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SDG 6 - Clean Water and Sanitation

14 November 2023

Learn how UC is committed to contributing to SDG 6 - Clean Water and Sanitation, to ensure available and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all.

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Consumers perceptions on farming

Assurance systems such as freshwater monitoring are a cornerstone of New Zealands agribusiness. They enable compliance with regulations, product safety and international trade. But these systems face growing challenges. Urban communities demand higher transparency and engagement, consumers are increasingly sceptical of the effectiveness and compliance of farm operations. UC Professor Pavel Castka and Senior Research Fellow John Reid co-authored a white paper based on a recent survey, to address challenges and to improve farm assurance systems. The authors explored technological developments, public awareness and the potential to incorporate Mori perspectives. The survey was designed to gather public perceptions of farm assurance and identify ways to enhance public understanding of farming and its impacts.It suggests better farm monitoring systems could strengthen agricultures social license to operate. It also highlights the importance of transparency, accountability and engagement with interest groups and communities to foster trust and ensure compliance.

Improving Waterways Catchment Management

In 2021 we reported on our ongoing efforts aimed at improving UC waterways. Waiutuutu Okeover Stream runs through our Ilam campus. We commenced the Waiutuutu Okeover Digital Twin Project, which involves a virtual model of the stream and surrounding infrastructure such as bridges and the local environment, with real-time information about the functional condition of water quality data and water data. Phase 1 of the project involved a trial basic sensor station, and Phase 2 expands on the concept with multiple sensor stations in-stream for continuous monitoring for real-time data and analysis. Development of Phase 2 is now underway. Phase 2 will assist us with day-to-day operational decisions of the Waiutuutu Okeover Stream, and also long-term strategic planning, environment reporting, trend analysis and management scenario modelling.

Water Teaching and Monitoring

The streams flowing through our campus waterways provide us a range of teaching opportunities. For example, the macroinvertebrate and stream flow data collected by BIOL112 (Biology) and GEOG201 (Geography) provides a valuable addition to our usual monitoring. Our Waterways Plan aims to increase base flow, reduce contamination, and improve habitat for aquatic species. To assess these goals, water quality and quantity measurements are collected quarterly, and ecological monitoring is conducted annually. This is then compared to previous studies conducted on campus since 1979, to evaluate long-term change.

Bringing clean water to Tongan schools

Using technical skills and community engagement,a group of UC humanitarian engineering studentsworked alongside staff and students at schools in the Kingdom of Tonga to install drinking water treatment systems, which consist of membrane filters and a UV chamber to disinfect water for 2,500 students in three schools.

Banding together to boost study in waterways

UC and Lincoln University have signed an agreementto run postgraduate degree programmes in water scienceas jointly awarded courses a first in Aotearoa New Zealand. The teaching and research partnership will be located in a new combined Waterways Centre on UCs Ilam campus. Centre Director Professor James Brasington says the Centre is central to the freshwater sector, providing independent research, tertiary education and professional development in water science and management. It is increasingly clear that we face a future characterised by periods with too little, then too much water, and water that is, far too often, too dirty to use safely or to support healthy ecosystems. Learning how to assess these risks, adapt and find new solutions that ensure sustainable and equitable access to water for both people and ecosystems couldnt be a more urgent challenge. Our new programmes will provide graduates with the professional skills and theoretical understanding needed to drive transformative change, says Professor Brasington.

About hydrological and ecological engineering

Our Hydrological and Ecological Engineering Group conducts research worldwide on diverse yet interrelated topics such as hydrology, water resources, erosion control, integrated catchment management, stormwater, irrigation, flood prediction, water quality, mine drainage, engineered treatment wetlands and biofuels. The Group use the Environmental and Fluids labs for research. The fluids lab has one of the largest hydraulic flumes in New Zealand, used for sediment transport studies and another flume for landslide and erosion studies. The environmental lab is also well equipped, including a particle size analyser, gas chromatograph, climate-controlled sub-rooms, automated logging capabilities, ion analyser and total organic carbon analyser. Other analytical equipment for field research includes a rainfall simulator, topographical laser scanner, weather station, automatic samplers, river surveyor and flow tracker and multiple portable instruments for measuring water quality and flow, including an inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) instrument, used for advanced analytical techniques for determining trace element concentrations in a range of water, sediment and biomass samples.

