Author:
Loureiro Dália,Silva Catarina,Cardoso Maria Adriana,Mamade Aisha,Alegre Helena,Rosa Maria João
Abstract
Urban water systems (UWSs) are energy-intensive worldwide, particularly for drinking-water pumping and aeration in wastewater treatment. Usual approaches to improve energy efficiency focus only on equipment and disregard the UWS as a continuum of stages from source-to-tap-to-source (abstraction/transport—treatment—drinking water transport/distribution—wastewater and stormwater collection/transport—treatment—discharge/reuse). We propose a framework for a comprehensive assessment of UWS energy efficiency and a four-level approach to enforce it: overall UWS (level 1), stage (level 2), infrastructure component (level 3) and processes/equipment (level 4). The framework is structured by efficiency and effectiveness criteria (an efficient but ineffective infrastructure is useless), earlier and newly developed performance indicators and reference values. The framework and the approach are the basis for a sound diagnosis and intervention prioritising, and are being tested in a peer-to-peer innovation project involving 13 water utilities (representing 17% of the energy consumption by the Portuguese water sector in 2017). Results of levels 1–3 of analysis herein illustrated for a water utility demonstrate the framework and approach potential to assess UWS effectiveness and energy efficiency, and to select the stages and infrastructures for improvement and deeper diagnosis.
Subject
Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry
Reference25 articles.
1. The United Nations World Water Development Report 2014: Water and Energy,2014
2. Water Energy Nexus-Excerpt from the World Energy Outlook 2016,2016
3. Intensive Energy Management Systems (SGCIE), Summary Report,2016
4. Decision Support for the Design and Operation of Variable Speed Pumps in Water Supply Systems
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献