water security Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/water-security/ National leader in water solutions through collaboration and high impact research Thu, 01 Dec 2022 03:51:32 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.waterra.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-waterRA-favicon-1-32x32.png water security Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/water-security/ 32 32 Secondary impacts of water quality on health hardware in NT https://www.waterra.com.au/project/secondary-impacts-of-water-quality-on-health-hardware-in-nt/ Thu, 01 Dec 2022 03:51:32 +0000 https://www.waterra.com.au/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=10834 Remote communities have an issue with hardness levels in water supplies...

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National Research Priority: Liveability

Project Description

Remote communities have an issue with hardness levels in water supplies.  This project established the cost impact of hard water on household infrastructure in remote Indigenous communities.  The results of this project enabled Power and Water Corporation to form a business case to improve the water quality for the communities they support.

Honours Thesis completed by Heather Browett in November 2011.

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Catchment Health Metrics https://www.waterra.com.au/project/catchment-health-metrics/ Thu, 24 Nov 2022 01:50:04 +0000 https://www.waterra.com.au/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=10679 Catchment health metrics are physical, chemical, biological, and socioeconomic indicators that collectively provide a holistic measure of a catchment’s state and functional capacity...

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Project Description

Catchment health metrics are physical, chemical, biological, and socioeconomic indicators that collectively provide a holistic measure of a catchment’s state and functional capacity. Catchment health metrics can provide an effective mechanism for not only assessing the health of a catchment but also a means of assessing the effectiveness of catchment control measures being implemented by management organisations. There is great diversity of catchments within Australia, displaying vastly different physical, chemical, biological, and hydrological interactions socioeconomic characteristics. Additionally, these catchments are impacted by a variety of land uses, levels of public access, types of water sources and receiving environments, demanding often very varied management responses. To ensure that catchment health information is useful for decision making, catchment health metrics should represent the dominant variables that impact the critical community environmental values provided by the catchment. Given the diversity in catchment characteristics, it is unlikely that a fully standardised set of catchment health metrics can accurately represent all types of catchments. This project will investigate and identify environmental indicators that would feed into a tailored catchment health assessment framework which would provide decision makers and regulators with a common paradigm and consistent approach to evaluate the state of a catchment and quantify the costs, benefits, risks, and opportunities of different management scenarios.

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Developing guidance for assessment and evaluation of harmful algal blooms, and implementation of control strategies in source water https://www.waterra.com.au/project/developing-guidance-for-assessment-and-evaluation-of-harmful-algal-blooms-and-implementation-of-control-strategies-in-source-water/ Thu, 01 Sep 2022 02:01:23 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9216 The environmental conditions which cause blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) blooms vary according to location, the climate, and other attributes of aquatic ecosystems...

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Project Description

The environmental conditions which cause blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) blooms vary according to location, the climate, and other attributes of aquatic ecosystems. This variety has made it difficult to develop one broadly applicable predictive model for cyanobacterial blooms. Water utilities monitor source waters to implement cyanobacterial risk management programmes but there are no standard protocols while limited information transfer between utilities has prevented the identification of management strategies that do or do not work. This research reviewed literature about early warning systems (Almuhtaram et al., 2021) and source control strategies, conducted a survey of 35 utilities in America and Canada (74%) and Australia (Kibuye et al., 2021) and evaluated selected control strategies. These different types of information were synthesised into decision trees within an overarching guidance document. It was concluded that a 3-tier framework to detect algal blooms which monitored biological activity, then confirmed the identification of cyanobacterial genes and associated metabolites gave sufficient early warning, while multi-barrier control strategies gave field-scale efficacy and enabled timely responses.

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National Carp Control Program: Risks, costs and water industry response https://www.waterra.com.au/project/national-carp-control-program-risks-costs-and-water-industry-response/ Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:28:00 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9057 European carp have decimated native fish species in the Murray-Darling River...

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Project Description

European carp have decimated native fish species in the Murray-Darling River. The federally funded National Carp Control Plan proposes using a carp-specific virus to kill the pest-fish, but before doing so are consulting with a broad array of environmental, conservation and other stakeholders, including the water industry. There are concerns that large amounts of dead and decaying carp near water offtakes or storages might overwhelm the capacity of water treatment plants (WTPs) to remove organic matter and taste and odour compounds, and might compromise the production of safe, palatable drinking water. In this research a series of experiments led to the conclusions that medium to high carp densities could be managed by adding a 30 minute procedure to existing WTP methods, and that there would not be an increased risk to public health.

