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- W2183634376 abstract "During the last decennium separation of wastes has matured into practical use. Separation not only reduces the amount of drinking water spilled in toilets, but makes reuse of nutrients attractive. The main drawback of separation is that it is rather expensive, especially in areas with an existing sewage system. Large centralised sewage treatment plants discharge waste water from large areas on one spot, with a considerable effect on surface water quality. It results in an ambivalent situation. Drinking water is becoming more and more expensive. After use in households and industry this water, collected together with rain water, is considered as a waste. It is transported in sewer systems and treated at huge costs in sewage treatment plants. But after discharging in surface water ecologists consider this cleaned water, originating from drinking water, as “dead water” compared with surface water, not complying with the ideas about natural water quality, as described in the latest directives on ecological water quality of the European Union. To bridge the gap between these two “worlds” (producing drinking water, transporting waste water on one hand and on the other hand the caretakers of surface waters) the Waterharmonica have been postulated. It is a low-tech concept based on ecological engineering, using food-chain approach to transfer well treated waste water into healthy and useable surface water. The main function is converting treated waste water into a usable natural surface water, but aspects like water buffering, recreation, buffer zones, nature development, water buffering during floods, creating fish spawning areas, growing fish for stocking wild populations are getting more and more important. In this paper the development of the concept is described. The Waterharmonica concept has resulted in a research and implementation programme (2003- 2004) of two of the main Waterboards in The Netherlands, supported by the Dutch Foundation for Applied Water Research. This paper describes the development of the concept within integral water management." @default.
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- W2183634376 date "2004-01-01" @default.
- W2183634376 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2183634376 title "The Use of Treated Wastewater for Nature: The Waterharmonica, a Sustainable Solution as an Alternative for Separate Drainage and Treatment" @default.
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