HERBARIUM

The water reuse mindset

Jirzankal — The Smoke at the Edge of the World

How to reuse RO reject, condensate and runoff without turning conservation into contamination

A grower installs reverse osmosis because water chemistry matters.

  • Sodium.
  • Chloride.
  • Hardness.
  • Alkalinity.
  • Salinity.
  • Contaminants the crop or system should not receive.

But reverse osmosis does not make unwanted material disappear.

It divides the incoming water into two streams.
One stream passes through the membrane:

the permeate, or product water.

The other carries a larger share of the material rejected by the membrane:

the concentrate, commonly called reject water.

The product water receives attention.

  • It enters the reservoir.
  • It is measured.
  • It is mixed.
  • It becomes part of the crop.

The concentrate is often sent directly to a drain, as though it were merely the shadow left behind by purification.

But the membrane did not remove responsibility.

It created a second water stream
with a different chemistry and a different possible use.

RO concentrate is not automatically worthless.
It is not automatically safe either.

Its composition depends on the source water, membrane rejection, recovery rate, pretreatment, operating conditions and the contaminants the RO system was installed to remove. Reverse-osmosis concentrate may contain elevated salts, metals, nutrients or other rejected constituents compared with the incoming water.

Water reuse begins by refusing two lazy conclusions:
It went to the drain, so it must be waste.

And:
It came from tap water, so it must be safe.

The better question is:

What is in this stream,
and which second use can accept it safely?

The membrane divides the responsibility

Reverse osmosis uses pressure to move part of the incoming water through a semipermeable membrane.

The system therefore has three relevant flows:

  • Feed water enters the unit.
  • Permeate passes through the membrane.
  • Concentrate carries away much of what the membrane rejected.

Two separate performance questions follow:

  • Rejection asks
    how effectively a particular dissolved constituent is prevented from entering the permeate.
  • Recovery asks
    what fraction of the incoming water becomes permeate.

They are not the same measurement.

A membrane may reject salts effectively while the complete unit still produces a large concentrate stream.

Recovery can be expressed as:
permeate flow ÷ feed flow × 100

The concentrate-to-permeate ratio compares concentrate volume with permeate volume.

  • At 20% recovery, approximately four litres of concentrate are produced for each litre of permeate.
  • At 30% recovery, the ratio is approximately 2.3:1.
  • At 50% recovery, it is approximately 1:1.

These ratios describe volume—not water quality.

EPA reports that a typical point-of-use drinking-water RO unit may discharge five or more units of concentrate for every unit of treated water, with some inefficient systems approaching 10:1. Under the current WaterSense specification, qualifying point-of-use systems discharge no more than approximately 2.3 units of concentrate per unit of permeate. These figures describe that equipment category, not every cultivation-scale RO installation.

The first lesson:

Do not describe an RO system
only by the quality of its product water.

Describe it by:

  • product quality;
  • contaminant rejection;
  • water recovery;
  • concentrate volume;
  • and the destination of both streams.

Measure the real recovery

Brochure efficiency is not enough.

The grower needs to know how the unit performs under the pressure, temperature, source-water chemistry and operating pattern of the actual site.

Measure:

  • feed volume where practical;
  • permeate volume;
  • concentrate volume;
  • operating pressure;
  • feed-water temperature;
  • product-water EC;
  • concentrate EC;
  • and the time required to produce them.

A simple container test can reveal the approximate concentrate-to-product ratio:

  • collect permeate and concentrate separately for the same defined period;
  • allow the system to reach normal operation first;
  • measure both volumes;
  • and repeat the test rather than trusting one short observation.

Pressure-tank systems, automatic flushing and start–stop operation can complicate a short test. Permanent flow meters provide a better long-term ledger where the system volume justifies them.

A poor ratio may result from:

  • unsuitable feed pressure;
  • cold water;
  • a worn or fouled membrane;
  • clogged prefilters;
  • scaling;
  • an incorrect flow restrictor;
  • leaks;
  • or a unit poorly matched to the required production volume.

