Case 6 - Improving national surface water quality using an urban non-point pollution model and supporting database
Submitting Institution
University of LeedsUnit of Assessment
Geography, Environmental Studies and ArchaeologySummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Earth Sciences: Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
Environmental Sciences: Environmental Science and Management
Engineering: Environmental Engineering
Summary of the impact
    Surface water runoff in urban areas makes a significant contribution to
      pollution of lakes and rivers, but historically is poorly addressed in
      catchment models. The School of Geography (SoG) developed a Geographic
      Information System (GIS) model and supporting database to quantify urban
      source area loadings of 18 common and priority pollutants. This knowledge
      improves catchment models and supports impact assessment and mitigation
      planning by environment managers. The research has been exploited on
      behalf of the Department for Energy, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), the
      Welsh Assembly, and the UK water industry (UK Water Industry Research —
      UKWIR, and United Utilities). The research has had three distinct impacts:
      1) its use addressing EU Water Framework Directive obligations; 2) its
      on-going influence on construction industry guidance; and 3) the
      commercialisation of its stormwater pollutant coefficient database for
      Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SUDS) planning software.
    Underpinning research
    Stormwater pollution originating from urban areal sources (urban diffuse
      pollution) is a significant barrier to achieving river water quality
      objectives. Reducing the problem requires and understanding of the impact
      of urban diffuse loadings relative to other sources (such as agriculture,
      or combined sewer overflows), and measures such as installation of SUDS
      for new development and SUDS retrofit for existing built areas.
    The SoG developed a GIS model to assess pollutant loadings in waters
      draining urban areas (diffuse sources) [1], funded from 1998-2001
      by EPSRC (`Urban Development and Nonpoint Source Water Pollution:
      Developing a Generic Hazard Management Tool'; PI Professor Adrian McDonald,
      Co-Is Dr. Gordon Mitchell, J. Packman; £129 K, graded
      `outstanding'). Mitchell (at Leeds 1994-present, Research
      Fellow/Senior Research Fellow 1998-2005, Lecturer since 2005), assisted by
      Mr James Lockyer (Research Assistant) and Prof. Adrian McDonald
      (at Leeds 1972- present, Professor since 1992), developed the model to:
    a) map the location of diffuse urban pollution hot spots, under a range
      of probabilistic conditions;
    b) quantify pollutant load to receiving waters and so identify areas
      which present the greatest pollution hazard; and
    c) assess the impact of land-use change on non-point source runoff
      quality.
    The model has fine spatial resolution, yet facilitates pollution
      appraisal at the river basin scale, to support investigative monitoring
      and management of emissions at source. It can be used in whole catchment
      water quality management, and in planning to understand where the
      implementation of SUDS would have the greatest beneficial effect on
      pollution of receiving waters. The model can therefore be used to identify
      sites that could contribute to a failure to meet the environmental
      objectives set out in the WFD (Directive 2000/60/EC) that comes into force
      in 2015, and has particular value when combined with estimates of
      pollutant inputs from other source types across a catchment [3].
    The work was detailed in technical reports that describe the GIS model
      and a pilot application [1], and presents and describes the
      derivation of concentration coefficients, as mean site event-mean
      concentrations (EMC), for 18 pollutants [1], before then being
      published in the peer reviewed press [2]. The EMC values were
      developed for a range of urban land uses (residential, commercial, road
      etc.), and stratified by UK, northern European and global geographies. The
      university supports a project website [www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/projects/nps]
      where the technical reports can be downloaded. In addition to the project
      website, the reports were provided to key individuals in UK planning and
      regulatory agencies, including the Environment Agency and the Scottish
      Environment Protection Agency (SEPA). To further disseminate results,
      invited presentations were made at UK workshops and conferences, and the
      work featured in the keynote presentation to the International Water
      Quality Association (IWQA) specialist conference on diffuse pollution, in
      Johannesburg [4]. UK Water Industry Research (UKWIR, comprising of
      24 water and sewerage undertakers in England and Wales, Scotland and
      Northern Ireland) commissioned a 2007 pilot study on the contributions and
      impact of control measures on water quality (UKWIR Report Ref. No.
      07/WW/17/9). The study of the Ribble basin, a WFD UK sentinel catchment,
      was a collaboration between WRc Plc., the Environment Agency, United
      Utilities(UU) and Mitchell, through Emaginating Ltd (a University
      of Leeds spin-out company specialising in spatial modelling and analysis
      who applied the model with Mitchell acting as consultant). Mitchell
      contributed modelled urban diffuse runoff estimates and pollution loads
      for the basin to assess the relative contributions and the impact of
      control measures on river water quality. The pilot study showed current
      information combined with a catchment modelling approach can be used to:
      (1) apportion sources of pollution load across a catchment; and (2)
      identify the water quality co-benefits of point source and diffuse
      pollution control measures to achieve compliance with WFD river quality
      standards [5].
    References to the research
    The research has been published in a range of internationally-recognised,
      rigorously peer reviewed journals. The technical report [1] was a key
      input for output 2 in a peer reviewed journal.
    Internal Report
    
