Newsletter September 2022
AquaticPollutants NATURE Project
The NATURE project started in September 2021 with the aim of assessing nature-based solutions as management option for water treatment on the catchment scale. Nature-based solutions are “living solutions” inspired by nature to address various ...
The NATURE project started in September 2021 with the aim of assessing nature-based solutions as management option for water treatment on the catchment scale. Nature-based solutions are “living solutions” inspired by nature to address various societal challenges in a resource-efficient and adaptable manner. According to the EU Research & Innovation agenda, they are key components to greening the economy and achieving sustainable development.
Coordinated by the IDAEA-CSIC in Spain with the collaboration of 5 institutes and companies from European and African countries (Aarhus university, CIIMAR, KIT, Kilian Water company, and ENI-ABT), the project implements an array of nature-based solutions including conventional and high-end constructed wetlands, river re-naturalization, and restoration of wetlands. These will cover the continuum from urban sources to coastal biota in estuaries. The analyses include the quantification of the fate of antibiotics, pathogens, and antimicrobial resistance in these systems together with ecotoxicological and human health assessments.
The application of these sustainable solutions will become essential in the coming years due to the economic costs of conventional water treatment and the need to re-naturalize ecosystems. NATURE will increase the knowledge of nature-based solutions’ effectiveness in reducing risks associated with antibiotics, pathogens and antimicrobial resistance. The project will also enhance the capacity of local stakeholders in the implementation of these solutions and will establish a sustainable network of scientists among the EU countries.
Beyond water quality: sewage treatment in a circular economy
European Environment Agency report on water treatment
The European Green Deal sets out an ambitious agenda 'to transform the EU into a fair and prosperous society, with a resource-efficient and competitive economy where there are no net emissions of greenhouse gases' (EC, 2019a).
Sewage treatment is ...
The European Green Deal sets out an ambitious agenda 'to transform the EU into a fair and prosperous society, with a resource-efficient and competitive economy where there are no net emissions of greenhouse gases' (EC, 2019a).
Sewage treatment is an essential service that can deliver clean water, nutrients and organic fertiliser. It can and should contribute to delivering the broad goals of the Green Deal, with a key role in supporting the ambition to achieve zero pollution. Reviews and evaluations of key parts of European legislation, such as the Urban Waste Water Treatment and the Sewage Sludge Directives, present the opportunity to modernise and improve coherency across the sector. While recognising the broad scope of sewage treatment, it must be appreciated that the primary priority is to protect human health and the environment from the harm caused by insufficiently-treated sewage.
This report focuses on water management, but action is needed in other sectors to support this area in achieving the ambitions of the Green Deal. In particular, planning legislation should enable innovative sewage treatment, while upstream efforts on water efficiency and pollution control must minimise both the volume of water to be treated and the level of contamination. Innovation is needed not only in technical approaches but also at cultural levels, for example in allowing citizens to take part in local decisions on approaches to water and sewage management.
Download the report.
Water scarcity: Commission advises on safe water reuse in agriculture
Minimum requirements for water reuse – guidelines
Today, the Commission published guidelines to help Member States and stakeholders apply the rules on the safe reuse of treated urban waste water for agricultural irrigation. With several Member States increasingly suffering from droughts, reusing ...
Today, the Commission published guidelines to help Member States and stakeholders apply the rules on the safe reuse of treated urban waste water for agricultural irrigation. With several Member States increasingly suffering from droughts, reusing water from urban waste water treatment plants can become an essential tool to ensure a safe and predictable source of water, whilst lowering the pressure on water bodies and enhancing the EU’s ability to adapt to climate change. The Water Reuse Regulation, applicable from June 2023, sets out minimum water quality, risk management and monitoring requirements to ensure safe water reuse. The guidelines are complemented by several practical examples to facilitate the application of the rules.
Commissioner for the Environment, Fisheries and Oceans Virginijus Sinkevičius, said:
Freshwater resources are scarce and increasingly under pressure. In times of unprecedented temperature peaks, we need to stop wasting water and use this resource more efficiently to adapt to the changing climate and ensure the security and sustainability of our agricultural supply. Today’s guidelines can help us do just that and secure the safe circulation, across the EU, of food products grown with reclaimed water.
