Why the taps won't run dry

New technology can help the world avert a water crisis.

water image

A quarter of a per cent. That’s how much of the world’s water is usable. The rest is too salty, too polluted or frozen. As the globe’s population grows and its middle class swells,1 the pressure on this vital but scarce resource is intensifying. By 2030, our planet will face a 40 per cent shortfall in fresh water supply, according to UNESCO.

We clearly need to make water go further. That means consuming less, recycling more and tapping into currently unusable reserves.

Achieving this requires investment from both the public and private sectors, education programmes across all ages and we need technology and innovation to improve the productivity of water as a resource.

Using less

Agriculture is where the latest water technology can have the biggest effect, given that it is by far the biggest user, accounting for 70 per cent of the total global consumption of some 5,000 cubic km per annum.

Precision irrigation, for example, not only saves water but also uses lower doses of fungicides, herbicides and pesticides – which in turn reduces water pollution. 

New sensor-based Internet of Things technology, for example, can determine exactly when water is needed and in what quantity. This both cuts water consumption and increases the crop yield. 

On a smaller scale, smart sprinklers, controlled via a mobile phone app, can reduce water use in domestic gardens. These technologies are already big business. The global micro-irrigation systems market is expected to more than triple to USD14.9 billion by 2025.2

water waste chart

Recycling more

As well as using less water, we need to recycle more. Private sector companies are alert to the challenge, with the global waste water recycling market growing at 20 per cent a year. Here, the biggest technological problem is removing micro-pollutants, which can cause health and environmental problems. If we can clean it, however, wastewater becomes a great resource.

Thanks to advances in analytical chemistry, we can now measure concentrations down to parts per trillion – the equivalent of one drop of impurity in 500,000 barrels of water. That gives a much greater degree of confidence in the quality of treated water – even opening up the door to recycled water being fit for human consumption rather than just for industrial use.

New lease of life

Innovation is needed not just to create new systems but to preserve old ones. Ageing infrastructure is a major problem. In the US alone, 1.7 trillion gallons of treated drinking water are lost as a result of leaks each year, at a cost of USD2.6 billion.3 Technology can help locate trouble-spots more quickly, giving a new lease of life to old pipes.

Smart water meters can often be the first port of call as they will pick up on changes in water use. In Barcelona, for example, smart meter customers are notified by email or telephone when higher consumption or leakages are detected. This has helped the city to cut its per capita water use by a fifth.4 

For maximum effect, the data from smart meters needs to be amalgamated, combined with information from other sensors and then analysed to identify any existing or future problems. Robotic network inspectors, are another line of defence, particularly in expensive large-diameter pipes. 

Together, these established technologies – and new ones currently in development  – can help us ensure that there is enough clean water in the world. 

 
[1] OECD forecasts that world middle class population will rise to 4.9 billion in 2030 from 1.8 billion in 2009
[2] Inkwood Research, 2017
[3] US Environmental Protection Agency
[4] Water demand management strategies for water-scarce cities: The case of Spain, 2018, C.Tojada, F.Gonzalez-Gomez, A.K.Biswas, et al

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Mega

Mega seeks to energise and enrich the debate over how to create a better-functioning economy and society.

Megatrends are the powerful socio-economic, environmental and technological forces that shape our planet. The digitisation of the economy, the rapid expansion of cities and the depletion of the Earth’s natural resources are just some of the structural trends transforming the way countries are governed, companies are run and people live their lives.

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