Title: Sandra Baynes, BES, MA
1Barriers to Grey Water Recycling
May, 2002
- Presented by
- Sandra Baynes, BES, MA
- Senior Researcher
2Outline
- Definitions
- Research
- Barriers
- Recommendations
3Greywater Definitions
- light grey - bathroom sink shower - dark grey
- kitchen sink - black water - includes
toilets - recycled water is used for toilet
flushing and depending on treatment, sinks
showers - used for irrigation
4Grey-Water Systems (not to be confused with grey
water recycling)
- Class 2 sewage system only used for treatment
and disposal of grey water - not be constructed where the daily design grey
water flow to the system exceeds 1000L per day - Sewage Inspection Permit must be completed prior
to construction of the system - Rural residents are very keen on grey water
systems and composting toilets - see Health Unit or MOE for more information
5Grey-Water Pit
6Water Statistics
- average Canadian uses 326 l/p/d72 g/p/d of
water - Toronto Healthy House (THH) uses 40 l/p/d9/g/p/d
Canada 326 l/p/d
THH 40/l/p/d
7Impacts of Grey Water Reuse
26 reduction in water demand via toilet flushing
approximately 30 to 70 wastewater captured for
reuse
AWWA Research Foundation - Residential End Use of
Water Data
8Water ReUse Benefits
- lessens the impact on municipal supply, private
wells and wastewater treatment - reduces water bills
- demonstrates environmental stewardship
9Grey Water Research
- External Research Projects
- - grey water planters - Ontario
- - monitoring and control of on-site wastewater
treatment - Nova Scotia - Multi-Residential Housing
- - Quayside Village CoHousing, Vancouver BC
- - Conservation Coop, Ottawa ON (concluded)
- Single Family
- Toronto Healthy House
10Conservation Co-op Ottawa, Ontario
11Conservation Co-op
- 84 unit facility
- downtown Ottawa
- environmental philosophy
- 8 units dual plumbed
- light grey system
- system experienced challenges
- new system -
- system removed February 2002
12Quayside Village CoHousing North Vancouver, BC
13Quayside Village CoHousingVancouver, BC
- 19 unit multi-residential cooperative
- dual plumbed
- - Waterloo Biofilter
- - collects water for toilet reuse (dark grey)
- - OM trial January 2002
- - operational
14(No Transcript)
15Quayside Village CoHousing Vancouver,
BC Waterloo Biofilter
16Interior of Waterloo Biofilter showing
distribution nozzle and foam medium
17Treated Water Storage Tank
The polyethylene storage tank has a capacity of
1500 litres - contains a submersible pump
capable of 40 gals (180 litres) a minute delivery.
18 19Toronto Healthy House
- 1,700 square foot, semi-detached, three-bedroom
family dwelling 4 floors of living space on a
vacant (infill) lot in the Riverdale area of
Metropolitan Toronto, Ontario - off-grid, self-sufficient, water-efficient
fixtures - Rainwater collected, filtered, purified stored
for drinking washing. Recycled for use in the
showers, washing machine or
toilets. - affordable, total annual operating costs expected
to be under 300. - biological monitoring underway
- now connected to hydro for computer operation
- and sells back surplus energy from solar power.
20Grey Water Socio-Economic Barriers
- Water Agencies/Government
- Financial
- Board of Health/MOE
- Resident Support
- Maintenance
21Water Agencies - Government Barriers
- few demonstration sites in Canada
- unfamiliar with technology
- reluctant to authorize permits
- prefer revenues for water supply and treatment
- costs for water services fixed
- billing changes
22Legislation
- Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality
(Health Canada, 1996) - Guidelines for Canadian Recreational Water
Quality (Health and Welfare Canada, 1992) - National Plumbing Code of Canada
(National Research Council Canada)
23Ontario/National Plumbing Code
- A non-potable water system shall not be
connected to a potatble water system. 7.1.1,
1995 - This effectively prohibits water reuse.
- Exception experimental purposes
24Financial Barriers
- not mass produced, systems costs are high in
multi-res and single family applications - technology changing
- generally cost prohibitive where municipal
service exist - billing may not be adjusted at wastewater side -
sewer surcharge
25Costs to Consider
- Payback period for system
- Maintenance
- Repair
- Operations Chlorine, Electrical, Testing
- Operator Education and Turnover
- Lending Mortgage Costs
- Insurance Costs
26Savings Barriers
- small scale projects do not result in significant
savings - Quayside estimates an 800 CDN/355 GBP savings
cost of operation - costs for testing and maintenance outweigh
savings - urban municipal costs too low
- unmetered areas do not realize water savings
27Resident Barriers
- presently do not see financial savings in urban
cases - lifestyle change
- multi-res may not have trained maintenance staff
- homeowners commitment to upkeep
- costs for maintenance time and repair a concern
- health concerns with unfamiliar technology
- partial unit project not cost-effective
- resident turnover
28Health Unit Barriers
- technology not proven
- hesitant to take risks to authorize permit
- needs ongoing testing -
29Maintenance Barriers
- each system currently different
- delegation of tasks who does what? when?
- every time shut off, must be cleaned out
- training difficult with residential turnover
- routine testing,
- time commitment
- not many familiar with system Royal Roads
Onsite Wastewater Training System or University
of Guelph
30Recommendations
- more demonstration projects with proven results
- develop guidelines and protocols for acceptance
of onsite water and sewage systems - reward healthy housing in both council policy and
implementation bylaws - Provincial MOE and MMAH review own policies,
regulations, legislation - widely distribute proven results to
municipalities - develop demonstration project with several
households/units instead of just one.
31Recommendations (continued)
- reduce system costs to encourage more new
homeowners to request systems - demonstrate newer technologies
- make maintenance simple or hire a contractor
(similar to a pool maintenance contractor) - annual maintenance should be done by a licensed
contractor - increase public education for general public,
local councils and building officials - showing
environmental stewardship, water savings etc.
32More Information
- email sbaynes_at_cmhc-schl.gc.ca
- http//www.cmhc.ca
- articles, reports on CMHC Website
- Research Highlights
- About Your House series
- water page
-