NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS FOR INDIRECT POTABLE REUSE (IPR) OF
EFFLUENT WATER TO SUPPORT WATER SUPPLIES

SEPA

www.epa.gov/research

science in ACTION

INNOVATIVE RESEARCH FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE

Background

Water scarcity is an ongoing concern throughout the
nation. The reuse of safe treated effluent can augment
increasing water supply demands, provide habitat
benefits, and protect receiving water quality. This has
led municipalities and states to move toward
approaches that incorporate reuse to supplement
existing water sources. Regardless of the degree of
treatment that a water reclamation facility applies to
ensure that the water is safe, clean, and healthy, direct
reuse of treated effluent can be difficult for
communities to approve. Indirect potable reuse (IPR)
offers the advantage of an "environmental buffer"
between the point of effluent discharge and entry into
the potable water supply. Moving treated effluent
through a wetland, stream, or floodplain can provide
value added habitat, water quality improvements, and
a vari ety of other ecosystem services that nature-
based solutions provide. Evaluation of these practices
with defensible scientific research will better support
decisions related to nature-based solutions and
indirect potable reuse.

In Oklahoma and many regions with limited water
supplies, novel applications of water reuse are being
developed and implemented. Nature-based solutions
for water reuse can take advantage of the biological
and physical processes in natural or modified systems
like wetlands, streams, and floodplains that receive
treated effluent. Some of these systems are designed
and implemented to take advantage of the natural
processes that can decrease our dependence on costly
single purpose grey infrastructure. The benefits of
additional water and desire to support sustainable
solutions are clear. Research and evaluation of the
effects of nature-based solutions, like the application
of wetland systems in IPR, will support safe and
sustainable water reuse decisions across the nation.

Existing outfall at the Norman site 2023.

Potential constructed wetland site for water quality at the
Norman Water Reclamation Facility. Source: Bureau of Reclamation

Like many municipalities, the City of Norman (City)
anticipates additional water needs to support the city's
growing demands, which are expected to double over
the next 40 years. Today, treated municipal effluent is
discharged to a nearby river without supporting the
city's potable water system. However, with the
addition of advanced treatment and wetlands to
receive effluent, this water may be permitted to
supplement potable water supply source streams and
reservoirs. Improved understanding of the interaction
between surface water and groundwater as well as
chemical transformations of nutrients and other
pollutants in treated effluent conveyed to these
nature-based environmental buffers can help improve
decision-making and manage any potential risks and
benefits.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Office of Research and Development


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Science to Support Solutions

To move forward, a new research effort has started in
collaboration with the City of Norman, USEPA's
Office of Research and Development (ORD) and
USEPA Region 6 to examine the use of wetland
construction in IPR and determine the effects on
water quality at the Norman Water Reclamation
Facility in Norman, OK. The research done at this site
will help demonstrate how wetlands and other
floodplain restoration activities augmented with
treated effluent can support the protection of
groundwater, surface water, and help meet designated
use requirements. This research will evaluate
approaches of effluent water reuse with the intention
to support practical and applicable permitting and
decision-making. The research will include evaluation
of hydrology, chemistry, and biogeochemical
processes that are critical to protect water quality.

ORD and the City have partnered to work at the City
of Norman's floodplain property adjacent to the water
reclamation facility to evaluate the effects of a
planned wetland that will be designed to receive
treated effluent that could be used for indirect potable
reuse. This research will leverage an ongoing, multi-
agency feasibility and pilot study of a constructed
wetland that the City intends to install on its property
as one part of a solution to water scarcity in the
region.

Nature-based solutions, particularly wetlands as
environmental buffers in floodplains, may be
beneficial to support water quality and support greater
habitat. Currently, case studies and scientific data on
the effects of these nature-based solutions are scarce
and guidance for permit writers or decision makers is
limited. Answering questions about the effects of
these systems on the surrounding water bodies
including receiving waters in the ground and surface

Contacts

Ken Forshay Ph.D. Research Ecologist and ORD Project Lead.
Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Center. Ada, OK 580-
436-8912. Forshav.Ken@epa.gov

Jacob Oliveira Environmental Engineer ORD.
Robert S. Kerr Enviromnental Research Center.

are critical to ensure the best outcomes of novel
nature-based solutions like constructed wetlands.

The intent of this research effort includes evaluation
of groundwater and surface water interactions, and
the influence of the practice on water quality. Also
included is the evaluation of the ecosystem services
provided by novel water reuse management practices.
ORD has installed several monitoring wells and
surface water sites to evaluate the water chemistry,
soil, and sediment before and after a pilot scale
wetland installation. By collaborating with motivated
communities, like the City of Norman, everyone can
better understand the potential tradeoffs and ultimate
benefits that these nature-based systems provide. This
collaborative effort not only allows us to realize the
potential benefit to improve water quality and
enhance ecosystem services in this community but
share research results with a larger body of
practitioners interested in applying similar
approaches. USEPA and the City of Norman are
developing this research collaboratively to design
experiments and monitoring that are meaningful to
stakeholders and to identify additional effluent
treatment options that may expand accessibility of
precious water resources.

Progress

ORD and the City of Norman have established a
Memorandum of Understanding to carry out this work
and ORD is supporting part of this work in the Safe
and Sustainable Water Research program. More
importantly, project partners are working together to
develop collaborative research and establish a site
where the potential water quality effects of nature-
based solutions to water scarcity will provide
important scientific evidence about the benefits of
water reuse and a nature-based constructed wetland
solution to improve water storage and availability in
times of increased water demand.

Christopher A. Mattingly, P.E., Utilities Director, City of
Norman. Norman, OK

Juanita Huff Ph.D. US EPA Region 6 Technical Lead
Suzanna Perea US EPA Region 6 Collaborator
EPA Publication # EPA/600/S-24/227

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Office of Research and Development


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Office of Research and Development


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