Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field

Sound urban water management relies on extensive and reliable monitoring of water infrastructure. As low-cost sensors and networks have become increasingly available for environmental monitoring, urban water researchers and practitioners must consider the benefits and disadvantages of such technolog...

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Main Authors: Hamel, Perrine, Ding, Ning, Cherqui, Frederic, Walcker, Nicolas, Bertrand-Krajewski, Jean-Luc, Champrasert, Paskorn, Fletcher, Tim D., McCarthy, David T., Navratil, Oldrich, Shi, Baiqian
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174786
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1747862024-04-15T15:30:56Z Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field Hamel, Perrine Ding, Ning Cherqui, Frederic Walcker, Nicolas Bertrand-Krajewski, Jean-Luc Champrasert, Paskorn Fletcher, Tim D. McCarthy, David T. Navratil, Oldrich Shi, Baiqian Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Earth and Environmental Sciences Monitoring and evaluation Open-source sensors Sound urban water management relies on extensive and reliable monitoring of water infrastructure. As low-cost sensors and networks have become increasingly available for environmental monitoring, urban water researchers and practitioners must consider the benefits and disadvantages of such technologies. In this perspective paper, we highlight six technical and socio-technological considerations for low-cost monitoring technology to reach its full potential in the field of urban water management, including: technical barriers to implementation, complementarity with traditional sensing technologies, low-cost sensor reliability, added value of produced information, opportunities to democratize data collection, and economic and environmental costs of the technology. For each consideration, we present recent experiences from our own work and broader literature and identify future research needs to address current challenges. Our experience supports the strong potential of low-cost monitoring technology, in particular that it promotes extensive and innovative monitoring of urban water infrastructure. Future efforts should focus on more systematic documenting of experiences to lower barriers to designing, implementing, and testing of low-cost sensor networks, and on assessing the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of low-cost sensor deployments. Nanyang Technological University National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version PH, ND, QZ, FC, NW, and JLBK acknowledge the support from Nanyang Technological University and the French Embassy in Singapore through a MERLION grant. QZ, FC, NW, ON and JLBK also acknowledge the Co-UDlabs Project (GA 101008626) and the support from the Rhˆ one- M´ editerran´ ee-Corse Water Agency, France. In France, this research was performed within the framework of the OTHU (www.othu.org) and the Graduate School H2O’Lyon (ANR-17-EURE-0018). PH acknowledges the support of the Singapore National Research Foundation, Prime Minister’s Office (NRF-NRFF12-2020-0009). QZ acknowledges the support of the China Scholarship Council (PhD grant contract 201806560056). The authors thank Noelle Ong for designing Fig. 1, and colleagues in our respective universities for their help with the design and implementation of low-cost monitoring systems. 2024-04-11T02:36:33Z 2024-04-11T02:36:33Z 2024 Journal Article Hamel, P., Ding, N., Cherqui, F., Walcker, N., Bertrand-Krajewski, J., Champrasert, P., Fletcher, T. D., McCarthy, D. T., Navratil, O. & Shi, B. (2024). Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field. Water Research X, 22, 100212-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2024.100212 0043-1354 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174786 10.1016/j.wroa.2024.100212 38327899 2-s2.0-85183995151 22 100212 en NRF-NRFF12-2020-0009 Water Research X © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CCBY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync-nd/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
Monitoring and evaluation
Open-source sensors
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
Monitoring and evaluation
Open-source sensors
Hamel, Perrine
Ding, Ning
Cherqui, Frederic
Walcker, Nicolas
Bertrand-Krajewski, Jean-Luc
Champrasert, Paskorn
Fletcher, Tim D.
McCarthy, David T.
Navratil, Oldrich
Shi, Baiqian
Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
description Sound urban water management relies on extensive and reliable monitoring of water infrastructure. As low-cost sensors and networks have become increasingly available for environmental monitoring, urban water researchers and practitioners must consider the benefits and disadvantages of such technologies. In this perspective paper, we highlight six technical and socio-technological considerations for low-cost monitoring technology to reach its full potential in the field of urban water management, including: technical barriers to implementation, complementarity with traditional sensing technologies, low-cost sensor reliability, added value of produced information, opportunities to democratize data collection, and economic and environmental costs of the technology. For each consideration, we present recent experiences from our own work and broader literature and identify future research needs to address current challenges. Our experience supports the strong potential of low-cost monitoring technology, in particular that it promotes extensive and innovative monitoring of urban water infrastructure. Future efforts should focus on more systematic documenting of experiences to lower barriers to designing, implementing, and testing of low-cost sensor networks, and on assessing the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of low-cost sensor deployments.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Hamel, Perrine
Ding, Ning
Cherqui, Frederic
Walcker, Nicolas
Bertrand-Krajewski, Jean-Luc
Champrasert, Paskorn
Fletcher, Tim D.
McCarthy, David T.
Navratil, Oldrich
Shi, Baiqian
format Article
author Hamel, Perrine
Ding, Ning
Cherqui, Frederic
Walcker, Nicolas
Bertrand-Krajewski, Jean-Luc
Champrasert, Paskorn
Fletcher, Tim D.
McCarthy, David T.
Navratil, Oldrich
Shi, Baiqian
author_sort Hamel, Perrine
title Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
title_short Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
title_full Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
title_fullStr Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
title_full_unstemmed Low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
title_sort low-cost monitoring systems for urban water management: lessons from the field
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174786
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