Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- PART I DRAWING LESSONS FROM SINGAPORE'S ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNEY
- PART II ACHIEVING A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT
- PART III CLOSING THE WATER LOOP
- 5 Ensuring Water Sustainability: The Supply Side
- 6 Ensuring Water Sustainability: Water Demand Management
- 7 Managing Used Water
- 8 From Flood Prevention and Flood Management to ABC Waters
- PART IV APPLYING ECONOMICS AND WORKING WITH THE COMMUNITY
- PART V LOOKING AHEAD TO FUTURE CHALLENGES
- APPENDICES
- Notes
- Glossary
- Index
- About the Authors
7 - Managing Used Water
from PART III - CLOSING THE WATER LOOP
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- PART I DRAWING LESSONS FROM SINGAPORE'S ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNEY
- PART II ACHIEVING A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT
- PART III CLOSING THE WATER LOOP
- 5 Ensuring Water Sustainability: The Supply Side
- 6 Ensuring Water Sustainability: Water Demand Management
- 7 Managing Used Water
- 8 From Flood Prevention and Flood Management to ABC Waters
- PART IV APPLYING ECONOMICS AND WORKING WITH THE COMMUNITY
- PART V LOOKING AHEAD TO FUTURE CHALLENGES
- APPENDICES
- Notes
- Glossary
- Index
- About the Authors
Summary
Access to sanitation is deeply connected to virtually all the Millennium Development Goals, in particular those involving the environment, education, gender equality and the reduction of child mortality and poverty.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon at the launch of the International Year of Sanitation, November 2007Singapore's journey in used water management started during the early twentieth century when the country was faced with the urgent need to tackle its hygiene and sanitation problems — issues brought about by rapid population growth in its tropical environment and concerns over public health.
After independence in 1965, the government realized that the development of a world-class used water management system was crucial not only in improving the quality of life for its people but also in sustaining the economic growth of the country. A comprehensive Sewerage Master Plan was thus developed and the necessary investments made to extend the used water infrastructure so that 100 per cent of the population would have access to modern sanitation.
Increasing water demand has also necessitated reclaiming water from used water to augment water supply. Singapore's fully sewered system offered the opportunity for large-scale used water recycling and water reclamation to be carried out. Recent breakthroughs allowed for the development of more advanced water reclamation facilities, namely, the NEWater factories, which are located adjacent to the Water Reclamation Plants (WRPs). These were formerly known as Sewage Treatment Works but they were renamed WRPs in 2001 to reinforce the idea that used water is a resource to be reclaimed. The NEWater factories receive the treated used water effluent and treat (reclaim) it further using advanced membrane technology. The resulting product is high-grade water known as NEWater, which is channelled for both direct non-potable and indirect potable uses. Chapter 5 elaborates on NEWater.
This chapter provides insights into how the management of used water in Singapore evolved over the years and the key considerations behind the government's decisions in adopting various solutions as the country progressed from a simple fishing village to one which was rapidly industrializing, and eventually to the modern, cosmopolitan city of today.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Clean, Green and BlueSingapore's Journey Towards Environmental and Water Sustainability, pp. 177 - 200Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2008