A GHG Metric Methodology to Assess Onsite Buildings Non-Potable Water System for Outdoor Landscape Use
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Research Background
1.2. Healthcare Context for Water Conservation
1.3. The Context of the Water Energy Nexus in Abu Dhabi
1.4. Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions and Decarbonization
1.5. Gaps Analysis Leading to New Body of Knowledge
1.6. Original and Significant Contribution to New Body of Knowledge
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. A Mixed Method Research
2.2. Medical facility case study (MFCS) Water System Description
2.3. MFCS Energy and GHG Impact Boundaries
2.4. MFCS Energy Impact Calculation Method
2.4.1. Scope Two
2.4.2. Scope Three
2.4.3. Scope Two and Three Combined
2.5. MFCS GHG Impact Calculation Method
Calculation Process for Scope Two and Scope Three
2.6. MFCS Calculation Evaluation against Alternative Scenarios (S2 and PRP S3)
2.7. MFCS 2017 EMCS Records
2.7.1. Baseline Case Scenario Two (S2)
2.7.2. Proposed Research Project Scenario Three (PRP S3)
2.8. MFCS Financial Impact Calculation Method
Discounted Cash Flow Method Analysis
3. Anticipated Results
3.1. MFCS Water System Energy Impact
3.2. MFCS Environmental Impact calculation
3.3. MFCS Financial Impact Calculation
4. Discussion
4.1. Contributions from the GHG Metric Methodology for Onsite Non-Potable Water Systems
- First, a mixture of condensate water and desalinated water (MFCS scenario);
- Second, desalinated water (Baseline Scenario 2, S2);
- Third, a case for additional non-potable water sources used as makeup water to the main water source (condensate water) such as fire sprinkler pump test water and RORW (Scenario 3, PRP S3).
4.2. Contributions and Target Audience
4.3. Research Limitations
4.3.1. Estimation of Cost and GHG Calculations
4.3.2. Energy Calculations
4.4. Recommendations
- A water balance to allow for the comparison of an onsite system as opposed to the use of municipal desalinated potable water. The water consumption records are to be collected and analyzed daily via sub flow meters connected to the EMCS. Additionally, these water data are to be compared with water bills to cross check the accuracy of the collected data and establish cost savings. This action research benefit is to help provide an account for the effect of non-potable water on landscape for water efficiency and water deficit offset feasibility analysis [6,28,51,52].
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AC CW | Air Conditioning condensate water |
AD | Abu Dhabi |
ADM | Abu Dhabi Municipality |
AED | Emirati Dirham |
D.Eng | Doctorate in Engineering |
EAD | Abu Dhabi- Environment Agency |
EMCS | Energy Monitoring and Control System |
GHG | Greenhouse gas |
IPCC | Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change |
LI | Landscape Irrigation |
MED | Multi Effect Distillers |
MFCS | Medical Facility Case Study |
MSF | Multistage flash |
RO | Reverse Osmosis |
S2 | Baseline case scenario 2 |
PRP S3 | Proposed research project Scenario 3 |
TCR | The Climate Registry |
TSE | Treated Sewage Effluent |
UAE | United Arab Emirates |
WF | Water feature |
WFs | Water features |
Appendix A. Methodology
- 0.32 kWh/m3 accounts for ozone generation, drying of the feed gas cooling of the ozone generator, injection units and instrumentation control [55]
Input Summary | Mean Average | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Physical characteristics | |||||
Outdoor elements | WFs | LI | |||
Area (m2) | 3289 | 36,310 | |||
2. Operational parameters | |||||
Pumps (h/day) | 11.7 | 13 | |||
Backwash period (No per month)—assumption | 4 | n/a | |||
Backwash duration (mins)—assumption | 15 | n/a | |||
Refill period (years) | 0.5 | n/a | |||
3. Environmental Conditions | |||||
Season (length) in days | 351 (14 days for maintenance) | 365 (2017); 366 (2016) | |||
Rainfall (mm) average per month) | 3.80 mm (November to April); 0 mm (May to October); (SCAD, 2017) | ||||
Evaporation (mm) average per month | 215 mm (November to April); 0 mm (December to March); (SCAD, 2017) | ||||
4. Existing Water System Components | |||||
Pump Description | Pump Power (kW) | Pump Flow (m3/h) | Pump Usage per day (%) | WFs | LI |
Number of pumps | |||||
(P1) Pumps Set A | 4 | 17 | 30 | 1 | |
(P1) Pumps Set B | 11 | 64 | 10 | 1 | |
(P1) Pumps Set C | 4 | 17 | 30 | 1 | |
