Nadja Kunz
University of Queensland
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nadja Kunz.
Water Science and Technology | 2016
Nadja Kunz; Manuel Fischer; Karin Ingold; Janet G. Hering
The reclamation, treatment and reuse of municipal wastewater can provide important environmental benefits. In this paper, 25 studies on this topic were reviewed and it was found that there are many (>150) different drivers acting for and against wastewater recycling. To deal with the challenge of comparing studies which entailed different research designs, a framework was developed which allowed the literature to be organized into comparable study contexts. Studies were categorized according to the level of analysis (wastewater recycling scheme, city, water utility, state, country, global) and outcome investigated (development/investment in new schemes, program implementation, percentage of wastewater recycled, percentage of water demand covered by recycled water, multiple outcomes). Findings across comparable case studies were then grouped according to the type (for or against recycling) and category of driver (social, natural, technical, economic, policy or business). The utility of the framework is demonstrated by summarizing the findings from four Australian studies at the city level. The framework offers a unique approach for disentangling the broad range of potential drivers for and against water recycling and to focus on those that seem relevant in specific study contexts. It may offer a valuable starting point for building hypotheses in future work.
Journal of Industrial Ecology | 2018
Daqian Jiang; Manuel Fischer; Zhe Huang; Nadja Kunz
Summary In water-scarce regions of China, wastewater reuse is increasingly considered as a potential component of Chinas future water resource management strategy. Currently, the percentage of wastewater reuse varies substantially across Chinese provinces, but conditions leading to a high rate of wastewater reuse have not been elucidated clearly. In this work, we use fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) to identify the drivers of high and low percentages of wastewater reuse in water-stressed Chinese provinces in 2013. We find that among the five conditions studied (per capita water availability, urban population, access to sea, access to urban space, and access to agricultural land), a high percentage of wastewater reuse is primarily driven by water stress and access to urban green space. Consequently, policies should consider targeting provinces with these attributes where wastewater reuse is more likely to be successful. Further, our results show that there is asymmetry in the conditions that lead to high and low percentages of wastewater reuse, and that the drivers for and against reuse identified in this study are not completely analogous to those identified in previous studies. As such, the drivers for and against wastewater reuse should not be generalized without due consideration of the local context.
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2014
Chris Moran; Sumit Lodhia; Nadja Kunz; Donald Huisingh
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2013
Nadja Kunz; Chris Moran; Tim Kastelle
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2013
Nadja Kunz; Chris Moran; Tim Kastelle
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2014
Chris Moran; Nadja Kunz
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2014
Nadja Kunz; Chris Moran
Water Resources and Industry | 2016
Nadja Kunz; Chris Moran
Archive | 2014
Paul Mitchell; Bradbrook Michael; Louise Higgins; John Steen; Chris Henderson; Tim Kastelle; Chris Moran; Sam MacAulay; Nadja Kunz
Journal of Cleaner Production | 2013
Sumit Lodhia; Chris Moran; Nadja Kunz; Donald Huisingh
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology
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