wwce 2020 meeting - danva
TRANSCRIPT
WWCE 2020 Meeting
COPENHAGEN, APRIL 2019
2
IWA’S MAIN ACTIVITIES
Communities Publications
Communities of water regulators, cities, utilities
Events Thought leadership
3
IWA STRATEGIC GOALS
1.
AN ENGAGED AND
BALANCED
MEMBERSHIP 3.
A SPACE FOR
PROFESSIONALS
TO EXCHANGE
WATER
KNOWLEDGE
4.
A BRIDGE
BETWEEN
RESEARCH AND
PRACTICE
5.
A SUPPORT TO THE
IMPLEMENTATION
OF SDG's
2.
A SOURCE FOR
LEADING-EDGE
WATER KNOWLEDGE
4
We will have a growing and engaged membership, from all
continents, genders and age groups (in particular YWP’s).
We will bring together the best scientific & practice minds, to tackle
the worlds most pressing water problems – support SDGs
We will be a catalyst for innovation, knowledge and best practice
for the sector – thought leadership
We will create platforms to bridge the chasm between researchers,
innovators & practitioners - accelerate diffusion of innovation
IWA IN 5 YEARS TIME
… A BRIGHT FUTURE
5
We will have a growing and engaged membership, from all
continents, genders and age groups (in particular YWP’s).
We will bring together the best scientific & practice minds, to tackle
the worlds most pressing water problems – support SDGs
We will be a catalyst for innovation, knowledge and best practice
for the sector – thought leadership
We will create platforms to bridge the chasm between researchers,
innovators & practitioners - accelerate diffusion of innovation
IWA IN 5 YEARS TIME
… A BRIGHT FUTURE
IWA will help the water sector navigate
through a period of rapid change
Global Change: Adaptive solutions
Digital Water : IoT and automation
Circular Economy: Resource miners
We want to inspire a smarter approach
Principles for Water Wise Cities
Regenerative Water Services
Water Sensitive Urban Design
Cities & Watershed Stewardship
Water Wise Communities
We need to have a systems
perspective of the water cycle
Surface water
Demand management
Leakage management
Stormwater/ Rainwater
Black water
Groundwater
Grey water
Desalination
Modelling allows us to connect
all flows with productive usesSURFACE WATER/GROUNDWATER/DESALINATION)
WATER SUPPLY
COMM/DOM/IND/USEIRRIGATION
GREYWATER REUSE
WASTEWATER TREATMENT
RECEIVING BODY (SUSRFACE/GROUNDWATER)
RAINWATER/ STORMWATERHARVESTING
POTABLE WATER
RAIN/STORMWATER
GREY WATER
BLACK WATER
KEY
RECLAIMED WATER
It’s ok to optimize at sub-system level
Water
Water Energy
Solid WasteUrban Ecology Building and Urban Form
Transportation
It’s ok to optimize at sub-system level
Water Energy
Solid WasteUrban Ecology Building and Urban Form
Transportation
Flood Mitigation, GW Recharge
GI reduces energy for water
Shading/ Reduce Urban Heat Island
Pollution Reduction Co-digestion (Biogas Production)
Filter/ Reduce Air Pollution
Waste Neutralization
Reduce Energy Demand Carbon
Sequestration
But we need to recognize that we’re dealing with a ‘system of systems’
Urban/Peri UrbanEnergy & Industry
Ecosystems Agriculture
GI reduces energy for water
Flood Mitigation, GW Recharge
Pollution Reduction
Co-digestion (Biogas Production)
Reused Water
Water Efficiencies (+) Carbon
Sequestration
Water Efficiencies (-)
At watershed level also ‘system of systems’
Moving forward – IWA Platform
For knowledge exchange among signatories
Sharing case studies and best practice
Identifying challenges and barriers
Encourage peer to peer learning
Inspire other cities to transition
Partner with IWA to activate actors of change
Who to contact?
Corinne Trommsdorff, [email protected]
30 urban regions endorsed
100+ individuals and companies
3 Partners powering up the initiative:
Arup, CRC for water Sensitive Cities,
Greater Paris Sanitation Authority.
Principles for Water Wise Cities
Digital Disrupters
COGNIZANT 20-20 INSIGHTS
Benefits to the water sector
COGNIZANT 20-20 INSIGHTS
combining data from real-time IoT platforms with predictive analytics, data
variables can be monitored, tracked, and analysed to make informed decisions
• Will develop:
• Thought leadership pieces to support IWA members on their
digital water journey (position papers, reports, tech outlooks)
• Catalogue of case studies – principles and characteristics
for successful digitalization
• Will provide opportunities for knowledge exchange
• Integration into events (incl. a Digital Water Summit)
• Products for dissemination and learning (e.g. webinars)
IWA Digital Water Programme
• Water utilities as users of digital water technologies,
• Water technology, and Software & Communication
technology companies as digital solution providers
• Water consultancies as strategic partners for utilities,
• IWA Specialist Groups influencing or being influenced by the
digital water agenda,
• Research and network institutes with expertise on the
development of smart solutions for water utilities.
