Making water smart

  • Wade M
  • Steyer J
  • Garcia M
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Abstract

Wherever we measure we gather data, wherever we have data we have information, and wherever we have information we have potential knowledge. However, we cannot assume that this knowledge is useful just by ensuring that we measure. The continual growth of data volume, velocity and variety has necessitated the development of tools that can assure its veracity to meet the criteria defined by its ultimate use. Where these tools provide computational functionality that are outside the abilities of a human operator , are non-routine and handle data large or complex in characteristics, we can define them as 'smart'. This and analogous terminology, such as 'intelligent' or 'cyber physical', has become ubiquitous within the data science community and has been embraced by manufacturing and processing industries as the 4th Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0). The water industry is no exception to this and perspectives for Smart Water were neatly presented in two recent IWA whitepapers on Digital Water (IWA ; van Thienen & Savic ), as part of their ongoing Digital Water Programme. This very much looks at the present and the future of smart technology and intelligent management and use of data across the water sector. For over thirty years, pockets of academics and practitioners have attempted to 'smarten' water processes, building on modelling and control foundations, most notably within the Industrial Control and Automation (ICA) community. While some traction has been made (Olsson ), general acceptance and integration of methods by industry has been sporadic and limited due to an array of reasons. Nevertheless , we believe that the ideas and approaches for smartening water systems are being embraced wholesale and data analysis and utilisation is being elevated from the mundane to the critical, sitting alongside process and control engineering in the armoury of skills required by practitioners in the water industry to meet present and future challenges facing the sector with preparedness and resilience. In this special issue of Water Science and Technology, 11 papers were selected that contribute to a broad discussion and demonstration of state-of-the-art for integration of digitalisation and water management processes. Therrien et al. () provide an excellent introduction to the concepts embraced in this issue, highlighting the necessary steps required to extract applicable intelligence from raw data in water resource recovery systems. Sit et al. () undertake a more focused review of contemporary deep learning techniques, which considers not only the process and challenges but governance and ethical management of data as a resource. Icke et al. () developed and tested an Artificial Intelligence approach at the Integrated Validation Plant of Singapore's National Water Agency. With a self-learning feedforward algorithm that uses load prediction and machine learning for nutrient removal control, they achieved up to 15% reduction of aeration compared with conventional feedback control. They also applied quantile regression neural network modelling for anomaly detection to deliver data-driven operational support for process operators. Eerikäinen et al. () present results from a series of interviews with stakeholders working in ICA of wastewater systems. The findings of the study echo some of the historical reasons identified as barriers for the uptake of machine learning and, more broadly, data analytics and data-driven models in the sector. However, given advances in technology and the quantifiable measure of their performance, the general feedback from practitioners is one of optimism. Antzoulatos et al. () propose a unified framework called SMART-WATER for the efficient management of the water supply network. This urban water management platform is based on Internet of Things (IoT) solutions for remote telemetry and control of water consumption in combination with machine learning techniques. Consumers and water utilities obtained feedback on water usage, providing an enhanced awareness of water consumption. The dimension reduction technique Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is slightly older than the activated sludge process, being developed by the eminent statistician Karl Pearson in 1901. The adoption of multivariate statistics, which includes PCA, by industry in the 1970s was a significant milestone towards the use of data-driven approaches, and eventually machine learning, for application in monitoring water processing facilities, especially wastewater treatment. Kazemi et al. () present a novel, adaptive This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC BY 4.0), which permits copying, adaptation and redistribution, provided the original work is properly cited

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APA

Wade, M. J., Steyer, J.-P., & Garcia, M. V. R. (2020). Making water smart. Water Science and Technology, 82(12), v–vii. https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2020.581

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