 
	How the water you flush becomes the water you drink - Francis de los Reyes
 In 2003, Singapore’s national water agency
 launched an unprecedented program.
  Using two new facilities,
  they planned to provide more than 50%
 of their nation’s water supply
  by recycling wastewater.
  And yes, we do mean that wastewater.
  While this might seem
 like a desperate decision,
  this program had been
 planned for decades
  to ensure the island nation
 never ran out of clean water.
  And today, as climate change
 increases the frequency and duration
  of droughts worldwide,
  more and more regions
 are facing this problem.
  But is it really safe to reuse anything
 we flush down the toilet?
  To answer this,
  we have to understand exactly
 what’s inside this cloudy cocktail.
  Wastewater is classified
 into several types,
  but the primary three are:
  gray water used
 in sinks, bathing, and laundry;
  yellow water containing just urine;
  and black water which has
 come into contact with feces.
  Globally, we generate enough wastewater
  to fill about 400,000 Olympic-sized
 swimming pools every day.
  In cities and towns with sewage systems,
  this wastewater combines
 in underground pipes,
  which actually aren’t filled with feces.
  The average 4,000 liters
 of sewage
  contains only a single liter
 of solid fecal material.
  But sewage is still rife
 with dangerous contaminants,
  including billions of pathogens
 and microorganisms,
  trace chemicals,
 and excess inorganic nutrients
  that can pollute rivers and lakes.
  So even if we aren’t planning
 to drink this concoction,
  we still need to clean it;
  which is why sewer systems typically
 run to wastewater treatment plants.
  Most plants remove major contaminants
  such as feces, pathogens,
 and excess nitrogen
  from all the water they process.
  And this involves a ton of biological,
 chemical, and physical interventions.
  Some of the most important include
 settling tanks to remove large particles,
  biological reaction tanks where microbes
 eat unwanted materials,
  and chemical disinfection processes
 that kill pathogens.
  After these procedures,
 typical treated wastewater in the US
  is already cleaner than most
 natural bodies of water,
  making it safe to discharge
 into rivers and lakes.
  If we plan on reusing the water
 for non-potable purposes,
  such as irrigation or washing cars,
  it gets even further disinfected 
 to prevent bacteria from growing
  during storage.
  But if we want it clean enough to drink,
  there's much more treatment to be done.
  One common process
 includes microfiltration,
  where membranes with pores
 one millionth of a meter across
  filter out small particles
 and larger microorganisms.
  Next, the water passes through an even
 finer reverse osmosis membrane,
  which can remove particles as small
 as a tenth of a billionth of a meter.
  This membrane is semi-permeable,
 allowing water to pass through,
  but stopping things like salt, viruses,
 or unwanted chemicals.
  After this stage, UV lamps are
 plunged into the water,
  emitting radiation that
 permanently damages
  the genetic material
 of any lingering life forms.
  Sometimes UV disinfection is then combined
 with further disinfection processes
  that use chemicals like hydrogen peroxide
  to handle a wide range
 of microorganisms and micropollutants.
  At this point, the treated wastewater
 is tested rigorously.
  And if it passes, it can safely enter
 the typical pipeline for drinking water,
  going through the standard
 treatment procedures
  before joining the municipal supply.
  This approach is called
 direct potable reuse,
  but even though it’s perfectly healthy,
  there’s still some concern
 with such a direct system.
  Instead, most places opt
 for indirect potable reuse,
  where the treated wastewater is discharged
 to an environmental buffer,
  such as a reservoir, lake, wetland,
 or groundwater aquifer.
  After some time in this environment,
  any lingering chemicals
 from the treatment process
  will diffuse and degrade.
  Then, the water can be extracted
 and enter the drinking water pipeline.
  Indirect potable reuse is the
 process used in Singapore,
  and it's become an increasingly common
 lifeline for arid regions in the US.
  But this system is only feasible in places
 with centralized sewer systems
  and infrastructure for pumping
 water into people's homes.
  This means it can’t help communities
  dealing with the most serious
 sanitation issues,
  where access to clean water
 is a daily struggle.
  Researchers are investigating smaller
 scale technologies to recycle sewage
  into potable water on site.
  But helping these communities
 in the long term
  will require us to take a closer look
 at all the water we’ve been wasting.