2010
DOI: 10.14198/ingeo2010.51.06
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Recursos de agua no convencionales en España: estado de la cuestión, 2010

Abstract: RESUMENLos recursos de agua no convencionales han experimentado un notable desarrollo durante la primera década del presente siglo. El cumplimiento de la Directiva 91/271 de depuración de aguas residuales urbanas y la puesta en marcha del programa AGUA han resultado decisivos para el impulso de la depuración y desalación de aguas en España. Por el contrario, la reutilización de aguas residuales depuradas, aunque cuenta con actuaciones significativas (agricultura, usos recreativos), sigue siendo una asignatura … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
7
0
3

Year Published

2012
2012
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
5
3
1

Relationship

1
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 25 publications
(12 citation statements)
references
References 3 publications
(1 reference statement)
0
7
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…Although the generalization of perceptive studies has not resulted in a generalization of the applied methodologies (each study tends to apply specific questions, different concepts, and combined analysis techniques), public acceptance regarding reclaimed wastewater for irrigation ranges from as low as 40-50% to as high as 70-90% [125]. The lowest percentages could respond to different reasons: (1) many citizens can perceive health risks or suspect about appearance, color and odor of reclaimed wastewater [126]; (2) communities could suspect that wastewater reuse was being promoted in secret and that their environmental and health concerns were being ignored [127]; or (3) water reuse organizations failed to adequately promote the benefits of their operations [128]. Studies conducted by Leong [129,130] suggest that public acceptance of reclaimed wastewater for food production is the result of the combination of multiple factors, including attitude and emotion, subjective norms (influence of people around you), knowledge or information about the water scheme, perceived risks, trust in water control authority, specific reclaimed wastewater use, water cost, and water scarcity scenarios.…”
Section: Yuck Factormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the generalization of perceptive studies has not resulted in a generalization of the applied methodologies (each study tends to apply specific questions, different concepts, and combined analysis techniques), public acceptance regarding reclaimed wastewater for irrigation ranges from as low as 40-50% to as high as 70-90% [125]. The lowest percentages could respond to different reasons: (1) many citizens can perceive health risks or suspect about appearance, color and odor of reclaimed wastewater [126]; (2) communities could suspect that wastewater reuse was being promoted in secret and that their environmental and health concerns were being ignored [127]; or (3) water reuse organizations failed to adequately promote the benefits of their operations [128]. Studies conducted by Leong [129,130] suggest that public acceptance of reclaimed wastewater for food production is the result of the combination of multiple factors, including attitude and emotion, subjective norms (influence of people around you), knowledge or information about the water scheme, perceived risks, trust in water control authority, specific reclaimed wastewater use, water cost, and water scarcity scenarios.…”
Section: Yuck Factormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En Israel, que partía de 280 hm 3 /año, se pretendía llegar a 380 y en Italia de 45 a 250. El resto de países quedaban muy por debajo en la realidad y en las expectativas (Olcina y Moltó, 2010 …”
Section: Las Aguas Regeneradas En El áMbito Internacionalunclassified
“…La reutilización de aguas residuales depuradas, aunque cuenta con actuaciones significativas (agricultura y usos recreativos), sigue siendo una asignatura pendiente de la planificación del agua en nuestro país, con la excepción que representan regiones como Murcia y Valencia, donde se ha recurrido al uso de estos recursos alternativos para usos agrícolas (Olcina y Moltó, 2010). Sin embargo, en algunas regiones españolas la gran expansión del poblamiento urbano-turístico experimentado desde mediados de la década de 1990 hasta el estallido de la crisis inmobiliaria y financiera de 2007/08, con cambios cuantitativos y cualitativos en los modelos residenciales (urbanismo disperso con nuevos equipamientos como jardines, piscinas, campos de golf, etc.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Se han señalado el desarrollo de proyectos de investigación destacados en el ámbito europeo orientados al estudio de las consecuencias del cambio climático en las actividades económicas ("Peseta" del JRC, Espon-Climate). En España, se han llevado a cabo algunos proyectos de investigación competitivos, donde los posibles efectos del cambio climático y los extremos atmosféricos asociados, comienzan a tenerse en cuenta en el marco de la planificación sostenible y renovación de destinos turísticos 33 . Asimismo, la Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional ha financiado acciones para el análisis de los efectos del cambio climático en la actividad turística de países en desarrollo 34 .…”
Section: Investigaciones Turísticasunclassified