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What is graywater?
Any water that has been used in the home,
except water from toilets, is called graywater. Dish, shower,
sink, and laundry water comprise 50 — 80% of residential "waste" water.
This may be reused for other purposes, especially landscape irrigation.
Why use graywater?
It's a waste to irrigate with great
quantities of drinking water when plants thrive on used water containing
small bits of compost. Unlike a lot of ecological stopgap
measures, graywater reuse is a part of the fundamental solution to many
ecological problems and will probably remain essentially unchanged in
the distant future. The benefits of graywater recycling include:
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Lower fresh water use:
Graywater can replace fresh water in
many instances, saving money and increasing the effective water
supply in
regions where irrigation is needed. Residential water use is
almost evenly split between indoor and outdoor. All
except toilet water could be recycled outdoors, achieving the same
result with significantly less water diverted
from nature.
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Less strain on failing septic tank or
treatment plant:
Graywater use greatly extends the
useful life and capacity of septic systems. For municipal
treatment systems, decreased wastewater flow means higher treatment
effectiveness and lower costs.
Graywater is purified to a
spectacularly high degree in the upper, most biologically active
region of the soil. This protects the quality of natural
surface and ground waters.
For sites with slow soil percolation
or other problems, a graywater system can be a partial or complete
substitute for a very costly, over-engineered system.
Less energy and chemicals are used due
to the reduced amount of both freshwater and wastewater that needs
pumping and treatment. For those providing their own water or
electricity, the advantage of a reduced burden on the infrastructure
is felt directly. Also, treating your wastewater in the soil
under your own fruit trees definitely encourages you to dump fewer
toxic chemicals down the drain.
Graywater application in excess of
plant needs recharges groundwater.
Graywater enables a landscape to
flourish where water may not otherwise be available to support much
plant
growth.
Loss of nutrients through wastewater
disposal in rivers or oceans is a subtle, but highly significant
form of erosion. Reclaiming nutrients in graywater helps to
maintain the fertility of the land.
Graywater use yields the satisfaction
of taking responsibility for the wise husbandry of an important
resource.
Is graywater legal?
In practice, graywater legality is
virtually never an issue for residential retrofit systems — everyone just
bootlegs them. However, graywater legality is almost always
an issue for permitted new construction and remodeling, unless you're in
a visionary state such as Arizona or New Mexico. For details see
our Graywater policy center and Builder's Graywater Guide (book).
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