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Berkeley – Cities around the world are facing shortages of drinking water, and the problem is only expected to worsen with climate change and prolonged dry spells. Researchers are now looking for solutions that capture and reuse urban stormwater.

Climate change and population growth are proving a deadly combination for drinking water resources. Dry regions are getting drier, and wetter ones are depleting their underground drinking water aquifers as their urban populations grow.

This is leading many to see urban runoff – the rainfall collected from a city’s roadways and rooftops – as a possible solution to a growing problem. But there is one major problem: urban stormwater can contain harmful contaminants from pesticides, asphalt, vehicle exhaust, consumer products, and human and animal waste, according to an article on Smart Cities Dive.

Researchers around the world are now developing solutions to remove pollutants from urban stormwater before introducing it into underground reservoirs.

At University of California, Berkeley, for example, researchers are experimenting with engineered mineral-coated sands that can break down some of the chemicals found in herbicides and consumer products. They have also teamed up with researchers at Stanford University to see if combining biochar with mineral-coated sands can further enhance the removal of organic pollutants, according to the article.

In Australia, water-engineering experts at the University of New South Wales, are investigating how plants can be used to remove nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, from stormwater. When these nutrients accumulate, they can lead to algal blooms in ground and surface water, which in turn harms drinking water sources.

Ultimately, there is no “one size fits all” solution for urban stormwater as different chemicals are found in urban runoff depending on the type of land use, according to Smart Cities Dive. The goal is to create a “menu of technologies” that can be implemented together or separately to match the needs of a particular environment.