This document discusses greywater systems, which reuse household wastewater for irrigation. It begins with background on California's drought conditions and water sources. It then defines greywater, outlines its composition and benefits of reuse. Common greywater system types are described, including laundry-to-landscape systems that can be installed without a permit. Regulations vary by state. A case study demonstrates a simple system's installation and maintenance. The key takeaway is that greywater reuse is an achievable way for homeowners to conserve water.
Role of Copper and Zinc Nanoparticles in Plant Disease Management
Grey water systems presentation 6 18-2015 final
1. Grey Water Systems: What they are,
why their time has come and how you
can participate in converting our most
precious resource
ECO Green Group Thursday June 18, 2015
by
Tony Green
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
2. Agenda
• How have we arrived at this point?
• What is Grey Water? What is in Grey Water?
• What are Grey Water Systems types/benefits of using/risks?
• What should be in our water anyway?
• What are the parts of a Grey Water System?
• Grey Water System Regulation?
• To Permit or not to Permit
• Case Study
• Takeaway/Summary
• Question and Answers
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
3. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Will California’s future look like this?
http://www.ohwy.com/history%20pictures/dustroad.gif
http://www.pbs.org/kenburns/dustbowl/
http://www.livinghistoryfarm.org/farminginthe30s/media/water0201.jpg
4. Water Use Statistics
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
18.5 gallons a day for flushing toilets, 5 times a day for the typical home, 5.7 billion gallons of water a day
nationally.
The largest consumer of water in the US is the water used in the generation of electricity. Not hydroelectric but coal
gas and nuclear power for cooling and making steam. 49% of all the water in the US. 7x of homes and 1.5 times of
farms.
16% of water is lost due to leakage which winds up back in the ground.
Source: The Big Thrust by Charles Fishman
Chapter 1 the Revenge of water
5. How have we arrived to this point?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Three main sources of water sustain California –
Mountain Snowpack
Water stored in Reservoirs
Water pumped from underground Aquifers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almaden_Reservoir https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_in_California http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/05/29/c
alifornia_s_snowpack_now_zero_percent_of_normal_a
_worst_case_scenario_for.html
6. How have we arrived to this point?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
All are connected, and when the Governor declared a drought
emergency on January 17, 2014, all three had been depleted by
an extended dry period.
The Sierra Nevada snowpack stood at 14 percent of
normal.
The state's two biggest reservoirs held less than 40 percent
of their capacity and
Aquifer levels from Siskiyou County to San Diego County
were in decline.
7. How have we arrived to this point?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
http://www.water.ca.gov/waterconditions/background.cfm
Drought can best be thought of as a
condition of water shortage for a
particular user in a particular location
Droughts occur slowly, over a period of time.
There is no universal definition of when a
drought begins or ends
Drought is a gradual phenomenon
Significant statewide droughts occurred during 1928-
34, 1976-77, 1987-92, and 2007-09. The last significant
regional drought occurred in parts of Southern
California in 1999-2002.
http://i.livescience.com/images/i/000/025/737/iFF/drought-
weather.jpg?1332776088
Where did the water go?
8. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
How have we arrived to this point?
http://www.californiadrought.org/drought/current-conditions/
9. How have we arrived to this point?
http://www.californiadrought.org/drought/current-conditions/
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
10. How have we arrived to this point?
http://www.californiadrought.org/drought/current-conditions/
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
http://www.californiadrought.org/drought/current-conditions/http://cnas.ucr.edu/drought-symposium/presentations/Hydrology-2-CA.pdf.
No Rain , No Snow pack , No Water Accumulation ---- No Water to stockpile our reservoirs
11. What Is Grey Water ?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Greywater is all water from house except from toilets and garbage
disposal.
