1. Introduction
The operation of water supply systems (WSS) is aimed at providing consumers with water of appropriate quality, in the right amount and under the appropriate pressure [
1,
2,
3]. Increasingly, the activity of water supply companies is based on a preventive strategy consisting of the prevention of failures and crisis situations. The basis of this strategy is a risk assessment based on the detailed identification of hazards and the validation of existing safety measures. This is consistent with the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on Water Safety Plans (WSP) [
4,
5]. Reducing the number of undesirable events increases the safety of water supply to consumers [
1,
3,
6]. Various IT tools are used to support the work of water companies. IT tools for managing WSS can be divided into four groups: Geographic Information System (GIS), Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA), Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and hydraulic models [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23]. The integrated operation of these tools allows detailed information to be obtained that can be used for monitoring the work in real mode and and to archive the obtained data and their subsequent use. Managing the WSS, implemented by an integrated IT system is aimed, inter alia, at visualization of the WSS, determination of the current operating status, optimization and design of the WSS or the location of failures and hidden water leaks [
7,
9,
10,
15]. The risk assessment in the WSS can be performed based on data obtained from IT tools, especially from the hydraulic model, which will allow for supplementing and extending the risk matrix analysis method recommended for WSP [
10,
11,
13,
22,
24,
25,
26].
One of the main difficulties in implementing WSP signaled by the industry is the inability to define risk and the uncertainty in assigning point weights to individual risk factors. The World Health Organization recommends, among others, using a two-parameter risk matrix that presents risk as the product of the probability of occurrence of undesirable events and losses resulting from their occurrence [
4]. It seems that this is the correct approach. However, one should refrain from adopting the point weights of the input parameters subjectively without reference to information obtained from the monitoring system or simulations. Comprehensive risk assessment related to the functioning of the WSS should take into account both the events related to the lack of water supply and water pollution. The developed method focuses on the amount of water. The safety theory does not cover all technical failures, but only those that may pose a threat to human health and life. For this reason, the work focuses on failures of the main pipes near the water treatment plant (WTP), which may result in a long lack of water supply to a large part of consumers. Due to high pressure, large diameters, and hence, a large amount of water flowing out of the pipe during a failure, their effects are significant and difficult to remove. The developed method is based on data on the failures of the WSS and a hydraulic model (Epanet 2.0) that works on the basis of historical data. The Epanet (United States Environmental Protection Agency, Washington D.C., USA) software simulated the effects of failures on the main pipes which was expressed by the number of inhabitants who do not have water as a result of the pressure drop.
Risk maps are widely used in various fields and there is a lot of research on this topic. It is a simple and effective tool that can be used to quickly identify high-risk areas. Most often, the probability of undesirable events and its consequences are taken into account. In the broadly-understood water management, the most common are flood risk maps, which are used in many countries as one of the tools for environmental decisions. An extensive, multi-criteria approach to the assessment of flood risk and the creation of flood risk maps is presented in [
27]. Risk maps in WSS are not widely used, so there is not much research on this topic. This is due to the fact that the WSS management based on IT tools is a relatively new approach, especially in developing countries. The maps can relates risk associated with quantity of supplied water and risk associated with quality of supplied water [
28]. Until now, research on risk maps associated with quality of supplied water have been performed mainly in developing countries, where contaminated water causes many serious diseases. In work [
24], mapping was performed and concentration of fluoride in drinking water was analyzed based on the GIS system. The exposure to trace metal contamination of drinking water sources in Pakistan was analyzed in the study [
29]. Analysis associated with quantity of supplied water are often based on water pipe failures simulation in a hydraulic model and pressure drop analysis [
15,
22,
25,
26,
28,
30]. The aim of the work was to present the methodology and to develop a risk map of lack of water supply to consumers for a selected city in Central and Eastern Europe. The article presents a failures simulation of the main pipes transporting treated water from the WTP to the city using the Epanet 2.0 program. Based on the number of inhabitants (consumers) affected with lack of water supply as a result of failure of the main pipes near the WTP and the failure rate values for these pipes the risk of lack of water supply has been determined. On this basis a risk map was developed taking into account the three-level risk scale, i.e., low, medium and high.
4. Conclusions and Perspectives
It is possible to simulate the closure (i.e., failure) of individual pipes in the water supply network, and then a comparative analysis of the pressure distribution in this network in failure-free conditions and during failure. In this way, it is possible to determine the consequence of failures on individual pipes in relation to the area where the pressure value dropped below the required level, the duration of this pressure reduction and the potential number of consumers affected by the limitation of water supply.
The presented method is based on failure-data of the water supply network and a simulating hydraulic model. The usefulness of the method depends on the reliability of the input data. The proposed approach is in line with the WHO guidelines on risk analysis in water supply systems.
This study focuses on the quantitative aspect of drinking water supply, the comprehensive analysis should also take into account the qualitative aspect, which can also be done in EPANET software (e.g., EPANET-MSX) [
16,
23,
24,
29]. Based on the results obtained, strategies can be developed to prevent main pipes failures that cause long-term water supply outages. The simulation results indicated that the highest risk was posed by the failure of the M3 main pipe, which led to the conclusion that it requires renovation. The analyzed network was made as a looped network, and the city is supplied from four main pipes, thus, for the most of housing estates, there is no high risk of lack of the water supply, even during a long-term failure of the city’s main water pipes.
The method is fully reproducible and can be used to analyze the operation of other water supply networks. It can be especially useful for water supply networks with one intake or a small number of pipes supplying the city, i.e., small water supply systems. The method can be the basis of an operational strategy aimed at maintaining water supplies, which are now becoming reliability-oriented, i.e., monitoring, surveys and preventive maintenance.