Maintenance matters because membrane fouling, scaling and pressure losses can reduce performance. But maximum recovery should not become another grower obsession: forcing recovery beyond the system’s design can increase concentration at the membrane surface, scaling risk and product-quality problems.

Follow the equipment specification rather than improvising pressure or restrictor modifications.

Better lesson:

A grower who measures only the permeate
knows only half the machine.

The concentrate remembers the source water

RO concentrate is not a standard product.

It is a concentrated expression
of the water that entered the membrane.

  • If the source contains mostly calcium and bicarbonate, the concentrate may intensify hardness and scaling concerns.
  • If the source contains elevated sodium or chloride, those ions may become more significant.

If the RO system was installed to reduce nitrate, arsenic, PFAS, boron, metals or another undesirable constituent, that constituent may become enriched in the concentrate stream.

That history determines whether reuse is sensible.

EC is a useful first measurement, but EC alone cannot identify sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, boron, nitrate or other individual constituents.

For possible soil or landscape irrigation, sodium risk should be considered alongside salinity. Sodium adsorption ratio, or SAR, compares sodium with calcium and magnesium and helps assess the risk of soil dispersion and reduced infiltration. Its meaning also depends on the EC of the water and the receiving soil.

The useful analysis depends on the proposed second use, but may include:

  • EC or total salinity;
  • pH and alkalinity;
  • calcium and magnesium;
  • sodium and chloride;
  • bicarbonate and carbonate;
  • boron where relevant;
  • nitrate or metals where they motivated RO treatment;
  • and any chemicals added during pretreatment or cleaning.

Do not test the water only after choosing its new job.

Choose the job
after understanding the water.

RO concentrate needs a job description

The question is not:
Can RO concentrate be reused?

Some water streams can be reused after suitable assessment, treatment and control.

Others may be impractical or inappropriate to reuse within the cultivation site.

The useful question is:
Which use, if any, can safely accept this chemistry—and what controls would that require?

 

Low-contact process uses

Depending on its composition, treatment and the design of the non-potable system, concentrate may be suitable for uses such as:

  • initial floor or tray washing;
  • toilet flushing in a properly designed non-potable system;
  • dust suppression;
  • or other tasks that do not introduce the concentrated water into the crop or potable-water system.

Scale, staining, corrosion, aerosol formation and worker exposure still need consideration.

Reclaimed-water storage and distribution must be designed to prevent cross-connections with potable plumbing and unintended backflow.

Applicable plumbing and non-potable-water requirements should be addressed by a qualified professional.

 

Landscape irrigation

Concentrate may sometimes be used for suitable non-crop landscapes or salt-tolerant plants.

But “salt tolerant” is not permission to irrigate blindly.

Repeated application can accumulate salts in the root zone, and sodium can damage soil structure even where the plants initially appear healthy. Drainage, rainfall, soil texture, irrigation frequency and the individual ions present all matter.

 

Blending

Blending concentrate with rainwater, tap water or another low-salinity source can reduce the final EC.

It does not make the original constituents disappear.

A responsible blend is calculated from the volumes and chemistry of both streams, then tested after mixing.

Do not dilute until one EC number looks acceptable while ignoring sodium, chloride, bicarbonate or the constituent the membrane was installed to reject.

 

Crop irrigation

RO concentrate should not be returned automatically to a cannabis nutrient tank.

It may contain precisely the background salts the RO system was intended to remove, while the nutrient programme adds another ionic load on top of them.

Direct crop reuse requires a water analysis, a defined target for the completed solution, knowledge of the medium and a plan for cumulative salts.

In many small systems, a non-crop second use is safer and more practical than trying to force concentrate back through the root zone.

The rule:

Concentrate does not need the most prestigious second use.
It needs the safest useful one.

When the concentrate should not be reused casually

Some RO concentrate should leave the reuse conversation early.