Kitchen
Shower
Sink
Washing machine
This comprises from 50% to 80% of
residential waste water
http://www.slideshare.net/AshrafRefaat/greywater-44033346?related=1
12. What should (or Shouldn’t) be in
our water?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Radiation
Silicone
Octane
Lysol
Bacteria
Chloroform
14. Where do we get our Potable Water ?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Source : http://www.watereducation.org/all-california-water-sources
Central Valley Project
State Water Project
The Colorado River
Local Streams and
Reservoirs
Groundwater
Other Major Water
Systems
15. Where do we get our Potable Water ?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Source: https://www.ebmud.com/water-and-
drought/about-your-water/water-supply/ebmud-and-
delta/
Other Major Water Systems
A number of large population centers in
California have developed their own
extensive water projects.
The Hetch Hetchy Project transports
Tuolumne River water 156 miles from the
Central Sierra to San Francisco and
peninsula cities.
The East Bay Municipal Utility District
supplies cities on the east side of San
Francisco Bay with Mokelumne River water.
Source: http://bawsca.org/water-supply/hetch-hetchy-
water-system/
16. What Is breakdown of Grey Water?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
50%
15%
30%
5%
Percent of Greywater
Bathroom (bath, basin,
shower)
Kitchen
Laundry
Other - other taps
/Dishwasher
17. What is in our Grey Water?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Source
Percent of
Greywater
Contaminants
Bathroom (bath,
basin, shower)
50
contaminated with hair, soaps, shampoos, hair
dyes, toothpaste, lint, nutrients, body fats, oils and
cleaning products. It may also contain some fecal
contamination (and the associated pathogens)
through body washing
Kitchen 15 food particles, oil, grease, etc.
Laundry 30
lint, oils, grease, laundry detergents, chemicals,
soaps, nutrients and other compounds. It may
also contain some fecal contamination
Other - other taps
/Dishwasher
5
food particles, oil, grease, etc.
Total 100
19. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
The Difference between Gray &
Potable?
Wastewater contains some soap, salts, hair, suspended
solids and bacteria, but that is clean enough to water plants.
- San Francisco Water Manual June 2012 Version
20. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
So what are the risks of using Grey
Water ?
Human health disease-causing organisms
(human pathogens such as bacteria, viruses
and protozoa).
Environment contaminants including fats and
oils, food scraps, nutrients, salts, sodium,
phosphorus, detergents, cleaning products,
sunscreens and personal care products. Long-
term watering with greywater containing these
contaminants can affect sensitive plants and
soil
Source: Urban Greywater Design and Installation Handbook November 2008 RMIT University in Australia
21. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
What are the types of Grey Water Systems?
Laundry-to-Landscape (L to L)
Branched Drain
Pumped System
Manufactured
Sand Filter to Drip Irrigation
Source : San Francisco Water Manual June 2012 Version
More complicated systems (gravity
versus pumps), (treatment versus
application) the
cost more !
All but L to L require permit
22. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Benefits of Grey Water Systems
Source : San Francisco Water Manual June 2012 Version
Decrease potable water use by 16 to 40 percent,
depending on the site.
Decrease water and wastewater utility bills.
Diversify the water portfolio and provide an alternate
source of irrigation water, reserving treated potable
water for high-quality water needs.
.
23. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
More Benefits of Grey Water Systems
Reduce the energy (approximately 2 watt-hours per gallon
of water) and chemicals needed to treat wastewater
Facilitates home-grown food production
Connects people to their yards
Sources : San Francisco Water Manual June 2012 Version and Christine Bertea of Greywater Action presentation
24. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Grey Water Systems –
Government Regulation?
In 2009, California revamped its greywater
codes. The new code allows simple
laundry to landscape systems without a
permit, but requires permits and
inspections for most greywater systems.
Regulations vary across the US by state.
If you’re not happy with the greywater
codes in your state, contact your
legislators about changing them!
25. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
To Permit or Not to Permit
You can install a graywater system for outdoor irrigation without a
permit if you meet all of the following requirements:
Graywater comes from the washing machine only.
Graywater system does not alter the household plumbing (you
access graywater from the hose of the machine, not by cutting
into the plumbing).
Graywater system is for a one- or two-unit residential building.
