Drinking Water

Sustainable urban water supply in south India : Desalination, efficiency improvement, or rainwater harvesting?

The authors propose a framework that makes it possible to evaluate a wider range of centralized and decentralized policies for urban water supply than previously considered.

Author : Lawrence Goulder, Steven Gorelick, Veena Srinivasan

Abstract:

Indian mega-cities face severe water supply problems due to factors ranging from growing population to high municipal pipe leakage rates; no Indian city provides 24 /7 water supply. Current approaches to addressing the problem have been “utility centric”, overlooking the significance of decentralized activities by consumers, groundwater extraction via private wells and aquifer recharge by rainwater harvesting.

 The framework was used to simulate water supply and demand in a simulation model of Chennai, India. 

Three very different policies: Supply Augmentation, Efficiency Improvement, and Rainwater Harvesting were evaluated using the model. The model results showed that none of the three policies perfectly satisfied our criteria of efficiency, reliability, equity, financial viability and revenue generation. Instead, a combination of Rainwater Harvesting and Efficiency Improvement best meets these criteria.  

 

2009WR008698.pdf
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