REUSEinCITIES Consortium (2020-2022)

REUSEinCITIES : INRAE network for reusing wastewater treated reuse in cities

The management and reuse of urban wastewater must go beyond the treatment of water and recycling in an industrial context or use for irrigation on farms. If wastewater is to be incorporated into urban ecosystems, the entire small water cycle needs to be redesigned, from identifying all available resources in a territory to characterising all uses and their associated constraints to all the socio-technical systems that allow water to be treated, transported, stocked and (re)distributed.

Context and challenges

REUSEinCITIES

The management and reuse of urban wastewater must go beyond the treatment of water and recycling in an industrial context or use for irrigation on farms. If wastewater is to be incorporated into urban ecosystems, the entire small water cycle needs to be redesigned, from identifying all available resources in a territory to characterising all uses and their associated constraints to all the socio-technical systems that allow water to be treated, transported, stocked and (re)distributed. The cities of tomorrow will be home to the vast majority of the70% of the world’s population, and therefore cities will be where the majority of wastewater will be produced. But current urban metabolism mobilises production zones sometimes in cities’ peripheral areas, and most often in rural areas, far from urban centres.

While support for the development of urban farms to make cities more resilient in the face of global shifts (relocation of production and making cities greener) is promising, it has its limits. Re-using wastewater is a major lever to help rise to the challenges linked to the changes currently underway. Its central spot in the water-energy-matter-environment nexus makes water an essential component of the bioeconomy in urban territories.

Goals

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The consortium ReuseInCities strives to adopt this systemic approach, under the regulatory, socio-economic, health and environmental constraints that the network is designed to support. It is inseparable both from the territory involved, which must be described in terms of the potential for implementing a new management of water flows and/or the associated nutrients, and players in the zone who must be mobilised to co-construct feasibility conditions for a circular water economy in their territory. Strategies for local, or so-called “short” circuits, must emerge, designed to foster synergies between production facilities (treatment plants, light industries), and urban uses, be they conventional or emerging, and for which the use of drinking water can be substituted with non-conventional water (street cleaning, networks, cars, watering green spaces, etc.).
These issues can only be addressedAddressing this issue can only happen with by using an integrated approach that involving involves many disciplines present within INRAE’s different divisions. These include agronomy, soil science, human and social sciences, ecology, environment science, process engineering, water savings, digital science, and more.

Project sheets

Contacts - Coordination

INRAE and non-INRAE partners

INRAE structures

The ReuseInCities consortium is made up of people from different INRAE fields, research units and divisions who wish to open up dialogues between their research to rise to the societal and scientific challenges of tomorrow’s cities. 

MATHNUM division

UR LISCComplex systems, dynamic systems, modelling
UMR MISTEAModelling and control of bioprocesses, optimisation and viability for decision-making support, crop modelling
UMR TETISGeography, environment, urban, sustainability, land use modelling & hydrological cycles

AGROECOSYSTEM division

UR LBEModelling and control of bioprocesses and microbial ecosystems, micropollutants, pathogens
UMR CEREGEPhysico-Chemical health risks – Process Engineering – Water treatment – Transfer of contaminants in the water use cycle - impact on soil quality and permeability
UMR EMMAHQuantification of bio-aerosols, sprinklers, irrigation, transport modelling and risk assessment
UMR ITAPACV, environmental and social assessments, water footprint

AQUA division

UMR G-EAUIrrigation technologies, technical sustainability of irrigation systems, nutrients, soil salinization risks, health risks, participatory approaches, governance of REUSE projects
UR RIVERLYUrban EcohHydrology – water and substance flows
UMR ECO&SOLSEcohydrology, ecological engineering, agroecology, soil science

TRANSFORM division

UR REVERSAALProcess engineering and consultation engineering,  nature-based solutions for urban water treatment, decentralised management of urban water for resilient cities and the circular water economy
UMR OPAALESanitary microbiology, nutrient recovery processes and reuse, interactions with energy recovery
UR TBIBiological and membrane processes, source separation, eco-design and modelling, water quality/use

Non-INRAE partners

LEESU (ENPC)Urban challenges of reuse
Icube (INSA/ENGEES/CNRS)Ecological engineering, process engineering, urban ecological infrastructures for water management, membrane technologies for reusing water
DEEP (INSA Lyon)Management at the source of urban rainwater
Lyon métropoleAdministrator
Office Français de la biodiversité (OFB)Public strategies
International Water Association  (Thaïlande)Support and international visibility
International Union for Conservation of Nature (Suisse)Making cities greener

See also