[1] Full account of development and test application of the
        urban diffuse pollution model Mitchell, G., Lockyer, J. and
      McDonald A.T. (2001). Pollution Hazard from Urban Nonpoint Sources:
      A GIS-model to Support Strategic Environmental Planning in the UK.
      Technical Report, Vols 1 and 2, School of Geography, University of Leeds,
      240pp.
     
Peer Reviewed Articles
    
[2] Key contribution to urban diffuse pollution appraisal in a
        highly ranked journal Mitchell, G. (2005) Mapping Hazard
      from Urban Non-Point Source Pollution: A Screening Model to Support
      Sustainable Urban Drainage Planning. Journal of Environmental
        Management, 74, 1-9. DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2004.08.002
     
[3] Paper reporting on threat to WFD targets from identified
        diffuse pollution sources and estimated loadings, and role of urban
        diffuse source modelling in compliance planning Ellis, J.B. and Mitchell,
        G. (2006) Urban Diffuse Pollution: Key Management Issues For the
      Water Framework Directive. Water and Environment Journal, 20,
      19-26. DOI:10.1111/j.1747- 6593.2006.00025.x
     
[4] Paper from keynote address to international practitioner
        conference (9th IWQA 2005) drawing on
        stormwater quality database and identifying urban diffuse pollution
        mitigation challenges D'Arcy, B., Rosenqvist, T., Mitchell, G.,
      Kellagher, R. and Billett, S. (2007). Restoration Challenges for Urban
      Rivers. Water Science and Technology, 55, 3, 1-7. DOI:
      10.2166/wst.2007.065
     
[5] Paper reporting on use of urban diffuse pollution model
        and database in the national source apportionment pilot study, funded by
        and conducted with practitioner agencies Crabtree, B., Kelly, S.,
      Green, H., Squibbs, G., and Mitchell, G. (2009). Water Framework
      Directive catchment planning: a case study apportioning loads and
      assessing environmental benefits of programme of measures, Water
        Science and Technology, 59, 3, 407-416. DOI: 10.2166/wst.2009.875.
     