Water Resource Management Education

Managing the worlds precious water resources requires professionals to have multidisciplinary knowledge and an integrated approach. Water Resource Management students learn how to develop innovative and effective methods for the sustainable management of this critical resource in Aotearoa New 厙ぴ勛圖and internationally. UC offers an extensive range of study options in water resource management, including:

  • Advanced Water Resources
  • Water Quality and Quantity Assessment
  • Water Management, Policy and Planning
  • Research and Communication Methods
  • Master of Water Resource Management
  • Water Resource Management PhD
  • Applied Hydrogeology

Water Resource Management

Sustainability and management of our valuable water resources, both supply and quality, is one of the biggest challenges facing Aotearoa New 厙ぴ勛圖today.Water Resource Managementstudies investigates sustainable techniques to protect our freshwater resources and prevent further stresses and hazards upon this vulnerable commodity. Our School of Earth and Environment offers an extensive range of study options related to water resource management. Study options include freshwater resources, and freshwater science field skills, advanced water resources, water quality and quantity assessment, and water management, policy and planning. Students can also learn to evaluate the effects of domestic and commercial use on our aquatic ecosystems through practical survey fieldwork.

Health Education for Goal 6

Global health challenges cross international borders and responses require international cooperation.Our Global Health courseoffers students the opportunity to explore key and emerging challenges and opportunities facing global health, major public health developments that have improved health outcomes for all, and how economic and political processes have shaped responses to global health problems. A major topic in classes explores key economic and environmental developments that have improved health outcomes including sanitation and the Sustainable Development Goals.

Seafood waste product could help our streams

Associate Professor Aisling OSullivan and Professor Tom Cochrane are researching the use of waste seashells as a solution to reduce contaminants, such as nitrate and phosphorus, from our streams. Greenlipped mussels are a huge industry in New Zealand, producing over 90,000 tonnes of shells every year. Using mussel shells as a solution would help to combat nitrate leaching and meet climate change targets and would also help to reduce waste going to landfill by converting it into a high value, reusable product. The technology would help enable farmers to meet new regulations by reducing the number of nitrates leaching from their land, while providing a natural lime fertiliser and soil enhancer from the waste seashells. Plans involve filters being reused at the end of their lifespan, as a regenerated filter or being crushed to make an organic fertiliser that can be applied back on the farm.

Waterways Centre for Freshwater Management

located at UC, is the first such centre to be established in any New 厙ぴ勛圖university. Established in 2009, the Centre is a joint partnership between UC and Lincoln University. It is run by core staff and supported by a multi-disciplinary group of approximately 50 academic staff members with expertise in freshwater issues, drawn from both Universities. The Centre offers both undergraduate and postgraduate teaching programmes and qualifications, including research programmes. It also provides resources to learn more about freshwater systems and their response to change, and general information relevant to Canterburys water systems.

Student recognition in Youth Awards

The passion and hard work of UC student, Alyce Lysaght, was recognised by the community through theCanterbury Youth Awards. Alyce is a final-year Natural Resources Engineering student, minoring in Water and Environmental Engineering Systems. As well as producing her podcast series, she has been the Engineering representative for Te Akatoki, and was on the Infrastructure Commission Te Ao Mori testing panel, as well as mentoring Mori EngMe students at UC.

On-campus water restoration and conservation

Our Sustainability Office is an on-campus hub for students and staff and the wider community, interested in how they can create positive change and promote sustainable practices in their own lives and spaces. The water focused initiative run by the office informs our students and staff about water restoration and conservation. UCs potable water is sourced from aquifers underneath the city which are fed by water from the Southern Alps. Staff and students can learn more aboutwhere our water comes from,how it is being used, how they can help conserve it, andlearn about restoration workon the three waterways flowing through our own Ilam campus. There are also lots of helpful tips and free resources available, including a pocket map which shows the locations of the nearest drinking water fountains on campus to refill your bottle.

Reusing water on campus

In order to reduce the impact of UCs water requirements, UC's building design code specifies the use of rainwater harvesting, where a minimum of 2 months average annual rainfall must be captured, stored and reticulated to provide a minimum 50% toilet water used. The design guidelines are applied to all new buildings, and examples have already been commissioned and are in use. We measure how much water is collected and used, in order to track and validate our water reduction strategy.