DWP Steering Committee
Digital additions to the Source
(Aug 2018)
IWA World Water
Congress
(Sep 2018)
Digital Water
Programme
(Dec 2018)
Active DWP Steering
Committee
(Feb 2019)
Digital Water
whitepaper
(ongoing)
DWP Journey So far
Active Steering Committee
meetings every 2 months
Webinar #1
(May 2019)
Launch whitepaper,
workshop, @ LET
(Jun 2019)
Webinar #2
(Jun 2019)
Workshops @ WDCE
(Dec 2019)
Digital Water Summit
(2020)
DWP Moving forward
• Contribute towards whitepaper series, technology
outlooks, case study collection, etc
• Provide ideas welcome for blogs, videos, webinars
• Lead, participate, and contribute to major digital water
workshops, forums at events e.g. WWCE 2020
DWP Needs your contribution
Join discussion:
iwa-connect.org/group/digital-water/
Katharine Cross
Raül Glotzbach
Source: Cambi
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100,000
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1996
1998
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2002
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2008
2010
2012
/3
cumulative 37 projects
cumulative capacity tds/year
2000 2006 2012/13
Cumulative 37 projects
Cumulative capacity tds/yr
200,000
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600,000
800,000
Haug, R.T., Stuckey, D.C., Gossett, I.M., McCarty, P.I. (1978)
Spreading innovation takes time
27
Universities, innovative
technology providers Water Utilities
IWA can help bridge the chasm?
Bridging
the chasm
Our Specialist Groups will be the catalysis
Water sector self-hypnotizes itself to change through dialogue and data
Opinion leaders
Researchers
Practitioners
Tech providers
IWA Innovators Platform:
the journey so far
IWA World Water Congress
(Sep 2018)
Innovators Platform
(Nov 2018)
Identification of events
(Dec 2018)
Guidance paper – working with
YWPs (ongoing)
30
Innovators Platform:planned engagement pathways
Series of events that bring
innovators from supply (e.g. tech.
companies/researchers) to demand
(e.g. water utilities)
An online platform that provides
curated information on innovation
Highlighting and promoting innovation
from IWA specialist groups
Curated online platform on
water innovation
Innovators events
Within IWA Events
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New FORMATS for events
• Mobile sessions – facilitator takes group through exhibition,
focusing on technology for specific issues (e.g. nutrient recovery)
• Clinics – end users pose their problems to a solution provider
• Speed dating, hack-a-thons, fireside chat/sofa, world Café
• Thinking about how to include gamification & prizes
Innovators PlatformMoving forwards
Set-up steering
committee
(Apr 2019)
Innovator platform
events (Sep-Oct 2019)
Forum @ Water and
Development Congress
(Dec 2019)
Innovator platform
events (2020)
Online platform
(2019/2020)
Wastewater is big on the agenda
85% of wastewater is NOT treated
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Nu
mb
er
of
Tre
atm
en
t P
lan
ts
Region
Business (e.g., hotel,airport)
Hospital
Military
School
Municipal/Township
Community-level
(Source: Murray & Drechsel, 2011)
Having treatment plants doesn't
mean they work and do their job!
Next 20 years golden age for wastewater
and sanitation - opportunities to “leapfrog”
Innovations resulting in:
• Smaller plant footprint
• Energy savings (up-to 50%)
• Improved CAPEX and OPEX
• Improved effluent quality, resource recovery etc.
Granular Sludge Anammox Thermal Hydrolysis Adv. Control
https://www.flickr.com/photos/sharadaprasad/
What happens when the pit is full?
6.2.1 – safe managed sanitation
SANITATION SERVICE CHAIN
FSM is a neglected issue with limited data
Show me the money - financing the SDG’s
$114 billion/ year required to
deliver safely managed WASH
$18 billion/year is approx.
current spending
Major finance gap
Sanitation accounts for 60%
of estimated costs
How do we handle the funding gap?
Capital Maintenance
Financial cost
Operations and Maintenance
Investment Costs Tariffs
Transfers
Taxes
Financing Gap
C O S T S F U N D I N G REPAYABLE FINANCING
Repayments
Commercial Finance
Concessional Finance
www.iwa-network.org/publications/an-avoidable-crisis-wash-human-resource/
LACK OF DATA
800k needed in 10 countries for universal coverage(80% in sanitation)
POOR ACCESS
Legacy of WWCE 2020
44
Copenhagen declaration on ‘livable cities’
High level utilities summit concluding in declaration
Launch of ‘water-wise cities’ platform
Celebration of new signatories
IWA declaration on SDGs
Showcase of IWA members contribution to SDG’s
Roadmap for contributions for remaining 10 years
Declaration of IWA commitment to SDG
Legacy of WWCE 2020
45
IWA a major influencer in Digital Water
First major Digital Water Utility Summit
Digital Maturity Model developed for utilities
Several white papers published and launched
IWA innovation platform open for business
Launch of IWA innovators platform
Launch of IWA’s ‘innovators’ toolkit
Mobile sessions, clinics, speed dating
Legacy of WWCE 2020
DANISHMEMBERSHIP
Legacy of WWCE 2020