Singapore
water...
Makes global waves
Once a national vulnerability, water shortage steadily heads
for a solution. BBC
May 7, 2008
By
Jorn Madslien
Water shortages are making waves all over the world, with
supplies increasingly seen as an issue of national security.
In Singapore, they have boiled it down to economics.
Singapore's water shortages have always posed a major challenge.
"Although
we're on the equator and we've got lots of rain, we have
nowhere to naturally store water," explains Khoo Teng
Chye, chief executive of the city-state's Public Utilities
Board. "We have no groundwater."
For
years, water has been imported through three pipelines from
neighbouring Malaysia - an expensive and geopolitically
troublesome solution that has long irked the Singaporean
government.
The
issue is becoming increasingly acute ahead of the expiry
of two long-term supply deals that guarantee deliveries
of Malaysian water for less than one cent per 1,000 gallons
- some until 2011, some until 2061.
"The main Malaysian demand has been for a much higher
price of water, which has varied from 15 to 20 times the
current price," observes Cecilia Tortajada in her report
Water Management in Singapore*.
Breakthrough
So Singapore
has set out to find alternative ways to provide its 4.4
million people with 1.36 billion litres of clean water a
day.
As a
first step, a string of massive reservoirs are being constructed
to "harvest as much rain as possible", so that
eventually, some two-thirds of the island's land surface
will be under water, up from about half today, Mr Khoo explains.
In addition,
desalination plants that turn salt water into drinking water
provide 10% of Singapore's current needs.
But
the real breakthrough has come from what Mr Khoo describes
as NEWater, produced in water reclamation plants from so-called
"used" water.
"We use the terminology 'used water' rather than sewage
to create the understanding that water is a resource,"
says Mr Khoo with a grin.
The
plants use advanced microfiltration or ultrafiltration,
reverse osmosis membranes and ultraviolet technology to
produce water that is almost as clean as the distilled variety,
according to Mr Khoo.
Water
for industrial use is transported in a separate pipe from
Singapore's drinking water. The rest is mixed in with rainwater
in the reservoirs.
"Singapore
has successfully managed to find the right balances between
water quantity and water quality considerations; water supply
and water demand management... [and] strategic national
interest and economic efficiency," according to Ms
Tortajada.
Cheaper water
Five
years ago, it cost up to S$3.00 (US$2.20) to produce a cubic
metre of water in the existing desalination systems, Mr
Khoo says.
Three
years ago, the introduction of new technology on a vast
scale reduced the cost to under a dollar.
NEWater
technology pushes costs much lower, so that now the cost
of one cubic metre of water has been pushed down to 30 cents,
which makes it all much more cost-effective.
Singapore's
NEWater is produced in four plants that currently provide
15% of Singapore's needs.
A fifth
plant is under construction. In three or four years, when
they are all scaled up, they should provide 30% of the water
needed in Singapore, Mr Khoo predicts.
Currently,
each drop of water is used twice, which Mr Khoo refers to
as "50% efficiency", though the target is 70%.
To achieve
this, Singapore is using universally available technology,
along with a rather big bundle of money.
Some
US$3.5bn has been invested in the last five years, and a
further US$3.5bn will be invested in the next five years.
"As
we've built bigger and bigger plants, the cost per unit
has come down dramatically," Mr Khoo says - partly
thanks to economies of scale, but also because more clever
ways of employing technology have been discovered.
"Our
investment in water has created an industry in Singapore,"
Mr Khoo says. "It's a knowledge industry. We hire people
from all over the world."
Global
solutions
Last
month, Singapore won the Environmental Contribution of the
Year prize at the Global Water Awards 2008.
"Singapore
has led the world in water re-use," according to Christopher
Gasson, publisher of the journal Global Water Intelligence.
"Other
countries will surely follow its footprints."
"Water
re-use and desalination are two key solutions for cities
looking to manage their water supply in a sustainable way,"
observes Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, praising
Singapore's efforts.
Next
month, Singapore International Water Week aims to bring
together water industry officials and policymakers to make
the search for solutions a global effort.
"We
have solved our problems," insists Mr Khoo.
"Now
we want to create a platform where people from all over
the world can share the solutions."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7371463.stm