2021 Water Reuse

Centre for EcoLogicalTechnology Solutions

UCs Centre for EcoLogical TechnicalSolutionsresearch is mostly on CleanWater Technologies both on pollutionprevention and pollution mitigation.Research is conducted in partnership
with councils, Iwi and industry.Associate Professor Aisling OSullivanleads the diverse research group. Apartfrom clean water research, whichincluded Associate Professor OSullivanpatenting the storm water downpipetechnology called Storminator, otherresearch projects include water qualitymonitoring and modelling, life cycleassessment involving quantifyingwhole-of-life environmental impactsof current and future wastewatertreatment systems, and engineeringeducation to enhance engineeringstudents competency in sustainability.

Recognising EmergingCareer Researchers

The Early and Emerging CareerResearcher Award recognisesoutstanding contributions to researchmade by a UC academic in the firstdecade of their career.Dr JonathanTonkin won the award in 2020. He isleading research seeking solutions onhow to prepare freshwater ecosystemsfor an ever more uncertain future.Globally, he is recognised for histheoretical work in this area and alsofor his leadership on communicatingthe pressing need for new approachesto managing river flows and forecastingtools. In Aotearoa, his research findingspaved the way to improving access toecosystems for native migratory fish.

Clean NZ Water

Water pollution is one of the biggestissues facing Aotearoa. UCsAssociateProfessor Aisling OSullivanis leading amulti-disciplinary, multi-institutionalteam of nationwide researchers on aproject aiming to help reverse waterpollution with innovative sustainabletreatment technologies, such as3D-printed water filters made frombiomaterials. With Mori and iwi,we are developing a valuable projectwhich has the potential to disrupt thewater treatment sector and mostimportantly return Te Mana o te Wai toour ecosystems and tangata whenua,Associate Professor OSullivan says.

Students Tackle TonganWater Challenges

A real-life challenge was given to a groupof UC final-year students. The challengecentred on Felemea, a real remote villagein Tonga, which needed clean drinkingwater but had limited electricity to run a processing plant. The studentteam had to create an economicallyviable plan for a small-scale plant todesalinate and sterilise drinking waterfor Felemea. The project idea came from UCs Geomechanics Laboratory Manager,Siale Faitotonu. A former high schoolteacher in Tonga, Siale visited Felemeaon a UC research trip at the start of 2020.This project is good for the studentsand for the community. Hopefully it willbecome a reality because that would bea blessing for Felemea, and there are alsoother islands in Tonga having similarproblems with water, who might beable to use the same kind of processingplant, he says. Siale was recently madea member of the New 厙ぴ勛圖Order ofMerit in the Queens Birthday HonoursList 2021.

Campus WaterwaysRestoration

啦堯梗泭Waterways Actiongroup isresponsible for the Campus Waterwaysproject aimed at restoring the ecologicalhealth and diversity of three campuswaterways. The Group and FacilitiesServices work together to improveUC waterways, and their focus is onimproving base flow (water quantity),reducing contamination (water quality)and improving habitat. In 2020 we switched from an automatic system to amanual system in using artesian waterto heat our Erskine Building. This changeenabled water to flow into campuswaterways throughout the entire year,thereby reducing the impact on streamlife. Progress was also made with filteringout contaminants, with significantwork done installing storm-water filtersto downpipes in hotspot campuslocations.

Trials to Reduce Nitratesin Canterbury Waterways

Trials commenced in 2020 to reducenitrates in Waitaha Canterburywaterways, backed by the Departmentof Conservation and Fonterra, withsupport from UC. A small springfedfarm waterway near Springstonwas chosen as a suitable site for theinstallation of an innovative twostepsolution involving a woodchipbioreactor and sediment trap. ProfessorJon Harding,Canterbury WaterwayRehabilitation Experiment (CAREX)Science Lead from UC, says testingand proving solutions will ultimatelyhelp farmers, landowners, watermanagement agencies and others be
able to take action and make a tangibledifference. Monitoring will continue forthe year, with results and updates to bepublished.

Water Resources Education and Research

UC has a range of innovative education and research options for the sustainable management of this critical resource, including:
Water Resource Management PhD
Masters Theses - topic of relevance to Water Resource Management
Water Quality and Quantity Assessment course
Research and Communication Methods course
Applied Hydrogeology course
Advanced Water Resources course jointly run by UC and Lincoln University
Water Management, Policy and Planning course jointly run by UC and Lincoln University

Find out more

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