Water reuse can limit abstractions from surface waters and groundwater and promote a more efficient management of water resources, through the multiple uses of water within the urban water cycle, in line with the EU’s goals under the European Green Deal.
This drive towards more efficient use of water is also reflected in the recent Commission proposal to revise the Industrial Emissions Directive, calling also for a more efficient use of water across all industrial processes including through water reuse. The upcoming Commission’s proposal to revise the Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive will also aim to further facilitate water reuse.
Background
In the context of the European Green Deal, both the Circular Economy Action Plan and the new EU Climate Adaptation Strategyrefer to wider use of treated waste water as a way to increase the EU’s ability to respond to the increasing pressures on water resources.
Water reuse could also contribute to the Farm to Fork Strategy’s goal of reducing the environmental footprint of the EU food system and strengthen its resilience, by providing an alternative, more reliable water source for irrigation. Funding opportunities for investments in irrigation with reclaimed water as an alternative water supply exist under the Common Agricultural Policy.
The Regulation on minimum requirements for water reuse (Water Reuse Regulation) sets harmonised minimum water quality requirements for the safe reuse of treated urban wastewater in agricultural irrigation, with the aim of facilitating the uptake of this practice. The Regulation also foresees the possibility for Member States to decide to introduce this practice at a later stage, on the basis of specific criteria. Such decisions must be regularly reviewed to take into account climate change projections and national strategies, as well as the river basins management plans established under the Water Framework Directive.
To ensure coordination between Member States, where water reuse is of cross-border relevance, Member States will have to designate a contact point to ensure timely exchanges with other Member States’ contact point and competent authorities.
The Regulation also sets out harmonised minimum monitoring requirements, risk management provisions to assess and address potential additional health risks and possible environmental risks, permitting obligations, and provisions on transparency, whereby key information about any water reuse project is to be made publicly available.
For more information
In-situ Total Nutrient Analyser System for Natural Waters
Real-time water quality management plays a key role in the transition to a more ecologically sustainable society. With ever-changing climate and human-influenced conditions affecting our lakes, rivers, streams and coastal waters, water quality needs ...
Real-time water quality management plays a key role in the transition to a more ecologically sustainable society. With ever-changing climate and human-influenced conditions affecting our lakes, rivers, streams and coastal waters, water quality needs to be consistently monitored, and any quality issues should be flagged at the earliest possible stages.
Traditionally, water quality monitoring relies on manual systems of data collection, otherwise known as grab sampling. Collected in an open container or bottle, samples are sent to a laboratory for analysis. Although the process is well established, it is time consuming: analysis results are released after several days and only represent snapshots of the various measured variables, rendering it difficult to compare or assess their values over time. Furthermore, the complexity, short deployment endurance and high cost of current in situ monitoring systems make them impractical, especially when it comes to small-scale operations. T.E. Laboratories, which specialises in water and environmental analysis and research, demonstrated an alternative to manual and in situ systems of data collection and sampling. “A new breed of autonomous, real-time analyser, Aquamonitrix®, was introduced to the market in 2021 that can measure nitrite and nitrate in situ with high accuracy and specificity in natural and industrial waters,” explains Sandra Lacey, research officer at T.E. Laboratories.
The global map of aridity
Precipitation alone does not properly characterize vegetation water stresses. Indeed, water needs of plants or crops to maintain their physiological processes – the evapotranspiration – depends on many meteorological and climatic variables, ...
Precipitation alone does not properly characterize vegetation water stresses. Indeed, water needs of plants or crops to maintain their physiological processes – the evapotranspiration – depends on many meteorological and climatic variables, including solar radiation, air temperature, relative humidity and wind speed, as well as specific crop characteristics and cultivation practices.
Aridity indices are therefore implemented to measure the adequacy of the precipitation to satisfy vegetation water requirements, namely as ratio of annual precipitation to evapotranspiration of reference crop, or Potential EvapoTranspiration.
