Author/Authors :
DeFelice Nicholas B نويسنده Environmental Sciences and Engineering - University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill , MacDonald Gibson Jacqueline نويسنده Environmental Sciences and Engineering - University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
Abstract :
The members of the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf have typically addressed water scarcity
problems by building energy-intensive desalination plants. Few efforts have addressed water scarcity through
metering, pricing, and other efficiency measures to reduce demand. This paper examines how decreased leakage in
the water distribution system and decreased residential water use in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, could
decrease air pollutant and greenhouse gas emissions from desalination plants. We developed a probabilistic model
to predict the effects of water use reductions on pollutant emissions from Abu Dhabiʹs major independent water
and power plants, which use a combination of multi-stage flash distillation and multi-effect distillation to produce
fresh water from seawater drawn from the Arabian Gulf. We examine three categories of scenarios for reducing
water use: increasing the price signal to residential users, instituting demand management programs among
residential users, and reducing water loss in the distribution system. Our analysis suggests that water conservation
price incentives could reduce air pollutant and greenhouse gas emissions by 1% to 5%, depending on assumptions
about how households respond to the incentives. Demand-side management programs curbing per capita water
use to levels typical of the Singapore or the UK would curb emissions by 10% or 11%, respectively. Reducing water
loss during distribution from the current high level of 35% to 15% (similar to loss rates in other developed nations)
could cut emissions by more than 3%. Overall, our analysis suggests that high per capita water use contributes to
ambient air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in Abu Dhabi.