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  • Main externalities associated with wastewater recycling - Existing study details

    Author(s)
    Daniels, Peter
    Porter, Madeleine
    Bodsworth, Prue
    Coleman, Susan
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Daniels, Peter L.
    Year published
    2009
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    This dataset is one of seven datasets that analyses a water supply option in terms of externalities (positive and negative effects that are not taken into account directly in market-place transactions). The water service option covered in this dataset is wastewater recycling, which involves: the harvesting of wastewater from sewage reticulation; transfer to a wastewater treatment plant; treatment; and distribution for specific uses that are dependent on water quality, control measures and available transportation infrastructure. Related datasets cover stormwater harvesting, desalination, dams, groundwater, greywater, and ...
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    This dataset is one of seven datasets that analyses a water supply option in terms of externalities (positive and negative effects that are not taken into account directly in market-place transactions). The water service option covered in this dataset is wastewater recycling, which involves: the harvesting of wastewater from sewage reticulation; transfer to a wastewater treatment plant; treatment; and distribution for specific uses that are dependent on water quality, control measures and available transportation infrastructure. Related datasets cover stormwater harvesting, desalination, dams, groundwater, greywater, and rainwater tanks. Each dataset identifies the social, environmental and economic impacts associated with the option in general and for each stage in its life cycle. Stages generally comprise the collection, storage, treatment, distribution of water and, finally, the decommissioning of the water supply option. The externalities were identified by an extensive survey of existing research and literature in water-related studies and through technical analysis of the option characteristics and technologies. The literature is vast and, at times, contradictory. The data is intended to provide an overview of the externalities that must be considered in the externality evaluation process, and does not provide not definitive values for option impacts as externality impacts will be site-specific.
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    Publisher URI
    https://griffith.edu.au/
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.4225/01/513D5CA01E085
    Copyright Statement
    Copyright is held by the creator, unless otherwise stated.
    Item Access Status
    Open Access. Files available via Data Link.
    Note
    This activity is a sub-project of the UWSRA project on Evaluation Methods for Evidence-based Total Water Cycle Management and Planning. The South East Queensland Regional Plan required the development of sub-regional and local government Total Water Cycle Management (TWCM) plans by July 2012. These had to consider the capture and use of local water supply sources as well as potential environmental implications. Robust and rigorous evaluation of the costs and benefits of these plans to support decision making is a challenge. Because the urban water cycle interacts in many ways with related flows of nutrients, energy and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, there are wide repercussions of water cycle management. The aim of the overall project is to provide guidance on selected systems analysis methods for the quantitative assessment of water supply options. The sub-project investigated how a wide range of environmental impacts of options could be quantified and normalised, and collated reporting from the international literature on the value of externalities (positive and negative effects that are not taken into account directly in market-place transactions).
    Subject
    Environment and Resource Economics
    Ecological Economics
    total water cycle management
    externalities
    cost-benefit analysis
    valuation techniques
    planning
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/395783
    Data link
    https://research-storage.griffith.edu.au/owncloud/index.php/s/IOsJqfu43Urjjc1
    Collection
    • Research data

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