Litcius/Paper detail

A review of limitations and potentials of desalination as a sustainable source of water

Babak Zolghadr‐Asli, Neil McIntyre, Slobodan Djordjević, Raziyeh Farmani, Liliana Pagliero, Víctoriano Martínez Álvarez, J.F. Maestre-Valero

2023Environmental Science and Pollution Research27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

For centuries, desalination, in one way or another, has helped alleviate water scarcity. Over time, desalination has gone through an evolutionary process influenced largely by available contemporary technology. This improvement, for the most part, was reflected in the energy efficiency and, in turn, in terms of the cost-effectiveness of this practice. Thanks to such advancements, by the 1960s, the desalination industry experienced notable exponential growth, becoming a formidable option to supplement conventional water resources with a reliable non-conventional resource. That said, often, there are pressing associated issues, most notably environmental, socioeconomic, health, and relatively recently, agronomic concerns. Such reservations raise the question of whether desalination is indeed a sustainable solution to current water supply problems. This is exceptionally important to understand in light of the looming water and food crises. This paper, thus, tends to review these potential issues from the sustainability perspective. It is concluded that the aforementioned issues are indeed major concerns, but they can be mitigated by actions that consider the local context. These may be either prophylactic, proactive measures that require careful planning to tailor the situation to best fit a given region or reactive measures such as incorporating pre- (e.g., removing particles, debris, microorganisms, suspended solids, and silt from the intake water prior to the desalination process) and post-treatments (e.g., reintroducing calcium and magnesium ions to water to enhance its quality for irrigation purposes) to target specific shortcomings of desalination.

Topics & Concepts

DesalinationSustainabilityContext (archaeology)ScarcityNatural resource economicsResource (disambiguation)Water scarcityProcess (computing)Environmental planningEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental engineeringWater resourcesBusinessEnvironmental economicsWater resource managementComputer scienceEconomicsEcologyChemistryOperating systemMicroeconomicsPaleontologyBiochemistryMembraneBiologyComputer networkWastewater Treatment and ReuseWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesMembrane Separation Technologies