Do not assign it to irrigation or uncontrolled cleaning when:

  • the source water contains a contaminant of health concern that the RO system was installed to remove;
  • the chemical composition is unknown and the concentrate is being stored or applied repeatedly;
  • sodium, chloride, boron or salinity is unsuitable for the receiving soil or plant;
  • pretreatment, membrane cleaning or disinfection chemicals may be present;
  • the proposed use creates aerosols or frequent human contact;
  • or the storage and distribution system cannot prevent contamination, overflow or cross-connection.

At utility scale, RO concentrate may contain elevated regulated contaminants and can require specialised treatment or disposal. The exact risk in a cultivation facility depends on the original water and process, but the principle is the same: concentration can turn a small source-water problem into a more significant second stream.

Water scarcity does not make unsuitable water suitable.

Ecological intention
is not a treatment process.

Condensate: recovered water, not distilled certainty

Indoor cultivation moves large quantities of water through plants and air.

  • Roots absorb water.
  • Leaves release much of it as vapour.
  • Cooling and dehumidification systems may condense part of that vapour back into liquid.

That makes condensate a potentially valuable water stream.
It does not make it sterile or automatically feed-ready.

Water may contact:

  • coils and drain pans;
  • dust and airborne particles;
  • metals and construction materials;
  • biofilms;
  • cleaning residues;
  • pipes, pumps and storage tanks.

Moisture, sediment, biofilms, favourable temperatures and stagnation can support microbial persistence or growth in water systems and on wet HVAC surfaces. Low EC therefore does not establish microbiological safety.

Condensate reuse begins with system design:

  • cleanable collection surfaces;
  • accessible drain pans and lines;
  • covered storage;
  • materials suitable for water contact;
  • control of light and temperature;
  • prevention of stagnant dead legs;
  • and a defined treatment and monitoring plan.

Depending on the intended use, treatment may include:

  • sediment filtration;
  • activated carbon where chemically appropriate;
  • membrane treatment;
  • ultraviolet disinfection;
  • or another validated process.

Treatment should respond to measured risk, not be assembled as a collection of fashionable devices.

For reuse in nutrient preparation, analyse both chemical and microbiological quality and continue monitoring the collection system. Returning condensate through an established water-treatment train is generally more defensible than assuming that water collected from the air is equivalent to laboratory-distilled water.

Better lesson:

The room may return part of the water
the crop transpired.

The grower must still decide
whether the collection system kept it usable.

Runoff is used chemistry

Fertigation runoff is not simply nutrient solution that missed the roots.
Its composition has already been altered by:

  • plant uptake;
  • evaporation;
  • substrate exchange;
  • mineral dissolution or precipitation;
  • root and microbial activity;
  • and contact with the cultivation environment.

Depending on the system, it may also carry:

  • suspended particles;
  • organic matter;
  • plant pathogens;
  • pesticides;
  • disinfectants;
  • or cleaning residues.

This makes runoff potentially recoverable—but not automatically reusable.

 

In a simple drain-to-waste system

  • Treat runoff first as data.
  • Measure its volume, timing, EC and pH using a consistent sampling method.
  • Use those records to reduce unnecessary drainage, improve irrigation uniformity and identify accumulating salts.
  • Do not pour one tray’s runoff directly into another plant or back into a common reservoir.

 

In a designed recirculating system

Reuse may require:

  • separate collection;
  • particulate filtration;
  • disinfection where biological transmission is possible;
  • analysis or modelling of nutrient composition;
  • correction with fresh water and nutrients;
  • monitoring of sodium, chloride and other poorly absorbed ions;
  • and a controlled purge when constituents accumulate beyond the system’s capacity.

Research in container-grown horticulture shows that recirculation can reduce water and fertiliser loss, but success depends on water treatment, pathogen management and control of accumulating ions. A recycled solution can retain an acceptable EC while its individual ionic ratios drift away from the intended formulation.

The objective is not permanent recirculation at any cost.

The objective is safe resource efficiency
without allowing yesterday’s imbalance
to become tomorrow’s feed.

