Would you drink toilet water?

The "gross out" factor has long prohibited efforts to take dirty water and transform it into drinkable water. That resistance may abate if water prices rise. 

In this file photo Courtney Lombardo drinks a glass of tap water at Charlie's Chili restaurant in Newport Beach, Calif. Newport Beach lies in Orange County, a district that has created the Groundwater Replenishment System, a $480 million dollar water treatment system that converts sewage water into drinking water. Recurring droughts, population growth and a decline in imported water supplies have overwhelmed local water supply.

Mary Knox Merrill/The Christian Science Monitor/File

February 11, 2012

Do you trust the engineers to develop new solutions for addressing society's challenges?  UCLA has an excellent engineering school and thousands of young, sober students attend the engineering classes taking notes and hopefully thinking.  Can these young people figure out how to take "dirty water" (think of your toliet after you use it) and transform it into drinkable water?  

If the answer is yes, and if the public believes that the answer is yes then we have another strategy for adapting to climate change.  Such recycled water offers us another way to increase our supply of scarce resources.  In Climatopolis, I talk at length about how human ingenuity will substitute for those resources that Mother Nature will be less generous with supplying in our hotter future.  I believe in directed technological change.  We foresee a challenge, we see the benefits of coming up with a solution for the challenge and we hold a competition. If 100 entrants submit a new idea, the best idea in the set will emerge and it will be quite good and it will broadly diffuse and the idea's creator will become rich.  Good dynamic incentives!

In the case of "toliet to the tap", there has been resistance to this approach before but now the NY Times reports that this gross out is easing.  Why? Sociologists should work on this.  If water prices rise, this would encourage water consumers to give the engineers the benefit of the doubt.  Perhaps the experience of nations such as Singapore has taught the rest of us that such solutions can be effective. In this case, Singapore is a useful "green guinea pig".