Details of the impact
    The impacts of this research in the assessment period have been in three
      distinct areas.
    Use in Addressing EU Water Framework Directive Obligations
    Pre-2008 Context of Impact: Mitchell was invited by DEFRA to work
      with their non-agricultural diffuse pollution policy group, including
      invited presentations to DEFRA policy makers and analysts in June and
      October 2006. The context for this work was the water quality objectives
      defined by the EC Water Framework Directive (WFD), and the need to
      understand strategies and costs to attain compliance nationally. Members
      of the working group were then charged by DEFRA with developing a `source
      apportionment' methodology, to identify compliance with in-river water
      quality standards given a range of source inputs (rural diffuse, urban
      diffuse, point etc.) and mitigation scenarios. The work was based on a UK
      WFD sentinel catchment — the Ribble in NW England (includes Blackburn,
      Preston, Blackpool) — with financial support from UK water industry
      research (UKWIR). Mitchell produced model estimates of urban diffuse
      loadings to river reaches in the basin. Other source inputs were modelled
      by the Environment Agency and the Water Industry, whilst WRc [A]
      integrated inputs in SIMCAT, a river mass balance model that determines in
      river pollutant concentrations, and compiled the final report [B].
      Mitchell's database and the Ribble study are cited in works on preliminary
      cost effectiveness assessment of measures by DEFRA [C] and Water
      Industry Working Group [D].
    Assessment Period Impacts: The Ribble study demonstrated the value
      of having reliable estimates of pollutant inputs, integrated across a
      catchment, and the potential benefits of different control measures in
      terms of compliance with WFD directive standards. It was the first study
      able to include a detailed appraisal of urban diffuse inputs. The
      methodology developed in the study has been enhanced through development
      of SAGIS — a commercially available source apportionment GIS model funded
      by UKWIR and led by Atkins working with WRc (i.e. Ribble partners) and
      AMEC (formerly Entec) [A]. SAGIS has been adopted by the
      Environment Agency in WFD Article 5 risk assessments for `River Basin
      Planning 2', which runs from 2012 runs to 2015; Article 5 of the WFD
      mandates assessment of the pressures and impacts on water bodies [E].
    The SoG work has also been used by other parties to provide catchment
      data and advice to UK governments in support of catchment planning and
      policy appraisal. ADAS UK Ltd [F] in conjunction with the Centre
      for Ecology and Hydrology used the methodology and export coefficients in
      quantifying urban diffuse exports of sediment and nutrient species, as an
      input to whole catchment pollutant budgets. Their work for DEFRA (e.g.
      projects WQ0106 and WQ0128) assessed the likelihood of catchments failing
      to meet Water Framework Directive 'good ecological status' targets for
      2015 and provided evidence for ecological impacts of fine sediment, whilst
      that for the Welsh Government (Agri-Environment Monitoring and Services
      Contract Lot 3 No.183/2007/08) contributed to an on-going evaluation of
      agri-environment schemes (whereby farmers receive grant aid to farm in an
      environmentally sensitive manner). United Utilities (UU) [G] also
      commissioned Mitchell, via Emaginating Ltd, to model urban diffuse loads
      for their entire company region, most of NW England. UU's integrated river
      water quality model accounts for river hydrology, background water
      quality, continuous and intermittent discharges (flow and quality) from
      wastewater treatment works, combined sewers, storm tanks and urban surface
      water discharges, the latter addressed by data modelled by Mitchell. UU's
      integrated models are used to identify the location of intermittent
      discharge problems, and in design of Capital Projects to alleviate the
      effects of unsatisfactory discharges [G]. Finally, work for SEPA [H]
      allowed an evaluation of urban diffuse loading tools in Scotland, and via
      scenario modelling at Leeds, provision of advice on diffuse loading
      implications of urbanisation.
    Influence on Construction Industry Guidance
    Pre-2008 Context of Impact: The stormwater pollutant coefficient
      database addresses 18 important urban diffuse pollutants, which
      environment managers seek to control. Analysis of these data led to the
      recommendation of probabilistic (including central tendency) values of
      pollutant concentrations in stormwater, subdivided by geographical region
