Title: water statistics, technical obstacles
1Wastewater generation treatment
statistics Reliable statistics Intersecretariat
Working Group on Environment Statistics Work
Session on Water Statistics (Vienna, 20-22 June
2005) Benoît FRIBOURG-BLANC
2Wastewater from generation to discharge Various
pathways
Source Lassainissement des grandes villes,
RNDE, France, 1998
3Wastewater from generation to discharge
Wastewater loading scheme
- 4 steps
- Water quantity and transfers
- pollution quantity and transfers (non
conservative) - Equipments and performance
Source Data Collection Manual for the
OECD/Eurostat Joint Questionnaire on Inland
Waters, Tables 1 7, June 2004
4Definitions for Wastewater Proposed sources
organisation
NACE/ISIC approach
Source Data Collection Manual for the
OECD/Eurostat Joint Questionnaire on Inland
Waters, Tables 1 7, June 2004
5Definitions for Wastewater Some characteristics
of sources
- Only the agent that emit the pollution (avoid
double counting) - Point, small point and diffuse sources
- A link with NACE/ISIC
- Process based vs Source based NOSE
6Definitions for Wastewater the collection systems
- The first part of the wastewater treatment
system, - Many equipments,
- Estimation of performance,
- Reduced to connection rate,
- Private part neglected,
- Population served vs connected.
7Definitions for Wastewater the treatment
- Definition / delimitation
- Primary, Secondary and Tertiary treatment (JQ
design and real performance) - Investment - working costs / pollution
destruction - transfers
Source SANDRE-OIEau 1997
8Definitions for Wastewater the pollution
- the direct or indirect introduction, as a result
of human activity, of substances or heat into the
air, water or land which may be harmful to human
health or the quality of aquatic ecosystems or
terrestrial ecosystems directly depending on
aquatic ecosystems, which result in damage to
material property, or which impair or interfere
with amenities and other legitimate uses of the
environment. (EU Water Framework Directive) - Parameters and substances
- Geographical and temporal
- Available classification systems (CAS, ELINCS,
EINECS)
9data collection for Wastewater the raw data
- Temporal and geographical variations,
- High influence of processes and human activities,
- Multiple pathways
- Reliable monitoring (continuous, quality check)
- High cost of monitoring,
- ?combination of monitoring and calculating
- (formula, emission factors, models, experts)
10data collection for Wastewater data aggregation
- A wide use of thresholds reliable individual
data, - A need to complete the picture,
- A need to aggregate for international statistics,
- Geographical or temporal aggregation (frequency,
quality), - Wide use of all possible methods from monitoring
to modelling
11Wastewater generation and discharge The main
conclusions
- Reliability is crucial for priority setting
- Completeness vs confidence
- shared terminology (definitions, data format,
nomenclature) - ?EN 10851997 wastewater treatment
- Not only monitoring but also design capacity,
emission factors and other estimations.