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When we talk about water, the focus is often on access and consumption.
Do we have enough? Are we using it efficiently?
But there is another question that is just as important, and often overlooked. What happens to the water after we use it? This is the focus of SDG 6.3, water quality and wastewater. And it shifts the perspective from consumption to consequence.
Water is never truly “used up”. It moves through systems.
From extraction to consumption. From buildings to wastewater networks.
From treatment plants back into rivers, lakes, and ecosystems. What we return to that system matters.
SDG 6.3 measures two critical things. How much wastewater is safely treated, and the overall quality of our water bodies. In other words, it looks at whether human activity is degrading water faster than nature can recover it.
Globally, this remains a major challenge. Pollution, untreated wastewater, and aging infrastructure continue to impact water quality in both developing and developed regions. Even where treatment systems exist, increasing pressure on networks can reduce their effectiveness.
Water quality is often seen as a utility or infrastructure issue. Something that happens downstream, far from the buildings where water is consumed.
In reality, buildings are part of the equation.
Every cubic metre of water that enters a building leaves it again. Carrying with it traces of how it was used. The volume, timing, and patterns of that flow all affect wastewater systems.
When consumption is uncontrolled, wastewater systems experience:
unnecessary load
peak flow stress
higher treatment demand
increased risk of overflow or inefficiency
What happens upstream directly affects what happens downstream.
Inefficiency does not only waste water. It amplifies impact.
A continuous leak is not just lost water. It is additional volume entering wastewater systems without purpose. Abnormal consumption patterns are not just a cost issue. They contribute to instability in infrastructure designed for predictable flows.
In a world where water systems are already under pressure, unnecessary volume becomes a problem. This is where SDG 6.3 connects directly to the previous indicators.
Efficiency reduces not only demand, but also the burden on wastewater systems. Lower consumption means lower volumes to treat. More stable usage means more predictable flows. Better input leads to better output.
At Smartvatten, we often talk about visibility in the context of efficiency. But it also plays a role in quality.
When water use is measured continuously, organisations gain a clearer understanding of how water moves through their buildings. They can identify anomalies, reduce unnecessary flow, and stabilise consumption patterns.
This does not replace wastewater treatment. But it supports it. Because water quality is not only about what happens at the treatment plant. It is influenced by everything that happens before it.
SDG 6.3 introduces a broader perspective on water management.
It is not only about securing access or improving efficiency. It is about recognising responsibility for the full water cycle.
What we take.
How we use it.
And what we return.
As pressure on water systems increases, this perspective becomes more important. Organisations are no longer only consumers of water. They are participants in a shared system.
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