Title: Water Cycle Strategies An integrated approach
1Water Cycle Strategies An integrated approach?
- Dr Jon Hillman, Scott Wilson
- Paul Hunt, Sustainable Development Delivery Team,
Environment Agency - Rob Morris, Strategic Planning Engineer, Anglian
Water Services Ltd - Mike Burrell, Planning Policy Team Leader,
Norwich City Council
2Background
- 3 million new houses will be built by 2020
(Housing Green Paper, CLG (2007)) - Raw water resources, treatment distribution
- Wastewater collection, treatment discharges
(waterbody physical chemical capacity) - Extreme events fluvial pluvial
- Water environmental impacts
- Energy use sustainabilty
- Location timing of building programme location
timing of water planning infrastructure
3Potential WCS benefits
- a method for determining when and where
sustainable water infrastructure is needed - to ensure planning makes best use of
environmental capacity and opportunities, and
adapts to constraints - a way for stakeholders to interact, preventing
any unexpected obstacles to growth - process that brings all available knowledge and
information together to help make better, more
integrated, risk based planning decisions
4Where do WCS fit in?
5Three stages
6Delivery mechanisms timelines
7Source Environment Agency, (2008)
8Water Resources and Water Supply
- Demands
- Existing Water Resources
- Future WR schemes
- Water Efficiency
- Costings
9Water Quality and Wastewater
- Wastewater Treatment Capacity
- Sewer Network Capacity
- River Quality Standards
- WFD
- Watercourse capacity (flood risk)
10Is WwTW assessment detailed enough? e.g.
phosphorus
11Suggested amendments
Yes
Yes
12P have we got the mix correct?
13P contribution and seasonality of point and
diffuse sources
River flow
River flow
Contribution to water column concentration
(Mainstone et al. 2000)
14Flood Risk to development and Flood Risk
Management
- Fluvial flooding
- Tidal flooding
- Other flooding sources e.g. DG5 Register
- SUDS
- Climate Change
15PATHWAY Overland flow
PATHWAY Overland flow
PATHWAY Overland flow from adjacent areas
16Conclusions challenges
- Timescales
- Integration with AMP, WRP, WFD RBMP (POMS)
- Provision of data
- Key stakeholders need to be active from brief to
completion - Scale
- WCS briefs need to be drafted with water
specialists to ensure a coherent, catchment
orientated approach - For some areas, a Regional Water Cycle approach
may be the way forward
17Thank-youJonathan.Hillman_at_scottwilson.com