      (UK, N. Europe, Global) and urban land use (residential, commercial, road
      etc.). The UK construction industry, which is responsible for the
      installation of sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS) that are used to
      control stormwater pollution, recognises these data as the most
      comprehensive analysis of urban stormwater pollutant concentrations. The
      data are published in guidance to developers (CIRIA 609) on SUDS planning
      and implementation produced by the Construction Industry Research and
      Information Association, the UK construction industry advisory body [I:
      45-49].
    Assessment Period Impact: CIRIA 609 was superseded in 2007 by "The
      SUDS manual" and its abridged guide "Site Handbook for the Construction of
      SUDS", but for technical design guidance relating to water quality (as
      opposed to flow), developers continue to be referred to CIRIA 609 [see
      page xxxii), and hence this has been the relevant guidance throughout the
      assessment period. DEFRA estimate 40% of all new build and redevelopments
      in the UK are now being developed with SUDS measures (for reference,
      planning authorities in England permitted 342,000 domestic and commercial
      developments in 2012, and 108,000 new homes were constructed).
    Commercialisation for SUDS Planning
    The 2010 Flood and Water Act mandated national standards for SUDS and
      statutory SUDS approval bodies (SABs) to regulate and permit SUDS designs.
      Quantitative techniques support evaluation of SUDS designs, and SAB
      decision making, hence in 2012 Jeremy Bentham Associates (JBA, www.jbaconsulting.co.uk),
      a UK based international environmental engineering consulting firm
      licenced the stormwater pollutant (EMC) coefficient database from the SoG.
      The database underpins UK applications of the proprietary SUDS planning
      model MUSIC (model of urban stormwater improvement conceptualisation)
      developed by the Australian Cooperative Research Centres and sold by
      eWater Innovation Pty Ltd (www.ewater.com.au;
      company ABN 80 133 551 283), who appointed JBA as their sole European
      agent (for context, MUSIC received £4 million of investment funding from
      the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, and has
      sold 2000 copies in Australia over the last decade). MUSIC requires
      geographically suitable stormwater loading coefficients for use in UK/Eire
      applications of the model, and JBA have purchased non-exclusive rights to
      Mitchell's EMC database, for 5.5% of net revenue [J] [K].
    Sources to corroborate the impact 
    [A] Letter from former Head of Environmental Management Division, WRc
      Plc. To verify role of model in UKWIR source apportionment, and legacy of
      Ribble project; dated 23 August 2013. [Available on request]
    [B] Crabtree, B. and Kelly, S. (2007) Ribble SIMCAT Pilot Study:
      Assessment of Relative Contributions and the Impact of Control Measures on
      Water Quality, UKWIR Report Ref. No. 07/WW/17/9, 2007. [Available on
      request]
    [C] DEFRA (2007) Cost-effectiveness of measures: Analysis of measures to
      reduce non- agricultural diffuse pollution. Final Report version 1
      9S4904.A0; 9S4870.02.34A. [Available on request].
    [D] WFD preliminary cost effectiveness analysis (pCEA) - Water Industry
      working group, Supporting Document (version 0.3, dated 20 June 2007).
      [Available on request]
    [E] Environment Agency update to DEFRA Water Stakeholder Forum - Update
      on Progress, dated June 2012, page 8. [Available on request]
    [F] ADAS UK Ltd - Assessment for the development of a screening tool to
      identify and characterise diffuse urban pollution pressures. Pages 19, 30,
      33-40, 42, 43, 47, 50, 53, 160, 164, dated May 2003. [Available on
      request]
    [G] Email from Network Modelling Technical Specialist, United Utilities
      Plc; dated 20 June 2013. To verify consultancy work for United Utilities.
      [Available on request]
    [H] Letter from Former Director of Diffuse Pollution, SEPA 1996-2010 (and
      commissioner of review work for SEPA), commenting on the value of the GIS
      urban modelling work, dated 12 October 2013. [Available on request].
    [I] Sustainable Drainage Systems: Hydraulic, structural and water
        quality advice. CIRIA 609, ISBN 0-86017609-6, 2004. Pages 45-49.
      [Available on request]
    [J] Letter from former eWater International Business Development and
      Technical Manager, eWater Innovation Pty Ltd.; dated 4 September 2013
      [Available on request]
    [K] Commercialisation Agreement between University of Leeds (Gordon
      Mitchell) and eWater Innovation pty Ltd; dated 30 November 2011.
      [Available on request].