Megatrends Channel Water/Wastewater's Future
Megatrends Channel Water/Wastewater's Future
Demand for greater efficiency and total-quality management is megatrend 6. Richardson describes it as “doing more with less—looking for every opportunity for automation, in real-time.” To him, that means full-time use of instrumentation and automation. Security issues lend themselves to instrumentation and automation, he adds.
Richardson’s megatrend 7 is total water-resource management and water reuse. West calls that combination “the big picture of water-supply management.” It will involve “looking at everything from a watershed approach—the highest quality water for the highest quality use,” Richardson says. The idea here involves “not just quality, but also quantity,” he explains. That involves finding the appropriate economic approach to treating not just drinking water but also wastewater.
From a sustainable-watershed approach, megatrend 7 “could lead to reconsideration of how water and wastewater should be regulated in the United States,” he observes. For example, in the western United States, “there could be a merging of the riparian-rights doctrine with the allocated-rights doctrine, as people look to secure water supplies.” Richardson notes that states are already beginning to look at the inventory of who has access and rights, “to make sure there is enough secure supply in the future.”
Megatrend 8 involves work environment change. “There is a huge brain drain, because of baby boomers retiring. By 2010, you will have 67 percent of the workforce ready to retire,” Richardson says.” So utilities are seeking ways to capture intellectual capital, he explains. Besides the obvious hiring of younger staff, other ways include artificial intelligence or automation.
Anthropogenic climate change muscles its way in as megatrend 9. “You need to be giving forethought,” he advises. “People in industry are very concerned about how to plan.”
The final megatrend reaches into consumers’ wallets. “Rates for water and wastewater treatment are going to have to rise,” Richardson asserts. “What will end up happening is that rates may be based on value vs. just cost of service.” That also means years-, if not decades-long cost subsidies may become relics. But recouping the full cost of services might not be possible in all communities, suggests West, who is also director of technical services for Spartanburg (South Carolina) Water ( www.sws-sssd.org), a municipal water-and-wastewater function.
C. Kenna Amos , ckamosjr@earthlink.net, is an Automation World Contributing Editor.
Greeley and Hansen
www.greely-hansen.com
Water Environment Federation
www.wef.org
Spartanburg Water
www.sws-sssd.org
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