Building
Graywater system follows 12 guidelines set forth in the
California Plumbing Code (see Appendix B, “Operation and
Maintenance Manual for Laundry-to-Landscape Graywater
System”). Follow Laundry to Landscape O & M
27. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
What do we need to Install?
Three Way Diverter Valve
Anti – Siphon Vent
Piping – PVC & HDPE
Mulch Basin
Valve Box
28. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Thoughts about Piping – PVC&HDPE
PVC = Poly Vinyl Chloride
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) piping is the
most widely used plastic piping material.
PVC piping systems are:
Environmentally sound.
Provide long service life.
Easy to install and handle.
Corrosion resistant.
Cost effective.
Widely accepted by codes
HDPE = High Density Polyethylene
The number one characteristic that sets
HDPE apart from other pipe types is that it
can be made to be flexible.
This quality opens HDPE pipe up to a
different world of applications than rigid
pipe.
29. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Thoughts about Piping – PVC&HDPE
Source: http://image11.photobiz.com/3907/20110424125559_113181.pdf
HDPE is
definitely more
sustainable
PVC issues with
process
and residuals
30. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Mulch Basin
A type of irrigation or disposal field
filled with mulch...of sufficient depth,
length and width to prevent ponding or runoff
Mulch. Is an organic waste material including but not
limited to leaves, pruning's, straw, pulled weeds and wood
chips.
Permeable enough to allow rapid infiltration of greywater
31. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
What do we need to avoid with
our Grey Water System once installed?
Soap and Products
Salt (Sodium Compounds)
Boron (Borax)
Chlorine Bleach (H2O2 OK)
Recommended
Liquid detergent: Oasis
Soap Alternatives: Soap Nuts
Note:
Read Ingredients: Biodegradable Garden Friendly
Sodium common in fabric softeners and water softeners
Adapted from Christine Berthea Presentation
32. Ground Rules for our Grey Water
System once installed?
Adapted from Christine Berthea Presentation
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Avoid contact with people or domestic animals
No above ground spraying or sprinkling
No surfacing ponding or runoff
No storing for more then 24 hours
Irrigation or disposal field may be Mulch basin
Discard point covered by 2” of mulch, gravel, soil or solid shield
33. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Case Study – Laundry to Landscape
.
.
Why Grey Water System ?
Source: www.fotolia.us
Source: www.dreamstime.com.
Concerned Bay Area Citizen Mother of Three – two
teenage kids with single home on San Francisco. 2
years ago it became obvious that we needed to
conserve water.
Came across the Laundry to Landscape (L-
to-L) program and attended class in the city of
San Francisco - gives you the materials but the
system has to be designed for your home.
In this case she planted a lemon tree and a lime
tree to produce fruit using Grey Water since in
San Francisco these are expensive.
34. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Case Study – Laundry to Landscape
. The Project
6-8 loads a week with an old type of top loading dryer
Her soil in her back yard is sandy, fruit trees
are Two feet in height
Needed to connect outlet in washer to soil in
yard where fruit tress would be planted
Mentioned that urban provides you a kit with the tools
in order to make installation easy
35. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Case Study – Laundry to Landscape
What was the hardest thing?
Source: www.wisgeek.com
Source: www.fotolia.us
Connecting the plumbing from the
outside of the house to the garden.
Hired a plumber to take the connection
from her dryer.
$300.00 and took him an
half an hour
36. Copyright @ Tony Green 2015
Case Study – Laundry to Landscape
Today/looking ahead
Lemons a growing!!!!
System installed for two months. No
maintenance requirements.
The next job in her view should be
to convert the shower water to use
to flush the toilet
3 way valve operated it once a
week (bleach). Otherwise all of the
water goes directly into the garden
37. Takeaways/Summary
1. Did I mention we need to Conserve
Water?
2. Grey Water system is achievable
help IS available
3. Parts are not expensive
4. Do not need to be technical to
install
What are you waiting for?
Copyright @ Tony Green 2015