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- Water-Energy-Climate Nexus in An Urban Environment
- (364e) Infrastructure Ecology for Sustainable and Resilient Urban Infrastructure Design
The goal of this research is to develop a framework which seeks an optimal combination of decentralized water and energy alternatives and centralized infrastructures based on physical and socio-economic environments of a region. Centralized and decentralized options related to water, wastewater and stormwater and distributed energy alternatives including photovoltaic (PV) generators, fuel cells and microturbines are investigated. In the context of the water-energy nexus, water recovery from energy alternatives and energy recovery from water alternatives are reflected. Alternatives recapturing nutrients from wastewater are also considered to conserve depleting resources. The alternatives are evaluated in terms of their life-cycle environmental impact and economic performance using a hybrid life cycle assessment (LCA) tool and cost benefit analysis, respectively. Meeting the increasing demand of a test bed, an optimal combination of the alternatives is designed to minimize environmental and economic impacts including CO2 emissions, human health risk, natural resource use, and construction and operation cost. The framework determines the optimal combination depending on urban density, transmission or conveyance distance or network, geology, climate, etc. Therefore, it will be also able to evaluate infrastructure resiliency against physical and socio-economic challenges such as population growth, severe weather, energy and water shortage, economic crisis, and so on.
Reference EIA. (2009). International Energy Outlook. Washington DC: Office of Integrated Analysis and Forecasting, U.S. Department of Energy. Elcock, D. (2008). Baseline and Projected Water Demand Data for Energy and Competing Water Use Sectors. The Environmental Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory for the U.S. Department of Energy. Goldstein, R., Smith, W. (2002). Water and sustainability (volume 4) U.S. Electricity consumption for water supply & treatment - The Next Half Century. Palo Alto, California: EPRI. UN. (2009). World Population Prospects.