(P1) Pumps Set D | 11 | 64 | 10 | 1 | |
(P2) Pumps Set power | 18.5 | 64 | 100 | - | 1 |
(P2) Pumps Set power | Not known | 10 | 100 | - | 1 |
(P3) WE Pump Set | 7.5 | 45.5 | 100 | 1 | - |
(P5) Pumps Set power | 11 | 63.3 | 100 | - | - |
(P4) Ozone Filter Pump | 5.5 | Not known | 100 | 5 | - |
(P4) Ozone Display Pump | 30 | Not known | 100 | 4 | - |
(P4) Ozone Filter Pump | 2.2 | Not known | 100 | 2 | - |
(P4) Ozone display Pump | 37.5 | Not known | 100 | 1 | - |
(P4) Ozone display Pump | 3.7 | Not known | 100 | 1 | - |
(P4) Ozone display Pump | 11.2 | Not known | 100 | 1 | - |
Ozone Disinfection | 0.31 kWh/m3 [55] | 40.15 kWh/day | - |
Water Product | Five Major Water Use Cycle Segments to Model GHG Emissions at Operations | GHG Protocol Scope [35,42,57,58] | Total GHG Emissions/Sinks in tCO2e | Energy Demand in kWh Per Year | Energy Intensity in kWh/m3 | Volume of Water Used in m3 | GHG Metric for Onsite Non Potable Water Use in (kgCO2e/m3) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Extract and Divert | 2. Place into Storage | 3. Conveyance | 4. Treatment | 5. Distribution | |||||||
Medical Facility Case Study (MFCS) | |||||||||||
Desalinated potable water use onsite as makeup water | These steps are included in the final emission factor generated by EAD [70] | 3 | Equation (14) | Equation (7) | 15.40 [20] | Make up water used onsite monitored by EMCS records | Equation (11) | ||||
Air conditioning condensate water (A/C CW) | No emission other than scope 2 below | 3 | Equation (15) | Nil | Nil | Onsite generated and used and monitored by EMCS records | |||||
38% makeup desalinated water and 62% condensate water (AC CW) for both WFs and LI use | Nil because the condensate water is generated regardless of condensate water recycling or not | Gravity fed into raw water storage tank | AC CW conveyed to treatment plant by pump (P1)- see Figure A1 in Appendix A | AC CW treated to secondary and tertiary treatment for WFs and LI reuse | AC CW distributed to point of delivery onsite to WFs and LI | 2 | Equation (13) | Equation (5) | Equation (6) | Included in scope 3 above | |
Baseline Scenario 2 (S2) | |||||||||||
Desalinated potable water use onsite as makeup water | Included in scope 3 below | Pumped to storage. Refer to Figure A1 in Appendix A | Desalinated water conveyed to treatment plant by pump (P3) | Secondary and tertiary treatment for WFs only | Deasilated water distributed to point of delivery onsite to WFs and LI | 2 | Equation (13) | Equation (5) | Equation (6) | Make up water used onsite monitored by EMCS records | Equation (11) |
Desalinated potable water use | These steps are included in the final emission factor generated by EAD [70] | 3 | Equation (14) | Equation (7) | 15.40 [20] | Included in scope 2 above | |||||
Proposed Research Project Scenario 3 (PRP S3) | |||||||||||
Reverse Osmosis Reject Water (RO RW) | Nil because the reject water is generated regardless of reject water recycling or not | Pumped to raw A/C CW storage tank. Assume a transfer pump consuming 0.11kWh/day (P8) Figure A1 and Table A1 in Appendix A. | Mixed with A/C CW in raw condensate water tanks (no extra power needed) | 3 | Equation (15) | Nil | Nil | Equation (4) in [6] | Equation (11) | ||
2 | Equation (13) | Part of Equation (5) below | Part of Equation (6) below | ||||||||
Food waste Effluent wastewater (FEW) [6] | Dehydrator power (13 kWh per day) [6] | Pumped to storage. Assume a small transfer pump (power unknown) | Mixed with A/C CW in raw condensate water tanks (no extra power needed) [6] | 3 | Equation (15) | Nil | Nil | Estimate (85%-95%) of food weight [6] | |||
2 | Equation (13) | Part of Equation (5) below | Part of Equation (6) below | ||||||||
Air conditioning condensate water (A/C CW) | Nil because the condensate water is generated regardless of condensate water recycling or not | Gravity fed into raw water storage tank | AC CW conveyed to treatment plant by pump (P1) Figure A1 and Table A1 in Appendix A | AC CW treated to secondary and tertiary treatment for WFs and LI | AC CW distributed to point of delivery onsite for WFs and LI use | 2 | Equation (13) | Equation (5) | Equation (6) | Onsite generated used and monitored by EMCS records | |
No emission other than scope 2 above | 3 | Equation (15) | Nil | Nil | Onsite generated monitored by EMCS records | ||||||
