capacity building Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/capacity-building/ National leader in water solutions through collaboration and high impact research Wed, 21 Sep 2022 06:00:53 +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 capacity building Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/capacity-building/ 32 32 State of knowledge + capability for remote sensing for water utilities https://www.waterra.com.au/project/state-of-knowledge-capability-for-remote-sensing-for-water-utilities/ Thu, 01 Sep 2022 01:58:24 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9225 New satellites and drones have the capacity to provide higher resolution images, of larger areas, more often than ever before, but how can water managers and scientists access or use this data, and what will they need to incorporate remotely sensed information into analysis, planning and other decision-making processes...

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Project Description

New satellites and drones have the capacity to provide higher resolution images, of larger areas, more often than ever before, but how can water managers and scientists access or use this data, and what will they need to incorporate remotely sensed information into analysis, planning and other decision-making processes? This is a desk-top study to review peer-refereed literature and service providers technical information, with a focus on the remote sensing of parameters relevant to optically complex inland waters.

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Ecotoxicity toolbox to evaluate water quality for recycling https://www.waterra.com.au/project/ecotoxicity-toolbox-to-evaluate-water-quality-for-recycling/ Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:53:16 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9067 Wastewater must be treated to remove harmful pathogens and chemicals before it can be released to the environment, but the cost of proving that all pollutants have been removed is prohibitive because potentially thousands of separate chemicals would have to be measured...

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Project Description

Wastewater must be treated to remove harmful pathogens and chemicals before it can be released to the environment, but the cost of proving that all pollutants have been removed is prohibitive because potentially thousands of separate chemicals would have to be measured. Another problem is that classical chemistry measurement tests are sometimes not sensitive enough to be able to detect the very low levels of chemicals which still harm animals and plants. This research developed a suite of extremely sensitive in vitro cell culture tests and an in-situ laboratory test in which mosquitofish were observed when swimming in recycled treated water. These bioassays measured the effects of mixtures of contaminants and were compared with traditional chemical measurements of separate contaminants. The in vitro cell culture, in situ mosquitofish and classical chemical analyses of selected contaminants generated equivalent results and led to the conclusion that combining multiple lines of evidence into a toolbox approach for the assessment of water quality provides data which is more informative and relevant when assessing potential impacts on the environment than traditional chemical measurements alone.

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A national approach to risk assessment, risk communication and management of chemical hazards from recycled water https://www.waterra.com.au/project/a-national-approach-to-risk-assessment-risk-communication-and-management-of-chemical-hazards-from-recycled-water/ Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:48:33 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9065 Wastewater (WW) contains harmful chemicals, including pesticides, that can disrupt normal gene function or hormone activity...

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Project Description

Wastewater (WW) contains harmful chemicals, including pesticides, that can disrupt normal gene function or hormone activity. The cost of measuring each separate contaminant at the frequency needed to demonstrate the safety of recycled WW is prohibitive. This research reviewed the risk assessment and regulation of chemicals in Australian water, with a focus on ‘thresholds of toxicological concern’. Laboratory techniques were developed to extract and concentrate WW contaminants into solutions suitable for analysis using both new in vitro cell culture assays and analysis in expensive, established chemical tests. WW and treated samples were collected from nine Australian water reclamation plants. The total effect of each sample (which contained a mixture of contaminants) on cell death, gene integrity and aspects of liver, hormone, nerve and immune system activity, was determined using in vitro cell culture bioassays, and compared with the classical chemical measurement of each separate contaminant. The cheaper cell-culture tests correlated well to the levels of groups of chemicals and could be used to find thresholds of toxicological concern. Both testing regimens also demonstrated that reverse osmosis is a highly effective method that removes harmful chemicals to levels much lower than those designated safe by regulatory authorities.

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Value of Operator Competency https://www.waterra.com.au/project/value-of-operator-competency/ Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:11:03 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9055 Failure to maintain appropriate levels of knowledge, skill, and experience in the frontline operator workforce runs the risk of disruption and loss of service delivery consequent to human error, along with associated risks to the environment and public health and safety...

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Project Description

Failure to maintain appropriate levels of knowledge, skill, and experience in the frontline operator workforce runs the risk of disruption and loss of service delivery consequent to human error, along with associated risks to the environment and public health and safety. This research reviewed literature that reports water quality safety incidents, other industry training requirements, and forward-looking training preparedness for new technologies. A case study and water industry survey provided additional information for review. Five key operating principles proved important to operator development and training. It was found that the Australian water industry lacks workforce competency and management practices that are well-established in the aviation, nursing, electrical and engineering industries, and that many utilities do not use the Water Industry Operators Certification Framework, even though this provides the best pathway to frontline operator competency and management. It was concluded that the Australian water industry would benefit from considering regulatory changes to drive a nationally consistent governance approach to the provision of frontline operator training and competency certification.

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