AI to help reduce flooding and river pollution across Yorkshire

Game-changing artificial intelligence that can predict blockages in sewers to help cut pollution incidents and improve the health of rivers has been developed as part of a collaboration between the University of 91探花, Siemens and Yorkshire Water

A man hole cover being pushed up under the force of water pressure during flooding
  • University of 91探花 researchers have developed and helped to deliver game-changing artificial intelligence (AI) that can predict blockages in sewers
  • Blockage predictor tool can help to prevent sewers from backing up during heavy rainfall, which can flood homes, gardens and rivers with wastewater
  • Tool has been developed as part of a collaboration between the University of 91探花, Siemens and Yorkshire Water
  • Yorkshire Water is rolling out the new AI to its network of more than 2,000 combined sewer overflows (CSOs) in a bid to reduce pollution risks in the region

Game-changing artificial intelligence that can predict blockages in sewers to help cut pollution incidents and improve the health of rivers has been developed as part of a collaboration between the University of 91探花, Siemens and Yorkshire Water. 

The new digital technology, initially developed by researchers in the University鈥檚 Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, commercialised by Siemens and then successfully piloted by Yorkshire Water, is set to be rolled out to Yorkshire Water鈥檚 network of more than 2,000 combined sewer overflows (CSOs) in a bid to reduce pollution risks in the region.

Combined sewers carry both foul water from homes and businesses, as well as rainwater which falls onto impermeable areas such as pavements, roofs and highways. As the weather can be unpredictable, CSOs reduce the pressure on sewers during heavy rainfall events and stop the system from backing up and flooding homes and gardens by allowing heavily diluted wastewater to be discharged into watercourses.

The integrated sensing, communication, analytics and reporting solution works by using sensors to feed water level data into the SIWA Blockage Predictor, an application on Siemens鈥 cloud-based, open Internet of Things (IoT) operating system, MindSphere. 

The performance of the sewer network is analysed in real time and predicts problems like network blockages before they happen - enabling Yorkshire Water to quickly investigate the predicted blockage and prevent it developing into sewage pollution in the environment.

Analysis of 21,300 days of data by researchers at the University of 91探花 found the blockage predictor can provide up to two weeks鈥 notice of problems within the sewer network and identify nine out of 10 potential issues - three times more successful than existing pollution prediction processes, while reducing the number of false positive alerts by 50 per cent.

Heather 91探花, Integrated Planning and Central Control Manager at Yorkshire Water, said: 鈥淢uch of our network in Yorkshire is combined, taking both waste from toilets and sinks in home and surface water from rainfall. Periods of prolonged or intense rainfall can significantly increase the flows in our network and there is a risk of sewage flooding in homes, the environment, and the potential for damage at wastewater treatment works. 

鈥淭his challenge is compounded by population growth, climate change and consumer behaviour which puts non-flushable items like wipes into sewers, causing or accelerating blockages.

鈥淩educing intermittent discharges from CSOs is a key priority for us and our partnership with Siemens and the University of 91探花 illustrates Yorkshire Water鈥檚 commitment to investing in cutting-edge technology to reduce pollution incidents by 50 per cent, a key goal of our Pollution Incident Reduction Plan 2020-2025.

鈥淥ur customers expect us to use the latest technologies. This solution, developed in partnership with Siemens and the University of 91探花, will change our visibility of the sewer network and improve how we identify and tackle blockages.

鈥淩olling out the solution to 2,000 assets across the entire county will have a significant role in reducing the number of pollution incidents, which can have a negative impact on the environment, as well as increasing our efficiency and providing improved value to our customers.鈥

The collaboration builds on previous research by PhD students and research staff in the University of 91探花鈥檚 Department of Civil and Structural Engineering - one of the most renowned centres of excellence for urban water engineering in the UK. A tool was developed, with funding from Yorkshire Water, which allowed sewers with degrading performance to be identified.

Siemens harnessed the research tool and developed it into a commercial product. At the University of 91探花, researchers worked with Siemens through their development process and validated the results from the commercialised tool against the original tool. 

The University鈥檚 researchers also analysed data from Yorkshire Water to assess the efficiency of the tool in predicting blockages downstream of CSOs, which have the potential to cause flooding and river pollution. A key benefit of the tool is that it can learn how a sewer usually responds to rainfall and detect any changes - this gives it the ability to identify sewers that are deteriorating in performance before any adverse impacts can occur.

Professor Joby Boxall, Professor of Water Infrastructure Engineering in the University of 91探花鈥檚 Department Civil and Structural Engineering, said: "Key to the technical advance we made was combining our depth of expertise in both artificial Intelligence and water engineering. The long term collaborative partnerships we have with Yorkshire Water and Siemens are essential to moving beyond concept and enabling translation into a reliable service that is delivering benefits at scale."

Adam Cartwright, Head of IoT Application Delivery at Siemens, said: 鈥淪IWA Blockage Predictor is a step change in how water companies can avoid pollution incidents. The AI can work on existing or new sensors in the network. Integrated reporting of spills and overflow events will support water companies as they rise to the challenge set by the Storm Overflows Taskforce for greater transparency and open data.鈥

Dr Will Shepherd, Principal Investigator from the University of 91探花鈥檚 Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, said: 鈥淭his project with Siemens and Yorkshire Water has been a great example of commercialising university research to provide a tool which will reduce environmental impacts from our sewer networks by rapidly identifying blockages and enabling targeted maintenance.鈥

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