Water Reuse in Colorado January 16, 2019

19
Water Reuse in Colorado January 16, 2019

Transcript of Water Reuse in Colorado January 16, 2019

Water Reuse in Colorado

January 16, 2019

Water Reuse Regulations

Regulation 84

Domestic wastewater– Toilets

– Kitchen sinks

– Bathroom wastewater

– Laundry wastewater

More organic matter

More risk for pathogen growth

3 “categories” of treatment

Regulation 86

Graywater– Only

Bathroom sinks

Bathroom showers and baths

Laundry machines

Laundry room sinks

Less organic matter

Less risk for pathogen growth

4 “classes” of graywater

2

Overview of Reg 84

3

Has been regulated since 2000– Treaters – treat non-potable reclaimed water

– Users – reclaimed water is provided for use on site from treater 26 treaters, ≈ 500 users/sites

15 approved uses

Water rights needed to reuse

Up and coming Reg 84 changes – Edible crops and hemp irrigation

Commercially processed crops versus non-commercial

Reclaimed Water Treatment

4

Category 2Category 1 Category 3

Treatment (also BMPs)

As human exposure increases, so does

treatment

Regulation 84 Overview Category General Pathogenic TSS/Turbidity Allowed Uses

Category 1 Secondary w/

disinfection

E. coli monthly

mean

126/100mL

single sample

max

30 mg/L daily

max (TSS)

Evaporative

and non-

evaporative

industrial

processes,

Landscape

irrigation

(restricted), zoo

operations &

Non-food crop

irrigation and

silviculture

Category 2 Secondary w/

filtration and

disinfection

E. coli monthly

mean

126/100mL and

235/100 mL

single sample

max

≤ 3 NTU

monthly mean

and ≤ 5 NTU in

more than 5 %

samples in

month

Same as

Category 1,

landscape

irrigation

(unrestricted),

commercial

laundries,

automated and

manual non-

public vehicle

washing &

nonresidential

fire protection

Category 3 Secondary w/

filtration and

disinfection

E. coli/mL non

detect in ≥ 75 %

per month and

126/mL single

sample max

≤ 3 NTU

monthly mean

and ≤ 5 NTU in

more than 5 %

samples in

month

Same as

Category 2,

resident

controlled

landscape

irrigation,

residential fire

protection

• E. coli, TSS and

turbidity

• Uses + best

management

practices

• Guidance & policies

5

Current Colorado uses

Irrigation

Commercial

Industrial

Fire protection

Agricultural ▪ Not human consumption

▪ Until we update the regulation

Best management practices

6

Recent Rule Making Hearing

2018 Rulemaking

hearing

– Added toilet and

urinal flushing

Cross connection risk

– Filtration and

disinfection for

Category 3 toilet and

urinal flushing

– Localized treatment

systems

Log reduction targets

7

Next Steps

Legislation

– Stakeholder work for

2019 Rulemaking

Edible crops

– Categories 2 & 3

Hemp

– Categories 1, 2 & 3

8

REUSE MAY HELP YOU

9

Localized Non-potable Systems

Onsite reuse– Graywater

– Blackwater Reduce discharges with

reuse

Graywater (Reg 86)– NSF 350 certification

Stakeholder process underway

Blackwater (Reg 84)– Higher treatment

Log reduction targets

10

Localized Non-potable Systems

Advantages

Municipality does not pay

Efficient water use

– Right water for the right

use

Reduce discharges to

surface and groundwater

– By what amount?

Automated

– With little oversight

– With backup potable

Disadvantages

Expensive?

– Site specific

– Graywater vs. blackwater

reuse

Other source waters

Socially acceptable?

Compliance and

enforcement

11

Municipal Non-potable Systems

Advantages

Reach more

customers/expand

– Cheaper rate for

customers

Mainstream reuse

New development

Disadvantages

Costs to municipality

– Often similar to potable

aside from treatment

Socially acceptable?

Compliance and

enforcement

More oversight/operators

12

13

Switching Gears – Direct Potable

Reuse

Direct Potable Reuse

Again, water rights

needed

Purified

Pipe to pipe

Engineered buffer

Higher need for

public acceptance

14

Direct Potable Reuse

Colorado

– Historic pilot project

Denver Water

10 years

Health effects study

– Recent demonstration

project

– Workgroup

Developing framework

15

Direct Potable Reuse

National– Pilots

– Approval to move forward in CA

– Regs being developed in TX

– Public outreach Beer and wine!

International– Regions in Southern Africa and elsewhere

16

Conclusions

Reuse is an option

– To maximize water efficiency

– To reduce discharges

– To upgrade current facilities (w/ potential

ROI)

17

Contact Information

Brandi Honeycutt 303-692-6357

[email protected]

https://www.colorado.gov/pacific/cdphe/

wq-reclaimed-water-stakeholders

18

Questions

19