Fire Sprinkler Pump Test Water (FSPTW) | Nil because the water is used for testing the fire pumps regardless of fire sprinkler pump test water recycling or not. | Conveyed to storage through existing pump | Mixed with A/C CW in raw condensate water tanks (no extra power needed) | 3 | Equation (15) | Nil | Nil | Equation (1) in [6] Equation (2) in [6] Equation (3) in [6] |
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Description | MSF | MED | RO |
---|---|---|---|
Water cost production (USD/m3) | 1.10–1.25 | 0.75–0.85 | 0.68–0.82 |
Energy use (kWh/m3) | 15.40 | 7.5 | 4–7 |
Volume of saline feed water per m3 of fresh water | 4 | 3 | 2–2.5 |
Abu Dhabi Water Supply | Desalination Technique Used | Water Production Share by Company |
---|---|---|
AMPC | MSF | 2% |
TAPCO | MSF | 18% |
GTTPC | MSF + MDF | 10% |
ECPC | MSF | 6% |
Existing Standards Related to Water and Energy Carbon Footprint Management | Scope | Address Both Energy Intensity and Water Reduction for Onsite Non-Potable Water Systems? (Yes or No) |
---|---|---|
International Standard Organization (ISO), 14046: 2016 Environmental management Water Footprint Principles, requirements and guidelines [47] | Applicable to products, processes and organizations and based on lifecycle assessments (LCA’s) to accurately quantify the water used, in a verifiable and consistent manner. | No. It addresses Water Consumption Reduction only. |
ISO 50001:2017 Energy management systems. Requirements with guidance for use [48] | ISO 50001 requires the demonstration of continual improvement through the reduction in utilization of energy. | No. It does address all energy systems of an organization including heating boilers and sanitary facilities. |
Water Usage Effectiveness (WUE) [46] | A metric to quantify water required for operating and cooling equipment for cloud computing industries and data centers. | No. It addresses Water Consumption Reduction only for specific industries. |
Embedded Resource Accounting (ERA) [49] | It generalizes ecological, water, and carbon footprint methods by accounting for the net direct and indirect impacts of processes on arbitrarily defined resource stocks. | No. It is a generalized footprint methodology, which is used to derive footprints including water footprint [46]. |
Water Energy Greenhouse Gas Metric (WEG) [35] | This establishes a series of WEG intensity metrics to enable water suppliers and consumers in Southern California to assess the GHG impact of their urban and agricultural water products. | No. The recycled water treatment and distribution and wastewater collection, treatment, and disposal are outside the scope of the WEG Guidance. The operational boundary ends at point-of delivery, or end-of-pipe. |
GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope three) Accounting & Reporting Standard [50] | The Scope Three Standard is the method to account for emissions from 15 categories of scope three activities (All other non-scope two indirect anthropogenic GHG emissions that occur in the value chain), both upstream and downstream of their operations. Unlike scope 1 and 2, scope three is not subject to verification by a third party. | No. Onsite non-potable water supply and water recycling GHG emissions are not defined. |
Literature Review | Method for Calculating Pump Energy Intensity | Water End-Use |
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▪ [67] ▪ [66] | ▪ Pump Input Power (kW) ▪ Pump Flow rate in cubic meter per hour (m3/h) ▪ Pump Start-up (kWh/start-up) ▪ Number of start-up operations (start-up/day) ▪ Power rate of standby mode (kW) ▪ Standby mode (hours/day) ▪ Rainwater consumption (m3) | Rainwater reuse for toilet flushing and laundry supply in single-story detached house |
▪ [68] | ▪ Volume pumped during constant flow operation (m3) ▪ Volume pumped during start-up (m3) ▪ Start-up energy factor (%) ▪ Motor pump power rating (kW) for efficiency calculation ▪ Motor input power (kW) for efficiency calculation ▪ Pump capacity (m3/h) | Rainwater reuse for toilet flushing in office building |
▪ [65] ▪ [64] | ▪ Liquid density in kilogram per cubic meter (kg/m3) ▪ Gravitation acceleration in meter per second squared (m/s2) ▪ Total head (m) ▪ Flow Rate in cubic meter per second (m3/s) ▪ Motor efficiency (%) ▪ Pump efficiency (%) | Rainwater reuse for single family one-story house |