Better lesson:

Runoff is not free nutrient solution.

It is used chemistry
carrying the history of the root zone.

Other water streams are not interchangeable

Rainwater

Rainwater can provide a low-mineral blending or irrigation source, but the collection system contributes its own chemistry and biology.

Roof material, atmospheric deposition, bird and animal waste, gutters, first-flush conditions, storage tanks, light and stagnation all affect quality.

Rainwater is not purity.
It is water with a catchment history.

 

Greywater

Household greywater may contain sodium, surfactants, fragrances, fats, disinfectants and microorganisms.

It should not be sent casually into cannabis containers or mixed into a nutrient reservoir.

Greywater reuse requires a system designed for its source and intended use—not a hose redirected by ecological enthusiasm. Reviews of greywater reuse consistently identify large variation in chemical and microbial quality between sources and the need for treatment appropriate to the intended application.

 

The distinction

Not every recovered litre needs to become crop water.

Replacing potable water in an appropriate cleaning, flushing or landscape task is still reuse.

The goal is not to force every stream
back into the reservoir.

The goal is to match water quality
to the least demanding safe use.

The water-reuse hierarchy

First: reduce

Avoid creating unnecessary water demand.

  • Improve irrigation timing and uniformity.
  • Match reservoir volume to actual use.
  • Reduce habitual flushing.
  • Maintain the RO system.
  • Select efficient treatment equipment.

Second: separate

Keep different water streams separate.

  • RO concentrate is not condensate.
  • Condensate is not runoff.
  • Runoff containing pesticides or cleaners is not ordinary fertigation drainage.

Once unlike streams are mixed, the whole volume inherits the uncertainty of the most contaminated one.

Third: measure

Record:

  • source-water volume;
  • permeate volume;
  • concentrate volume;
  • condensate recovered;
  • irrigation applied;
  • runoff collected;
  • and water discharged.

Measure the chemical variables relevant to the proposed use.

Fourth: classify

Assign an operational category:

  • suitable for feed after defined treatment;
  • suitable for a non-crop process use;
  • suitable for site-specific landscape use;
  • requires additional treatment;
  • or unsuitable for reuse within the facility.

These are internal management categories,
not regulatory certifications.

Fifth: assign

  • Give each stream the least demanding safe job.
  • Do not use high-quality permeate to wash a floor when a tested process-water stream can do the work.
  • Do not use unsuitable concentrate on a crop merely because crop irrigation appears to be the most virtuous reuse.

Sixth: treat

Filtration, disinfection, blending, membrane treatment and storage control should bridge a defined gap between present quality and intended use.

Treatment without a target
is equipment collecting around uncertainty.

 

Seventh: verify

Test the treated stream.

  • Inspect tanks and distribution lines.
  • Confirm that storage did not recontaminate it.
  • Reassess when the source water, membrane, chemicals or intended use changes.

 

Eighth: record the destination

A complete ledger records:

  • how many litres entered;
  • how many became permeate;
  • how many became concentrate;
  • how many were reclaimed;
  • how many received a second use;
  • and how many finally left the site.

What is not separated cannot be classified.

What is not measured
cannot be responsibly reused.

The boundary between reuse and improvisation

Water reuse becomes dangerous when enthusiasm outruns classification.

Do not:

  • reuse a stream containing unknown pesticides, disinfectants or cleaning chemicals;
  • irrigate with RO concentrate merely because its source was once potable;
  • use concentrate from a system installed to remove a hazardous contaminant without assessing that contaminant;
  • recirculate runoff without considering nutrient drift and pathogen movement;
  • assume low EC proves microbial safety;
  • store reclaimed water warm, stagnant, uncovered or exposed to light;
  • mix incompatible water streams before sampling them;
  • create cross-connections between potable and reclaimed systems;
  • or aerosolise water whose microbial and chemical quality is unknown.

EPA describes water reuse as reclaiming water from different sources, treating it and reusing it for beneficial purposes.

The word treating matters:
reuse is not simply the act
of collecting a discarded stream.