An international team of scientists has released a set of updated and improved estimations of Potential Evapotranspiration and an Aridity Index for the entire world. The peer-reviewed article describing the database has recently been published in the Nature journal – Scientific Data. The database presents the values of the indices for the entire globe at a very high spatial resolution of approximately 1 km2 for the period 1970-2000, and as baseline for future projections.
SRI2022 Congress in open access
The 2022 Sustainability Research and Innovation Congress (SRI2022) is now open access.
The second edition of SRI held in Pretoria, South Africa, and online in June 2022 attracted nearly 2000 participants from academia, industry, business and civil ...
The 2022 Sustainability Research and Innovation Congress (SRI2022) is now open access.
The second edition of SRI held in Pretoria, South Africa, and online in June 2022 attracted nearly 2000 participants from academia, industry, business and civil society and from more than 100 countries on six continents. This Congress offers exceptional opportunities for connecting knowledge to action and advance transformations to sustainability.
Water4All 2022 Joint Call Open!
The European Partnership Water4All - Water Security for the Planet - is launching its first Joint Call for research projects!
Thirty-Four Funding Agencies from all over Europe and abroad are pleased to announce a joint transnational call for ...
The European Partnership Water4All - Water Security for the Planet - is launching its first Joint Call for research projects!
Thirty-Four Funding Agencies from all over Europe and abroad are pleased to announce a joint transnational call for research and innovation projects on “Management of water resources: resilience, adaptation and mitigation to hydroclimatic extreme events and management tools”.
Call Topics
The call will focus on solutions for hydroclimatic extreme events, as described in the Water4All Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda Theme III “Water for the future: sustainable water management”, as well as address the cross-cutting Theme VII “Governance” and Theme V “Water Infrastructures”. Research & innovation proposals submitted under the Water4All 2022 Joint Transnational Call are required to address at least one of the following topics:
- Topic 1. Resilience, adaptation and mitigation to hydroclimatic extreme events
- Topic 2. Tools for water management - in the context of hydroclimatic extreme events
- Topic 3. Improved water governance in the context hydroclimatic extreme events and international contexts
Call timeline
- Call Opening: 1 September 2022
- Submission Deadline of Pre-proposal: 31 October 2022 at 15:00 (CET)
- Selection of Pre-proposals: 10 January 2023
- Submission Deadline of Full-proposals: 20 March 2023
- Selection of Proposals: 6 June 2023
- Projects kick off / Start: Autumn 2023
An information webinar will be held on 23rd September 2022 from 14.00-15.30 CEST. The record of the event will be available on the call webpage. Please register here
Consult the call announcement, the list of funding partner organisations and national contact points, as well as national/regional regulations available for download on the call webpage.
Biodiversa+ 2022 Joint Call Open!
Biodiversa+, the European Biodiversity Partnership under Horizon Europe, is pleased to launch a new transnational joint research call on “Improved transnational monitoring of biodiversity and ecosystem change for science and society”.
This call ...
Biodiversa+, the European Biodiversity Partnership under Horizon Europe, is pleased to launch a new transnational joint research call on “Improved transnational monitoring of biodiversity and ecosystem change for science and society”.
This call will cover the following three non-exclusive research themes:
- Innovation and harmonisation of methods and tools for collection and management of biodiversity monitoring data
- Addressing knowledge gaps on biodiversity status, dynamics, and trends to reverse biodiversity loss
- Making use of available biodiversity monitoring data
All environments (i.e. terrestrial, inland freshwater including wetlands, and marine) will be eligible.
A two-step application procedure will be used with a closing date for pre-proposals early November 2022. A first evaluation of pre-proposals will be organised and the deadline to submit full proposals will be early April 2023.
An information webinar about this call is scheduled on 20 September 2022. You can consult the Biodiversa+ website and subscribe to news to be kept updated on latest information on this future major research funding opportunity.
Read more about Biodiversa+ here
Call for abstracts - UNESCO-IWRA Online Conference
The deadline for the submission of abstracts is on 10 October 2022.
UNESCO-IWRA Online Conference on 'Emerging Pollutants: Protecting Water Quality for the Health of People and the Environment' will be held from 17-19 January 2023. The Online Conference, the 3rd in the IWRA Online Conference Series, will highlight ...
