Abstract :
As cities grow they first impose substantial stress on their surrounding water environment, but then, as comprehensive
wastewater infrastructure is installed, much of that stress is removed. It becomes possible to talk of rehabilitated watersheds, in
which the river network, with its re-invigorated ecological health, passes through the urban landscape of (now) potentially intense
polluting activities. Surface water quality becomes vulnerable to the transient pollution events arising from all manner of accidents,
faults, failures, and contaminated-runoff events associated with the city’s metabolism, including unreliability in the performance of
its wastewater infrastructure. The paper examines the role of High-Performance Integrated Control (H-PIC)da combination of
real-time control (RTC) and Integrated Urban Water Management (IUWM)das an approach essential to managing water quality
in such intensively developing watersheds. Rather than promoting H-PIC as the logical stage of operations that will follow planning,
design, and construction in the life cycle of an infrastructure, discussion is set in the context of the sustainability of cities, in
particular, in association with a measure of sustainability expressed in terms of the frequency spectrum of disturbances to which the
aquatic environment is subject. In this more strategic setting, it is argued that control engineering ( for achieving H-PIC) should be
seen as having relevance beyond merely its conventional interpretation of closed-loop unit-process automation, e.g., in opening up
analyses of the stability and ecological resilience of an entire urban water infrastructure. It is acknowledged that ‘‘integration’’, as in
IUWM and H-PIC, is likely to be realized in practice, because of the need for it expressed in the highest political circles of the
sustainability debate. Given this, the paper examines the implications of the ongoing shiftdfrom the technocracy of the past century
to the democracy of stakeholder participation in the present centurydfor the more widespread use of information and
communication technologies in managing water quality in urban water environments.
Keywords :
Integrated Urban Water Management (IUWM) , River water quality , real-time control , Frequency spectrum , sustainability , Human dimension , Global material cycles