The goal is not to reuse every drop.

  • Some water should be treated further.
  • Some should receive a lower-risk second use.
  • Some should be managed as waste.

The goal is to waste fewer litres
without distributing their problems elsewhere.

The rule

Reverse osmosis is not a machine
that creates pure water and nothing else.

It is a separator
that creates two responsibilities.

  • The first responsibility is to produce water suitable for the crop and the cultivation system.
  • The second is to understand what happened to the water that did not cross the membrane.

A mature grower does not ask only:
Can this litre be reused?

They ask:

  • What does it contain?
  • How did it change?
  • What is the least demanding safe use?
  • What treatment is required?
  • What will accumulate after repeated use?
  • Where will it finally go?

Wastewater is not always waste.

But water does not become reusable
merely because the grower dislikes throwing it away.

A second use is responsible
only when it does not create a second problem.

Factual Note

Reverse osmosis separates feed water into permeate and concentrate. Permeate is the fraction that crosses the membrane; concentrate carries a larger share of the dissolved constituents rejected by the membrane. Concentrate quality depends on feed-water chemistry, membrane rejection, recovery, pretreatment and operating conditions. It should not be assumed to have one standard composition.

Membrane rejection and system recovery describe different properties. Rejection describes how effectively a constituent is retained by the membrane. Recovery describes the fraction of feed water converted to permeate. Increasing recovery reduces concentrate volume but raises the concentration burden within the membrane system and may increase fouling or scaling risk if the unit is not designed for that operating point.

EPA reports that many conventional point-of-use RO systems discharge five or more units of concentrate for every unit of permeate, while some inefficient units may approach 10:1. To earn the WaterSense label, a point-of-use RO system must demonstrate that it sends no more than 2.3 units of concentrate to the drain for each unit of permeate produced. Cultivation and commercial RO systems may operate at different recoveries, so actual permeate and concentrate flows should be measured.

EC indicates the combined conductive effect of dissolved ions but does not identify them. Assessing RO concentrate for irrigation may require individual measurements of sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, boron or other source-specific constituents. For soil irrigation, sodium adsorption ratio helps assess sodium relative to calcium and magnesium, while the water’s EC and the receiving soil also affect infiltration risk.

RO concentrate should not be reused casually when the membrane is being used to remove a constituent of health or environmental concern. Reverse-osmosis concentrate can contain elevated salts, nutrients, metals and micropollutants compared with the feed water, and advanced municipal systems may require specialised concentrate treatment and disposal.

HVAC and dehumidifier condensate may contain little dissolved mineral material at the point of condensation, but collection surfaces, dust, biofilms, cleaning residues, metals, storage and distribution can alter its quality. Low EC does not establish microbiological safety. Warm or stagnant water and wet HVAC components can support microbial growth, so crop reuse requires clean collection, suitable storage, testing and treatment appropriate to the intended use.

Fertigation runoff can contain water and recoverable nutrients, but its nutrient ratios may differ from the original solution and it may transport suspended material, poorly absorbed ions or plant pathogens. Recirculating irrigation can reduce water and fertiliser discharge, but it requires filtration, sanitation, nutrient rebalancing and monitoring of accumulating constituents. A stable EC does not prove that the ionic composition remains suitable.

Rainwater, greywater, condensate, RO concentrate and fertigation runoff are not interchangeable sources. Each requires a fit-for-purpose assessment based on origin, chemistry, biological risk, storage and intended use. Water reuse involves reclaiming a water stream, treating it as necessary for a defined beneficial use and verifying that it is suitable for that use. Collection alone does not establish safety or suitability.

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LIBERA HERBA Cannabis VADEMECUM — Early Access

Join early.

Keep the
archive open.

The VADEMECUM is not just a book anymore. It is becoming a living archive of guides, tools, notes and practical plant knowledge.

Free member access. Join early. Keep the archive open.

The VADEMECUM is becoming a living archive of practical plant knowledge.

Free member access.