODUCTION

Environmental Management and Community Participation: Enhancing Local Programmes

Creating an Enabling Environment for WR&R Implementation

Introduction to Water Assessment in GaBi Software

SCIENCE-POLICY INTERACTIONS WITHIN THE CONVENTION ON LONG- RANGE TRANBOUNDARY AIR POLLUTION

Closure Report of Working Group Environment (WG-ENV) Strategy Theme: Basin

FRESHWATER COUNTRY PROFILE SWEDEN

Freshwater Strategy

Executive summary. Pressures

CE 107: Introduction to Civil and Environmental Engineering. Lecture 3: Man and Environment, Major components of Environment

Protection of Australia s freshwater ecosystems

OPERATIONAL PROGRAM NUMBER 8 WATERBODY-BASED OPERATIONAL PROGRAM GUIDANCE

Dominika Anna Dziegielewska ( )

Fresh Water 4/20/2009. Chapter 7. Earth s Water Resources. Chapter 7: Outline

Development and climate policy synergies: insights from global modelling studies. Rao, N.D., McCollum, D., Dubash, N.K. & Khosla, R.

Swiss Competence Center for Energy Research Efficiency of Industrial Processes

CIVL401 Introduction to Capstone Project. Introduction to sustainability: Environmental, Economical and Social Impacts

MEDIUM TERM PLAN

Towards Human-Centered Design. Michael Bartl

Evaluation of the data collected in the community surveys

Belmont Forum Collaborative Research Action on Mountains as Sentinels of Change

Freshwater Initiative

Application of Multi-Criteria Analysis to Urban Land-Use Planning

ENGS 37 INTRODUCTION to ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING Prof. Benoit Cushman-Roisin. We live in incredibly rich and prosperous times.

WATER MANAGEMENT IN TURKEY AND IN ISTANBUL

Negative perceptions, pessimism, fear: consumer confidence in Europe does not seem ready to bounce back!

Midway ISD Course: Aquatic Science

AP Environmental Science 2002 Scoring Commentary

FROM WASTE DISPOSAL TO RESOURCE RECOVERY

Biodiversity Credits: Direct economic reward for sustainable management. James Shields Wildlife Manager State Forests of NSW, Australia

Water for life and livelihoods

Towards Decentralization in Indonesia: Electronic Government in te Vanishing of Distance: The Papua (Irian Jaya) Province Case

Negotiating Inefficient Compromises: Is Less Better than More?

Executive)Summary) ) )

Tempus IV International Joint Master programme on Material and Energy Flows management

INTEGRATED SOLUTIONS FOR WATER, ENERGY and LAND (ISWEL) Simon Langan. IBKF workshop, 2 nd June 2018, Laxenburg

TAHOE TRUCKEE SANITATION AGENCY WASTEWATER TREATMENT INQUIRY

Pre-Workshop Survey: ACEEE/AWE Workshop to Develop a Joint Blueprint for Energy and Water Efficiency

NEC - Element 5 - Control of contamination of water sources July Copyright RMS. Copyright RMS. Copyright RMS

SUPPORTING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL 7, BY 2030 ENSURE UNIVERSAL ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE, RELIABLE AND MODERN ENERGY SERVICES

How the world and the UN have developed new views on the environment and sustainability Robert Brinkmann, Ph.D. Hofstra University

Limiting global warming is not enough

Fresh Water Treaty. International Setting and Issues in Water, Environment and Development

Potential impacts of climate change to water and adaptation plan in Vietnam

Water Governance and Management for Sustainable Development

Notes for NEPA for Generic Terms of Reference

River Biomonitoring: General Information African Environmental Development Aquatic Environmental Management Specialists

Report on the Global Assessment of Water Statistics and Water Accounts. Prepared by the United Nations Statistics Division

The Future of Food and Water Security in New Egypt

Negotiating Flows in the Mekong

INDUSTRIAL AND MUNICIPAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT

Balanced Scorecard Usage Survey Report

The Volga River Basin - history of development and modern hydrological regime under the changing climate

