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  • Wastewater surveillance is a valuable and noninvasive way to detect, monitor and rule out viral pathogen transmission at the population level. Drawing on lessons learned from severe acute respiratory virus two (SARS-CoV-2), monkeypox virus, norovirus and influenza A viruses, we outline six key considerations for designing or refining a wastewater surveillance program for a viral pathogen: pathogen suitability, surveillance objective, sampling strategy, molecular assays, data transformation, and analysis. Together, these components form an interdisciplinary “wastewater toolkit” that supports methodological rigor, adaptability, and comparability across settings. By providing a structured yet flexible framework that accommodates technical variation and contextual differences, this toolkit enhances preparedness and enables the rapid establishment or optimization of wastewater surveillance systems. Gaps and inefficiencies in disease surveillance can lead to inaccurate intelligence and inadequate or inappropriate public health responses, a systematic wastewater surveillance framework is essential to generate reliable indicators of viral transmission and inform timely, evidence-based decision-making for known and emerging pathogens.

    • Aidan M. Nikiforuk
    • Muhammad Zohaib Anwar
    • David A. McVea
    CommentOpen Access
  • This comment prompts scholars to include eutrophication more often to water quality assessments as it is globally one of the major water-related environmental problems but remains underrepresented in contemporary assessments, water policies and international targets such as the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). What we scholars can do is to mainstream eutrophication in our global water assessments, and that way ram it to a higher position in political agendas. The recent advances in global nutrient models and datasets, as well as Earth observation approaches, allow novel horizons in this regard. Now is the time to scrutinize these novel opportunities. Our take to this quest here is to develop a model protocol that produces gridded eutrophication maps from total nitrogen and total phosphorus data. We also developed analogous methods for biochemical oxygen demand and total dissolved solids.

    • Olli Varis
    • Dandan Zhao
    CommentOpen Access
  • This Comment critiques current urban sanitation financing discourse and proposes sustainable cost recovery principles as a framework for more constructive conversations. The way we talk about financing matters, and a better conversation can lead to better outcomes. We contend that framing discussions around sustainable cost recovery principles can foster fairer, more sustainable financing arrangements that acknowledge sanitation as a critical public good while ensuring service provider viability and user affordability.

    • Naomi Carrard
    • Juliet Willetts
    • Rajeev Munankami
    CommentOpen Access
  • Unsafe water reuse in the informal irrigation sector dominates in the Global South and requires more attention to protect food safety and public health. Promoting formal wastewater use in conjunction with (usually constrained) investment in treatment capacities is not sufficient in LMIC. New approaches and indicators are needed across the formal and informal reuse sectors to increase food safety and monitor progress on safe reuse. Current reuse guidelines need to be updated with greater attention to policy, regulations, investments, and behavior change for a higher implementation potential.

    • Pay Drechsel
    • James Bartram
    • Kate O. Medlicott
    CommentOpen Access
  • Current wastewater management practices underutilize wastewater as a valuable source of water, energy, and essential plant nutrients. A new paradigm shift is needed, one that integrates the water-energy-food nexus into wastewater management. Decentralized wastewater management has the power to redefine not only the urban water cycle but also reshape society towards a more economic and environmentally sustainable future.

    • María Molinos-Senante
    • Manel Poch
    • Manel Garrido-Baserba
    CommentOpen Access
  • Field openers should be admired for leading the crowds. This comment is relevant to the bigger picture of Professor Sourirajan to highlight how a humble talent had selflessly founded a multicontinental major, which scaled up to US$ 50 billion in the 2021 global membrane separation market to enrich the quality of worldwide life via providing clean water.

    • Yasin Orooji
    CommentOpen Access
  • Deductive arguments regarding the unexpected stability of nanobubbles in water include the excessive internal pressure of minuscule gas pockets. In this study, the derivation assumptions of the Young–Laplace equation are evaluated closely to discuss the possible modifications towards making conclusive remarks about the predictive power of the equation at the nano-scale.

    • Tuna Yildirim
    • Sudheera Yaparatne
    • Onur Apul
    CommentOpen Access
  • Climate resilient development has become the new paradigm for sustainable development influencing theory and practice across all sectors globally—gaining particular momentum in the water sector, since water security is intimately connected to climate change. Climate resilience is increasingly recognised as being inherently political, yet efforts often do not sufficiently engage with context-specific socio-ecological, cultural and political processes, including structural inequalities underlying historically produced vulnerabilities. Depoliticised approaches have been shown to pose barriers to concerted and meaningful change. In this article, world-leading water specialists from academic and practitioner communities reflect on, and share examples of, the importance of keeping people and politics at the centre of work on climate resilient water security. We propose a roadmap to meaningfully engage with the complex politics of climate resilient water security. It is critical to re-politicise climate resilience to enable efforts towards sustainable development goal 6—clean water and sanitation for all.

    • Catherine Fallon Grasham
    • Roger Calow
    • Hashim Zaidi
    CommentOpen Access

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