Author Archives: James Beam

  • -

“PIRE holds an all-hands-on-deck strategic planning meeting at UCI. Find out what’s in store for 2014!”

The PIRE team had quite the day of planning for the 2014 year this last Saturday, January 25th. Please see below to check out the agenda, PowerPoint presentations and video (coming soon) from the day!


Agenda:

2014 PIRE Retreat Agenda

Presentations:
 Stanley grant Dr. Stanley Grant – UCI

State of the Budget

UPP Down Under Closure – Overview of Field Sites Visited in 2013

Proposed Reciprocal Program with University of Monash

Hyporheic Exchange and Urban Water Demand

 

Lisa Levin Dr. Lisa Levin – UCSD

Overview of Ecological Results in 2013

Animal Communities in Wetlands & Biofilters

rippy_meg Dr. Megan Rippy – Post Doctoral Researcher – UCI

Overview of Physical/Chlorophyll Results in 2013

Evaporation Concepts – Stormwater Fountains as Public Art

Post Doctoral Research Status Report

Sunny Jiang Dr. Sunny Jiang – UCI

Overview of Pathogen Results in 2013

Pathogens & Public Health Risks

Lisa Professional picture Dr. Lisa Kohne – SmartStart

Lessons From the 2013 UPP Down Under

Evaluation of 2013 CASQA Meetings

 Processed with VSCOcam with f2 preset Edith De Guzman – TreePeople

Tree People Summary

 JianPeng Jian Peng – County of Orange

OC Stormwater Low Impact Retrofit

 Orange-County-seal Matt Yeager, Chris Crompton, Mark Grey – County of Orange, Yeager Environmental

OC Fletcher Basin
  City_of_Irvine_Official_City_Seal Amanda Carr – City of Irvine


How to Submit a Successful Prop 84 Proposal

  uci_seal_2col Dr. Richard Demerjian – UCI

UCI’s Stormwater Infrastructure

Evaporation Concepts – Misting Stormwater to Grow Redwood Forests

  David Feldman Dr. David Feldman

Urban Water Sustainability Textbook

UCI Activities

Strategic Planning for 2014 and Beyond

  Jean-Daniel Saphores Dr. Jean-Daniel Saphores – UCI

Special Issues of WIRES Water

Resource Economics and Public Perception

  Amir AghaKouchak_ Dr. Amir Aghakouchak – UCI

Proposed 2014 Conferences

Defining/Predicting Drought

  diego Rosso Dr. Diego Rosso – UCI

Greenhouse Gas Emissions

  Brett Sanders Dr. Brett Sanders – UCI

Flood Modeling

  Rich Ambrose-UCLA Dr. Richard Ambrose – UCLA

Plant Communities in Wetlands & Biofilters

  wastenot_110822_01_sz_s780x520 Dr. Jack Brouwer – UCI

Opportunities for Energy Related Research

  MEHRING_ANDREW Dr. Andrew Mehring – UCSD

Post-Doctoral Status Report

  Winfrey_PIRE Dr. Brandon Winfrey – UCLA

Post-Doctoral Status Report

  picture-595 Lindsey Stuvick – UCI

Post-Doctoral Status Report


  • -

  • -

  • -

  • -

Stanley Grant presents information about LEO’s and the UCI Water-PIRE program at the quarterly CEE Affiliates meeting

 


 

pptClick Here for the PowerPoint Slides57Click Here for More Info Regarding the CEE Affiliates Program


edit3

From Right to Left: Gregory Washington (Dean, Henry Samueli School of Engineering), Stanley Grant (Professor, UC Irvine),  Adel Hagekhalil (Assistant Director, Bureau of Sanitation, City of Los Angeles),  Sam Abi-Samra, David Feldman (Professor, UC Irvine), Brett Sanders (Chair, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering)


  • -

  • -

  • -

Professor Sunny Jiang and her PhD student Keah-Ying Lim evaluate the health risks associated with household use of rooftop-harvested rainwater in an article published in the journal Water Research.

123

Highlights

•Health risk associated with harvested rainwater for home gardening is evaluated.
•Results indicate the annual risk exceeds U.S. EPA drinking water risk benchmark.
•Comparative risk shows lower risk of applying rainwater than reclaimed water.
•Current risk benchmark should be reconsidered for sustainable water practice.

Abstract

Health risk concerns associated with household use of rooftop-harvested rainwater (HRW) constitute one of the main impediments to exploit the benefits of rainwater harvesting in the United States. However, the benchmark based on the U.S. EPA acceptable annual infection risk level of ≤ 1 case per 10,000 persons per year (≤ 10-4 pppy) developed to aid drinking water regulations may be unnecessarily stringent for sustainable water practice. In this study, we challenge the current risk benchmark by quantifying the potential microbial risk associated with consumption of HRW-irrigated home produce and comparing it against the current risk benchmark. Microbial pathogen data for HRW and exposure rates reported in literature are applied to assess the potential microbial risk posed to household consumers of their homegrown produce. A Quantitative Risk Assessment (QMRA) model based on worst-case scenario (e.g. overhead irrigation, no pathogen inactivation) is applied to three crops that are most popular among home gardeners (lettuce, cucumbers, and tomatoes) and commonly consumed raw. The infection risks of household consumers attributed to consumption of these home produce vary with the type of produce. The lettuce presents the highest risk, which is followed by tomato and cucumber, respectively. Results show that the 95th percentile values of infection risk per intake event of home produce are one to three orders of magnitude (10-7 to 10-5) lower than U.S. EPA risk benchmark (≤ 10-4 pppy). However, annual infection risks under the same scenario (multiple intake events in a year) are very likely to exceed the risk benchmark by one order of magnitude in some cases. Estimated 95th percentile values of the annual risk are in the 10-4 to 10-3 pppy range, which are still lower than the 10-3 to 10-1 pppy risk range of reclaimed water irrigated produce estimated in comparable studies. We further discuss the desirability of HRW for irrigating home produce based on the relative risk of HRW to reclaimed wastewater for irrigation of food crops. The appropriateness of the ≤ 10-4 pppy annual risk benchmark for assessing safety level of HRW-irrigated fresh produce is questioned by considering the assumptions made for the QMRA model. Consequently, the need of an updated approach to assess appropriateness of sustainable water practice for making guidelines and policies is proposed.

http://origin-ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0043135413008245-fx1.jpg

Click Here for the full article.

Click Here for a PDF Download of the article.


  • -

  • -

Archives

Photos