Technical and economic impact of water reuse as an integrated water resource management measure in rural water supply systems

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Abstract

Water reuse becomes an alternative to reduce the demand in the conventional water supply systems, especially in regions, where non-potable use of drinking water, as for garden and grass irrigation, is predominant. This study evaluates the footprint of reuse on small water supply systems in rural areas, where raw water quality does not meet the drinking water standards and complicated treatment is needed. Individual facilities for reuse of potential rainwater, light gray, gray and domestic wastewater in the households could lead to a decrease in non-potable tap water use up to 60% and a decrease of households’ annual expenses for water supply up to 93 /household. The installation of individual facilities for common reuse of rainwater and gray wastewater requires the highest investment costs, but the option`s operational costs are between 15% and 20% lower than all other options considered. The Drinking Water Treatment Plant capacity reduction due to Integrated Water Resource Management measures implementation enables from 48% up to 58% saving in the total operational costs for drinking water supply in the settlement. The shortest payback period and best economic impact of reuse for small scale water supply systems is observed if rainwater and gray wastewater are reused together.

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APA

Angelova, I., Alitchkov, D., & Radovanov, V. (2024). Technical and economic impact of water reuse as an integrated water resource management measure in rural water supply systems. Water Supply, 24(5), 1974–1984. https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2024.099

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