Gray water's grass
roots
In a
grass-roots effort, a Los Angeles community pushes the plant-saving
practice of reusing water from showers, baths, sinks, and
washers.
Laura Allen,
cofounder of Greywater Action, installed a laundry to landscape
irrigation system in Oakland, Calif.
Tony Avelar/The
Christian Science Monitor
By Gloria
Goodale Staff
writer of The Christian Science Monitor / January 26,
2010
Eco Village, near
Koreatown, Los Angeles
If water is the next battleground for a globe facing dwindling water
resources, then this 1960s-style community center at the northern end
of Los Angeles's Koreatown is at the forefront of the
fight.
On this day, Laura
Allen, cofounder of Greywater Action, a group that encourages
conserving and reusing household water, is in her fourth of a five-day
workshop teaching Californians how to reclaim and recycle what has
been dubbed "gray water." Typically, gray water includes the
discharge from washing machines, sinks, showers, and tubs, which is
then used to provide moisture for outdoor plants, from backyard
rosebushes to large orchards.
While progress has
been made - many institutions, corporations, and municipalities
around the world use gray water - activists say there's still a long
way to go. And it's groups such as Greywater Action that are helping
to drive change.
"Grass-roots
efforts - seeing an issue and trying to do something by acting
individually and being responsible stewards - are very important,"
says Kathy Robb, founder and director of the Water Policy Institute in
New York.
As an example, she
points to the fact that before regulations in California were changed
last August to make it legal for homeowners to install or alter a
simple gray-water system without a construction permit, there were
already an estimated 2 million unpermitted systems in the Golden
State.
This is evidence, Ms. Allen says, that, given the opportunity, state
residents will embrace the technology for both economic and
environmental reasons.
'Laundry to
landscape' systems
'This is the way the world is going. We all need to learn to save
water," says Trent Cawthon, a handyman from Redondo Beach,
Calif., who aspires to be a contractor and feels that expertise with
gray-?water systems will make his services more valuable.
Mr. Cawthon is part of a four-person team that has designed a simple
"laundry-to-landscape" system. They will practice their
skills at the community center, running plastic pipes from the laundry
room to the front of the building, where the rinse water will irrigate
four fruit trees.
Cawthorn's teammate,
Allan Haskell from Echo Park, Calif., runs a green consulting business
that helps restaurants find compostable containers for takeout food.
He hopes to expand his business to encompass gray-water planning.
Diana Lawrence, a former urban planner, is attending the workshop
because she hopes to downsize her utility bills through gray-water
usage.
Landscape architect Robin Grabs of San Pedro, Calif., has come because
two clients requested gray-water systems. It's fascinating, she says,
but the amount of information is overwhelming.
Allen understands
this reaction. "Fitting all the important things that gray water
brings into a five-day class and a manageable package is a challenge,"
she says. The course has to cover plant and soil information,
plumbing, and landscaping and design skills. It's aimed at a wide
range of users - from those who must work within small budgets to
those with larger ambitions, as well as people who simply want to
water the plants in their yard inexpensively and those who might have
a large commercial landscape.
Legalization
boosts demand
In the months since California changed the gray-water permit
requirements, demand has begun to build statewide, says John Leys of
Sherwood Design Engineers in San Francisco, which has clients across
the United States as well as abroad.
Mr. Leys recently
consulted on new ?water-planning regulations for Abu Dhabi, capital of
the United Arab Emirates, which has water needs similar to those in
the American Southwest.
'Ten years ago, we
were not seeing any demand for gray-water systems," he says, but
now clients of all types are requesting projects that range from
simple and inexpensive backyard irrigation retrofits to complex,
multipurpose gray-water systems that are part of the design from the
beginning.
Leys notes that as
pressures over drought regulations and energy conservation have
started to build, many businesses have begun to see that reclamation
and reuse make sense from both a business and an environmental
standpoint.
For instance, if a development of 10,000 new homes reduces its overall
potable water use by as much as 25 percent, he says, that means a huge
savings in construction and utility costs.
Most of the momentum
toward greater use of gray-water systems is not being driven by
economics - yet. "But that is inevitable," Leys says,
"if you consider that despite the vast oceans covering the
planet, less than 1 percent of the world's water is both fresh and
accessible for human use."
He believes that
it's important to plan for solutions in advance of a water crisis, and
that when and how that's done will become critical.
Today, even with conventional water-supply strategies and
technologies, water shortages are common in communities around the
globe. The World Health Organization reports that more than 2 billion
people - roughly 1 out of every 3 people on the planet - live in a
water-stressed area.
Commenting on the
importance of reclaiming and reusing water, Leys says: "History
demonstrates that properly managed water resources can be the deciding
factor in determining the habitability of an individual site, the
sustainability of a community, or the survival of an entire
civilization."
[Editor's
note: The original
cutline of the first photograph misstated the type of system being
installed and for whom.]