Calculation adapted from Forrest and Williams [61] and Gallion et al. [62] Equations (1)–(5) in Seguela et al. [51] | ▪ Electricity input (kWh) (Equation (5)): - Pump power (kW) - Use frequency (%) - Pumping shut down during maintenance in hours per day and days per year ▪ Total water consumption (m3) which considers: - WFs water precipitation, evaporation, backflush and refill (Equations (1)–(4)) | Water features (WFs) |
Kay and Hatcho [60] for Equations (6)–(9) in Seguela et al. [51]; Conway and Rothausen [63] for Equation (7) (ibid.) | ▪ Peak power demand (kW) (Equation (6)) - Acceleration of gravity (9.81 m/s2) - Pump discharge (m3/s) - Pressure/head (m) - Pumping plant efficiency (%) ▪ Overall seasonal energy demand (kWh) (Equation (7)) - Volume of water (m3) - Pressure/head (m) - Water density (367 = 3600 (s/h) ÷ 9.81 (m/s2) - Pumping plant efficiency (%) ▪ Average daily hours (kWh): (Equation (8)) - Overall seasonal energy demand (kWh) - Crop duration (days) - Pump power (kW) ▪ Energy demand per day (kWh): (Equation (9)) - Peak power demand (kW) - Maximum daily pumping hours | Landscape irrigation (LI) |
MFCS Scenario 1 | Baseline Case Scenario 2 (S2) | Proposed Research Project Scenario 3 (PRP S3) | |
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Initial investment (design and construction) | Water tanks, piping, flow meters, pumps, EMCS connection, UV disinfection and Ozone treatment systems. | Pumps, EMCS connection, and ozone disinfection treatment system. | Water tanks, piping, flow meters, pumps, EMCS connection, UV disinfection, and ozone treatment systems. |
Annual landscape maintenance | ▪ Soil conditioner B. | ▪ Soil conditioner B. | |
Annual water system maintenance | ▪ Chlorine; laboratory analysis; tank disinfection. | ▪ Chlorine; ▪ Laboratory analysis. | ▪ Chlorine; ▪ Laboratory analysis; ▪ Tank disinfection; ▪ Chemigation. |
Annual water type consumption | ▪ Combined desalinated and non-potable water sources: WFs: 52% condensate water; 48% makeup water; LI: 72% condensate water; 28% makeup water. | 100% desalinated water consumption: ▪ WF water demand is based on the 2017 EMCS records. ▪ LI water demand is based on ADM [53] standard with no soil improvement. | 100% mixed non-potable water supply (condensate, fire sprinkler pump test water, RO reject water): ▪ WFs demand is based on Seguela et al.’s [28] water demand calculation. ▪ LI water demand is based on demand after soil improvement. |
Additional parameters | ▪ Soil improvement partially implemented; 13 hours (h) run time irrigation controller per day, 10.67 h for the WF system. | ▪ 13 h run time irrigation controller per day; ▪ 10.67 h for the WF system. | ▪ Soil improvement 100% implemented; ▪ 8 h run time irrigation controller per day; ▪ 6 h for the WF system; ▪ Leaks detected and repaired; ▪ Hydraulic review recommendations 100% implemented; ▪ 365 days/year operations for the RORW pump and 1 day operation per year for the fire sprinkler pump test water. |
For all three scenarios | |||
Annual electrical consumption | Based on Seguela et al. [51] calculation method; except for scope three desalinated water use based on 15.40 kWh/m3 [20] | ||
Annual energy tariff | AED 0.21/kWh, equivalent to USD 0.057/kWh [22] | ||
Annual water tariff | The calculation will ignore the water and energy subsidies | AED 8.23/m3 equivalent to USD 2.24/m3 [22] | |
Life span of the project (assumption) | 20 years | ||
UAE interest rate in January 2018 (Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates [72]. | 4.8% | ||
UAE inflation rate in January 2018 [73]. | 2.25% |
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Seguela, G.; Littlewood, J.R.; Karani, G. A GHG Metric Methodology to Assess Onsite Buildings Non-Potable Water System for Outdoor Landscape Use. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10041339
Seguela G, Littlewood JR, Karani G. A GHG Metric Methodology to Assess Onsite Buildings Non-Potable Water System for Outdoor Landscape Use. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(4):1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10041339
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeguela, Geraldine, John R. Littlewood, and George Karani. 2020. "A GHG Metric Methodology to Assess Onsite Buildings Non-Potable Water System for Outdoor Landscape Use" Applied Sciences 10, no. 4: 1339. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10041339