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Decentralised treatment solutions for regional and remote water supplies https://www.waterra.com.au/project/decentralised-treatment-solutions-for-regional-and-remote-water-supplies/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 07:24:21 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9031 In Australia, remote and regional communities frequently manage relatively small, isolated water treatment and waste management systems which have water quality and health risks characteristic of small-scale decentralised operations...

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Project Description

In Australia, remote and regional communities frequently manage relatively small, isolated water treatment and waste management systems which have water quality and health risks characteristic of small-scale decentralised operations. Australian water utilities have a wealth of experience in addressing these issues, and this project gathered and documented a series of case studies from Victoria, Tasmania and the Northern Territory to form a knowledge base that can be referred to in the future.

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Development of a Bayesian risk assessment tool to predict and manage the water quality impacts of extreme events in both metropolitan and smaller remote areas https://www.waterra.com.au/project/development-of-a-bayesian-risk-assessment-tool-to-predict-and-manage-the-water-quality-impacts-of-extreme-events-in-both-metropolitan-and-smaller-remote-areas/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 06:25:40 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9021 The ADWG has methods for predicting risks to water quality, but these were not developed for managing extreme climate-change driven weather events such as bushfires or floods...

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Project Description

The ADWG has methods for predicting risks to water quality, but these were not developed for managing extreme climate-change driven weather events such as bushfires or floods. This research developed a risk assessment tool for managing water-related health risks associated with extreme weather events. Real-world datasets and experience of water cloudiness (turbidity), colour and blue-green algae were used to create and validate environmental models which were developed further by applying Baysian network and System Dynamics concepts. This iteration of the model was not constrained by, and did not reflect existing risk profiles, but was judged to be flexible enough to provide a realistic representation of future hazards arising from extreme weather events.

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Bad tastes, odours and toxins in our drinking water reservoirs: Are benthic cyanobacteria the culprits? https://www.waterra.com.au/project/bad-tastes-odours-and-toxins-in-our-drinking-water-reservoirs-are-benthic-cyanobacteria-the-culprits/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 05:06:45 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9011 Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) reduce water quality especially when they bloom and form high numbers of cells which produce toxins, and taste and odour compounds...

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Project Description

Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) reduce water quality especially when they bloom and form high numbers of cells which produce toxins, and taste and odour compounds. Most cyanobacteria photosynthesise and tend to grow and float at depths which optimise their exposure to sunlight, but an increase in unexplained occurrences of taste and odour compounds in reservoirs, and a bloom of benthic (bottom-living) cyanobacteria, forced the closure of a water supply. This research examined the role that bottom-living benthic cyanobacteria play in the production of toxins or taste and odour compounds. Seven DNA-based PCR tests were developed to identify benthic species of cyanobacteria and their capacity for producing toxins. A taste and odour compound, and two toxins were found in winter and spring in an SA reservoir, whereas a different taste and odour compound and toxin assemblage were found in summer and autumn in a reservoir in NSW. These results will help water suppliers to anticipate and manage future aesthetic or toxin issues related to benthic cyanobacteria.

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Comprehensive assessment of the impacts of climate change on reservoir quality in a range of climatic regions https://www.waterra.com.au/project/comprehensive-assessment-of-the-impacts-of-climate-change-on-reservoir-quality-in-a-range-of-climatic-regions/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 04:34:26 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9005 Water utilities lack the information they need to implement risk-based adaptation and planning strategies that incorporate climate change...

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Project Description

Water utilities lack the information they need to implement risk-based adaptation and planning strategies that incorporate climate change. This research addresses this problem by modelling the effects of climate change on reservoirs in three climate zones: temperate, humid tropical and Mediterranean. By integrating different modelling approaches it was concluded that increased temperatures will increase water stratification; the differences in water temperature that occur with depth. This is important because the duration and type of stratification affects the storage and release of substances from reservoir floors and this in turn affects blue-green algal blooms and water quality. The integrated modelling approach developed in this project can be applied to the management of contaminants running off the catchments and for future risk assessment. This information will also support the development of business cases for targeted catchment interventions.

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Scale formation and prevention in small water supplies reliant on groundwater https://www.waterra.com.au/project/scale-formation-and-prevention-in-small-water-supplies-reliant-on-groundwater/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 00:54:51 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=8970 Some remote and regional areas of Australia rely on groundwater...

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Project Description

Some remote and regional areas of Australia rely on groundwater. A problem with this is that naturally occurring salts, such as calcium carbonate, make the water ‘hard’ and cause scale deposition on the elements used to heat water. Scale also blocks taps and showerheads. This research examined different methods for predicting the amount of scale that a groundwater might form and also considered the pro’s and con’s of various treatment technologies which prevent scale formation. The consideration of community size and the chemical characteristics of different groundwaters was incorporated into this assessment and recommendation for scale prevention.

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