UNESCO-IWRA Online Conference on 'Emerging Pollutants: Protecting Water Quality for the Health of People and the Environment' will be held from 17-19 January 2023. The Online Conference, the 3rd in the IWRA Online Conference Series, will highlight the ways the world can advance knowledge, research, and solutions for managing emerging pollutants to improve and protect water quality in a changing world.
Conference themes
The overarching theme of the Online Conference is “Emerging Pollutants: Protecting Water Quality for the Health of People and the Environment”. This theme was selected to focus the conference on the intersection of the science-policy interface when addressing emerging pollutants, and steps and mechanisms that must be pursued to protect the health of people and communities as well as that of the natural environment.
- Theme 1: Emerging pollutants in aquatic ecosystems
- Theme 2: Emerging pollutants and groundwater
- Theme 3: Emerging pollutants and managing wastewater and waste
- Theme 4: A circular economy approach: Lifecycle management of emerging pollutants
- Theme 5: “Priority” emerging pollutants in the hydrocycle: microplastics, nanomaterial, PFAs and PPCPs
More detail on the themes and sub-themes can be found on the official conference website.
Registration for the conference is free and all conference-related materials will be open access.
Call for Abstracts open
Participants from all backgrounds (i.e., academics, water professionals, private sector practitioners and civil society stakeholders) who wish to present their work on the indicated theme and related sub-themes at this online conference, are invited to submit an abstract. Participation by participants from developing countries, women, underrepresented groups, and youth is highly encouraged. This conference will have options to present in online oral and poster formats and will include a special submission category for young water professionals.
The deadline for the submission of abstracts is on 10 October 2022.
More information and abstract submission - here
Horizon Europe: OpenAIRE Guides for Researchers
The European Commission’s 2021-2027 research funding programme for research and innovation Horizon Europe includes Open Science in different sections of the grant proposal and within that the realisation of the research and innovation process. In ...
The European Commission’s 2021-2027 research funding programme for research and innovation Horizon Europe includes Open Science in different sections of the grant proposal and within that the realisation of the research and innovation process. In particular, the legal provisions in the grant agreements aim to strengthen the Open Access rights and obligations for beneficiaries and to meet the requirements of open science for both publications and data.
OpenAIRE has prepared three guides aimed at researchers who wish to take part in funding calls. These guides are intended to supplement the guides already available through the EC and aim to provide a more digestible format in which the relevant information can be referenced and which will aid proposal writing.
- How to comply with Horizon Europe mandate for publications
- Open Science in Horizon Europe proposal
- RDM in Horizon Europe Proposals
Webinar on “Solutions and challenges for sustainable water management in the Mediterranean basin”
Sep 29, 2022 from 09:00 AM to 01:00 PM CEST
The use of non-conventional water resources and sustainable water management through smart agriculture will be among the topics that will be discussed during the webinar entitled “Solutions and challenges for sustainable water management in ...
The use of non-conventional water resources and sustainable water management through smart agriculture will be among the topics that will be discussed during the webinar entitled “Solutions and challenges for sustainable water management in the Mediterranean basin”, organised by three innovative PRIMA projects: Fit4Reuse, DSWAP and WATERMED 4.0.
The first two sessions of the webinar will feature a series of presentations by the partners of the three projects, while the last session will be a roundtable discussion, featuring water experts from the Institut Méditerranéen de l'Eau (IME), Irrigants d'Europe, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission and the Arizona State University.
The webinar will be held on Thursday 29 September 2022 (9:00-13:00 CEST) and will be live-streamed via Zoom.
Registrations here: https://lnkd.in/d2KUiNKt
Science Europe workshop on Spreading Excellence and Widening Participation in European R&I programmes
Sep 27, 2022 from 09:00 AM to 01:00 PM CEST
As part of the 2022 SE Workplan and in a renewed effort to support capacity-building in all European countries, Science Europe has launched this year a series of networking and policy activities. With this, Science Europe aims to draw attention on ...