Mandatory Review Date: June 1, 2017

Biodiversity and Global Change

WATER PRICING Seizing a Public Policy Dilemma by the Horns

THE MATHEMATICS OF PLANET EARTH. John Baez University of Cambridge 12 March 2014

Microproblems of the Forest Sector

Chapter 1: Introduction

Benefits of investing in water and sanitation

Ex-Post Evaluation - INTERREG III PROGRAMME: INTERREG III B Baltic Sea

The Dublin Statement on Water and Sustainable Development

First International Environment Forum for Basin Organizations

THE BLUE PLANET SATELLITE IMAGE OF OUR PLANET WHAT ARE YOUR HAPPIEST ME MEMORIES THAT INCLUDE WATER?

Water Indicators and Statistics

KNOWLEDGE EXPANDER WATER Shell Global Solutions International B.V.

The SEEA 2003 progress since 1993

52 April 2000/Vol. 43, No. 4 COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM

Common Position Paper on Collective Solar Thermal Systems

Joint Spain-Algeria Initiative for Water Strategy in the Western Mediterranean Basin

Intergovernmental Cooperation: Air Pollution from an U.S. Perspective

Red River Basin Commission Annual Conference Winnipeg January 20, 2015

BUSINESS PLAN CEN/TC 92 WATER METERS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Environmental Systems Prescriptive

COMPARISON OF PROCESS HAZARD ANALYSIS (PHA) METHODS

Environmental Science Prescriptive

GEF. Global Support. Conservation GEF BIODIVERSITY STRATEGY IN ACTION. Biodiversity. for GEF BIODIVERSITY PROJECTS BY STRATEGIC PRIORITY

The Next Generation of Customer Analytics Using Analytics to Optimize Customer-Related Activities and Processes

Future of Turkey s Water Services And Investment Environment Arena

Application of a Model of Planned Change to the Analysis of the Organization of Regional Problems

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE (ENVR)

Workshop on ASSESSING THE WATER-FOOD-ENERGY- ECOSYSTEMS NEXUS AND BENEFITS OF TRANSBOUNDARY COOPERATION IN THE DRINA RIVER BASIN

Chesapeake Plenary Session 29 August 2011

Economics, Environment, and Sustainability

WATER QUALITY AND STANDARDS Vol. I - Basic Concepts and Definitions in Water Quality and Standards - Yasumoto Magara

Indicator 6.4.2: Level of water stress: freshwater withdrawal as a proportion of available freshwater resources

Indicator 6.4.2: Level of water stress: freshwater withdrawal as a proportion of available freshwater resources

Importance of chemical legislation to water quality in agriculture

Transcription:

Water Quality Management: Can we Improve Integration to Face Future Problems? Somlyody, L. IIASA Working Paper WP-94-034 May 1994

Somlyody L (1994). Water Quality Management: Can we Improve Integration to Face Future Problems? IIASA Working Paper. IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria: WP 94 034 Copyright 1994 by the author(s). http://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/4175/ Working Papers on work of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis receive only limited review. Views or opinions expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of the Institute, its National Member Organizations, or other organizations supporting the work. All rights reserved. Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage. All copies must bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. For other purposes, to republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, permission must be sought by contacting repository@iiasa.ac.at

Working Paper Water Quality Management: Can We Improve Integration to Face Future Problems? L. Somlyddy WP-94-34 May 1994 Fg4 11 ASA International b.d: Telephone: +43 2236 71521 Telex: 079 137 iiasa a Telefax: +43 2236 71313 Institute for Applied Systems Analysis A-2361 Laxenburg Austria

Water Quality Management: Can We Improve Integration to Face Future Problems? L. Sornlyddy Working Papers are interim reports on work of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis and have received only limited review. Views or opinions expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of the Instit~t~e or of its National Member Organizations. 11 ASA International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis A-2361 Laxenburg Austria Telephone: +43 2236 71521 Telex: 079 137 iiasa a Telefax: +43 2236 71313

WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT: CAN WE IMPROVE INTEGRATION TO FACE FUTURE PROBLEMS? Water Resources Project, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria ABSTRACT Water (and its deteriorating quality) may be the most severe stress on the exponentially growing human population in the next century. Problems are becoming increasingly complex and diverse and require more and more specific knowledge, and efficient integration across various disciplines, sectors, countries, and societies. The major challenge addressed is whether we are prepared to realize the desired integration and to resolve the large amount of existing gaps and barriers. The paper analyzes major past and desired future trends in water quality management, with a special focus on the developing world. A number of issues are selected such as the identification, occurrence, and perception of various problems (e.g. eutrophication, acidification, global warming), pollution control types (considering also consumption emissions), wastewater treatment, modeling and monitoring, planning and environmental impact assessment, legislation and institutions, the notion of sustainable development (and the ways to use it), and the role of science and engineering. The past two decades showed tremendous developments in water quality management. In spite of these, the focus of the present discussion lies mostly on pitfalls to disseminate lessons and questions which are crucial to likely future problems and desired improvements. KEY WORDS Water quality management, river basins, international water resources, global trends, integration, control types, wastewater treatment, modeling, monitoring, planning, EIA, legislation, institutions, developing world, Central and Eastern Europe, sustainable development, science and engineering. INTRODUCTION Water quality comprises all the properties of water besides its quantity. In practice, it is given by a large number of physical, chemical, biological, and other parameters. The actual

characterization of water quality is never unambiguous; dominating parameters depend on uses (such as domestic, industrial, agricultural, recreational, and others), problems (hygiene, oxygen household, eutrophication, salinization, acidification, toxics, etc.), space and time, and the subjective judgment of the analyst which cannot be excluded. Water quality management is a commonly used and somewhat vague expression referring to the (systematic) usage of a set of technical and non-technical measures and activities (and associated applied research, planning methodologies, etc.) to maintain or improve quality according to the requirements of its uses and to "protect" its ecosystem. It is worthy to note that while the desired quality of a particular use can be expressed by "concentrations," ecosystem "goals" are hard to quantify leading to an additional subjective element of management. Water quality management is at the interface of water resources management and environmental management (which in itself is endowed with a controversial nature), which draws from hydrology, biology, chemistry, ecology, engineering, economics, and other sciences and disciplines. Accordingly, there is a broad range of professionals who deal with quality issues such as sanitary, water resources, environmental, and other engineers, hydrologists, lirnnologists, biologists, chemists, economists, and so forth. In other words, the field is rather broad and there is not a unique profession which could have "ownership." The often used notion of river basin management stresses that the natural scale of water resources management is a river basin (or a sequence of embedded basins of various orders) from the point of view of both quantity and quality, which is frequently forgotten in practice. Finally, "integration" expresses the desire to look for the "totality" of the management problem. As it will be presented, water quality issues are becoming more and more complex and diverse. The handling of these issues requires an increasing amount of specific knowledge on the one side and more efficient integration across various disciplines, emissions, sectors, countries, cultures, and societies on the other side. These two requirements seem to be rather contradictory. Thus, the major challenge which we address here is whether we are really prepared to realize the desired integration in theory and practice, alike. OBSERVED AND FUTURE DESIRED TRENDS It is often said that water is a limited valuable resource (freshwater resources form less than 1% of the total water in the Globe, 85% of use is for irrigation) essential to life which behaves rather differently than other elements of the biosphere. There is not really a global or unified strategy on how to handle the variety of problems of different scales (see Figure 1) which may appear often jointly depending on the geographic location. This is probably one reason why the "Brundtland report" (WCED, 1987)--and the 1992 UNCED conference--overlooked the "water issue" (for example, see Falkenmark, 1988; Biswas, 1992) which may have the most severe stress on human population in the next century. Fresh water degradation is a consequence of the overall socio-economic development which took place after the Industrial Revolution. Population pressure (with its direct and indirect consequences) is a key element of the water dilemma (the wish for improved standard of living and increasing consumption adds another component of the problem). Population grows exponentially, and it may exceed 10 billion by the end of the next century (for example, see UN, 1989). Most of the increases will occur in developing countries. As shown by Kulshrestha (1993), a ten times greater proportion of the population than today may be