How the water you flush becomes the water you drink - Francis de los Reyes

408,981 views ・ 2023-08-15

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 2003, Singapore’s national water agency launched an unprecedented program.
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Using two new facilities,
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they planned to provide more than 50% of their nation’s water supply
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by recycling wastewater.
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And yes, we do mean that wastewater.
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While this might seem like a desperate decision,
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this program had been planned for decades
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to ensure the island nation never ran out of clean water.
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And today, as climate change increases the frequency and duration
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of droughts worldwide,
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more and more regions are facing this problem.
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But is it really safe to reuse anything we flush down the toilet?
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To answer this,
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we have to understand exactly what’s inside this cloudy cocktail.
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Wastewater is classified into several types,
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but the primary three are:
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gray water used in sinks, bathing, and laundry;
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yellow water containing just urine;
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and black water which has come into contact with feces.
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Globally, we generate enough wastewater
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to fill about 400,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools every day.
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In cities and towns with sewage systems,
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this wastewater combines in underground pipes,
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which actually aren’t filled with feces.
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The average 4,000 liters of sewage
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contains only a single liter of solid fecal material.
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But sewage is still rife with dangerous contaminants,
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including billions of pathogens and microorganisms,
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trace chemicals, and excess inorganic nutrients
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that can pollute rivers and lakes.
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So even if we aren’t planning to drink this concoction,
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we still need to clean it;
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which is why sewer systems typically run to wastewater treatment plants.
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Most plants remove major contaminants
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such as feces, pathogens, and excess nitrogen
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from all the water they process.
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And this involves a ton of biological, chemical, and physical interventions.
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Some of the most important include settling tanks to remove large particles,
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biological reaction tanks where microbes eat unwanted materials,
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and chemical disinfection processes that kill pathogens.
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After these procedures, typical treated wastewater in the US
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is already cleaner than most natural bodies of water,
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making it safe to discharge into rivers and lakes.
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If we plan on reusing the water for non-potable purposes,
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such as irrigation or washing cars,
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it gets even further disinfected to prevent bacteria from growing
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during storage.
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But if we want it clean enough to drink,
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there's much more treatment to be done.
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One common process includes microfiltration,
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where membranes with pores one millionth of a meter across
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filter out small particles and larger microorganisms.
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Next, the water passes through an even finer reverse osmosis membrane,
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which can remove particles as small as a tenth of a billionth of a meter.
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This membrane is semi-permeable, allowing water to pass through,
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but stopping things like salt, viruses, or unwanted chemicals.
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After this stage, UV lamps are plunged into the water,
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emitting radiation that permanently damages
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the genetic material of any lingering life forms.
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Sometimes UV disinfection is then combined with further disinfection processes
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that use chemicals like hydrogen peroxide
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to handle a wide range of microorganisms and micropollutants.
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At this point, the treated wastewater is tested rigorously.
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And if it passes, it can safely enter the typical pipeline for drinking water,
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going through the standard treatment procedures
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before joining the municipal supply.
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This approach is called direct potable reuse,
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but even though it’s perfectly healthy,
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there’s still some concern with such a direct system.
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Instead, most places opt for indirect potable reuse,
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where the treated wastewater is discharged to an environmental buffer,
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such as a reservoir, lake, wetland, or groundwater aquifer.
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After some time in this environment,
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any lingering chemicals from the treatment process
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will diffuse and degrade.
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Then, the water can be extracted and enter the drinking water pipeline.
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Indirect potable reuse is the process used in Singapore,
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and it's become an increasingly common lifeline for arid regions in the US.
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But this system is only feasible in places with centralized sewer systems
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and infrastructure for pumping water into people's homes.
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This means it can’t help communities
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dealing with the most serious sanitation issues,
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where access to clean water is a daily struggle.
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Researchers are investigating smaller scale technologies to recycle sewage
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into potable water on site.
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But helping these communities in the long term
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will require us to take a closer look at all the water we’ve been wasting.
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