With time, the hydraulic performance and the quality
of the water transported by the pipes in place
decrease and water losses and damage to the
infrastructure increase. The latter phenomena, which
can cause spectacular damage (floods, water cuts,
disturbances in road traffic), are generally
recorded by the agencies responsible for their
maintenance within the local government bodies.
Corrosion, an increase in water pressure in the
network, destabilization of the underlying land by
roadworks, the conditions at installation, and age
can all cause damage. While the duration and
lifespan of the pipes can be long: some, put in
place more than 150 years ago, continue to function
properly; certain sections, however, deteriorate
more quickly and should be replaced earlier.
Modeling the risk of damage...
To assist the managers of this network in evaluating
how often various sections of the network need to be
replaced, as well as in organizing and planning the
works in sync with roadworks, for example,
Cemagref’s Netwater team scientists are developing
tools that can supervise network aging, from data
collection to the decision to renew pipes. Software
called Casses, on the market since October 2007, was
developed after research lasting more than 10 years.
The approach chosen estimates, for a future period,
the number of breakages that each section of piping
will undergo. It is based on data available in the
archives that describes the pipes, their
environment, and the past history of damage.
Initiated in 1994, this work was pursued within a
CARE-W 1 European research program, from 1999 to
2002, during which comparison with field data made
it possible to assess the relevance of this approach
and refine it. Since then, the Casses software has
been successfully applied in France and abroad,
notably in the cities of Oslo and Las Vegas.
Designed to adapt to the diversity of management
practices, it has been shown to perform well in
predicting the number of future breakages and in
identifying the pipes that are at the greatest risk.
and
evaluating the extent of damage…
A second software program, baptized Criticité, also
developed and marketed by Cemagref, was designed to
quantify the distruptions in water distribution when
a section is damaged. Distribution is not disrupted
in the same proportions if the damage occurs at the
end of the network that serves a few users or in a
water main coming out of a reservoir. For a given
event, the interaction between its probability,
calculated by Casses, and its impact, provided by
Criticité, provides information on the extent of the
risk related to this event. Studies are ongoing so
the users that are particularly deprived of water as
well as those who have no water can be taken into
account, as the current version of the software
forecasts.
| And the small
towns ?
Mutualizing
the data of small towns so that they can
take advantage of statistical modeling:
such is the objective of the SIROCO
program. This software was developed by
Cemagref and G2C Environnement R&D.
Individually, these small towns do not
have sufficient data for an optimal use
of the Casses forecasting models. In
addition to Casses and Criticité, SIROCO
uses a geographical information system,
the Cart@jour GIS to mutualize data.
This is an integrated system that allows
the user to prioritize the sections of
the network that are candidates for
renewal. |