As part of the 2022 SE Workplan and in a renewed effort to support capacity-building in all European countries, Science Europe has launched this year a series of networking and policy activities. With this, Science Europe aims to draw attention on the benefits, challenges and opportunities of the capacity building and collaborative instruments both for so called ‘widening’ and ‘non-widening’ countries.
This second workshop will focus on national instruments, the possible synergies between various instruments, and the use of European Structural and Investment Funds (ESIF) and Partnerships. The main goal is to share good examples and facilitate an interactive exchange of views and experiences among Science Europe members. Participants will also be invited to reflect upon improving brain circulation across Europe.
As a reminder, the first workshop, which took place in May, focused on Horizon Europe’s dedicated instruments. A third, public, workshop will be organised in the framework of the Czech Presidency of the EU Council on 9-10 November in Prague.
European Rivers Summit 2022
September 29 @ 8:00 am - October 1 @ 5:00 pm CEST
The Summit - September 29 @ 8:00 am - October 1 @ 5:00 pm - aims to inspire a movement of connected citizens in Europe to protect and restore European rivers, fight new dams and remove obsolete barriers. Healthy rivers are essential to delivering ...
The Summit - September 29 @ 8:00 am - October 1 @ 5:00 pm - aims to inspire a movement of connected citizens in Europe to protect and restore European rivers, fight new dams and remove obsolete barriers. Healthy rivers are essential to delivering the European Green Deal and we aim to connect river champions around Europe to policy-makers in Brussels, with a two-day conference plus a third day to visit a river restoration site.
Horizon Europe Info Day @Taiwan
6 October 2022, 09:00 AM-11:30 AM CEST
The National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) of Taiwan will hold 2022 Horizon Europe Info Day @Taiwan on October 6th, 2022. This event will provide critical information for researchers around the world interested in applying the calls related ...
The National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) of Taiwan will hold 2022 Horizon Europe Info Day @Taiwan on October 6th, 2022. This event will provide critical information for researchers around the world interested in applying the calls related to the EU Horizon Europe framework programme. It also aims at strengthening cooperation and communication among Taiwan and EU partners. The event will be divided into two “Break-out Sessions” and “Opening Ceremony”, which will be held in English. Participants around the globe are welcome to join remotely.
The break-out sessions will be dedicated to the promotion of calls related to the EU Horizon Europe. Call Coordinators and their teams will be invited to join us and to give short presentations about the calls, advise on how to write proposals, share of success stories. The second break-out session will include in particular:
- a presentation of the European Partnership Water4All by Miguel Angel Gilarranz, Water4All vice-Chair,
- an introduction of the Water4All 2022 Joint Call by Maria Banco, Water4All Call Secretariat,
- a presentation on cooperation and synergies towards Green Deal by Maciej Zalewski, Water4All vice-Chair.
Registration deadline: 26 September 2022
Registration Form - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScMDmI7Drcxtmegc7Cr8gGDJRbYcbfggJXWu0wWfjmQmHg4qw/viewform
European Research and Innovation Days 2022
28 and 29 September 2022
European Research and Innovation Days is the European Commission’s annual flagship Research and Innovation event, bringing together policymakers, researchers, entrepreneurs and the public to debate and shape the future of research and innovation in ...
European Research and Innovation Days is the European Commission’s annual flagship Research and Innovation event, bringing together policymakers, researchers, entrepreneurs and the public to debate and shape the future of research and innovation in Europe and beyond.
The event will take place online on 28 and 29 September 2022, allowing everyone to get involved from anywhere.
Water Knowledge Europe 2022
The event, Brussels on October 17-19, will guide through the Horizon Europe (HEU) Work Programmes 2023-2024 and reveal you all the exclusive insights you need for the preparation of winning project proposals.
WKE2022 intends to reward the best ...
The event, Brussels on October 17-19, will guide through the Horizon Europe (HEU) Work Programmes 2023-2024 and reveal you all the exclusive insights you need for the preparation of winning project proposals.
WKE2022 intends to reward the best running or recently phased out projects contributing to the achievement of a Water Smart Society. Get ready to send your application to participate for the Water Europe Projects Award (WEPA).