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    Home»Technology»Space Technology Used for Cleaner and Greener Tennis at the French Open
    Technology

    Space Technology Used for Cleaner and Greener Tennis at the French Open

    By European Space AgencyOctober 11, 2020No Comments5 Mins Read
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    French Open Tennis
    Space technology is serving at the heart of the 2020 French Open. The showers in the tennis players’ showers at Roland Garros Stadium near Paris recycle their water to flush the locker room toilets, harnessing technology originally developed by ESA for astronauts on long-duration space missions, and employed operationally in Antarctica for the last 15 years. Credit: French Open

    Space technology is serving at the heart of the French Open. The tennis players’ showers at Roland Garros Stadium near Paris recycle their water to flush the locker room toilets, harnessing technology originally developed by ESA for astronauts on long-duration space missions, and employed operationally in Antarctica for the last 15 years.

    Since the tennis tournament started on 20 September, each player who takes a shower at the Roland Garros training grounds is helping to preserve drinking water. Thanks to a recycling system installed by the FGWRS company, the shower water is then reused for flushing toilets, rather than the drinking water usually employed for this purpose.

    This is the first time such a system has been installed in France, arranged by specialist firm GL Events Live Sports and Entertainment as a way to reduce energy and water waste in their facilities, and permitted through a special prefectural authorization.

    French Open Water Recycling

    Water recycling system at the French Open, installed by the FGWRS company. Since the tennis tournament started on 20 September, each player who takes a shower at the Roland Garros training grounds is helping to preserve drinking water. Thanks to a recycling system installed by the FGWRS company, the shower water is then reused for flushing toilets, rather than the drinking water usually employed for this purpose. Credit: Mathieu Génon

    This water recycling technology owes its origins to the 11-nation ESA-led Micro-Ecological Life Support System Alternative program (MELiSSA), which for the last 30 years has been developing advanced life support and recycling systems for crewed space missions.

    “Today’s International Space Station crews receive regular resupply from Earth,” explains Christophe Lasseur of ESA’s Life Support and Physical Sciences Instrumentation Section, overseeing MELiSSA, “but such supply lines will become impractical as explorers venture farther out into space.

    Concordia Research Station at Night
    Concordia research station at night. Credit: ESA/IPEV/PNRA–S. Thoolen

    “As an alternative, we are developing self-sustaining closed-loop life support systems that could be flown in space in the future, supplying astronauts with all the oxygen, water, and food they require. MELiSSA is a multi-element effort, with projects taking place all across European – and Canadian – universities and industry. In addition, there have been numerous terrestrial spin-offs from MELiSSA technology.”

    France’s FIRMUS company in Clermont l’Hérault, focused on treating, purifying, and separating recycled water and effluents, developed a terrestrial recycling system based on ‘grey’ water – meaning water used in domestic activities such as washing, as opposed to ‘black’ sewage water.

    Water Recycling System at Concordia
    Concordia research station’s water recycling system. Credit: ESA/IPEV/PNRA– C. Verseux

    Next Monaco-based startup FGWRS commercialized it through the system they are named after: the Full/Firmus Grey Water Recycling System. FGWRS targets the preservation of drinking water resources by recycling up to 80% of grey water for reuse for toilet flushes, washing machines, and other household tasks.

    For the last 15 years the system has been running continuously without technical or sanitary failure in one of the most remote locations in the world: the French/Italian Concordia research station, located at 3,200 m (10,500 ft) altitude and more than 1100 km (680 mi) inland on the Antarctic Plateau. The research station is operated by the Institut Polaire Français Paul-Emile Victor (IPEV) and the Programma Nazionale di Ricerche in Antartide (PNRA), who have been key to the long-term validation of the recycling system.

    Life Supporting Pilot Plant
    A prototype version of a self-sustaining life-support system, intended to allow humans to live in space indefinitely, is seen in Spain’s University Autònoma of Barcelona. This is the pilot plant of the international ESA-led Micro-Ecological Life Support System Alternative, or MELiSSA, a mini-ecosystem behind airtight glass. Credit: ESA/UAB

    The recycling system in place at the French Open this year will also be present in 2021 and 2022 with the technical teams planning ongoing improvements, in particular to recover calories from this gray water to save water and energy in combination.

    About MELiSSA

    Perfecting a ‘regenerative’ life support system that humans could reliably trust their lives to is forecast to take many more years yet: MELiSSA is regarded by members as a 50-year effort, resulting so far in hundreds of academic papers, patents, and terrestrial spin-offs in areas ranging from food preparation to water purification and microbial safety.

    MELiSSA has also included multiple orbital experiments aboard the International Space Station. And in 2009 the program took a major step forward with the inauguration of the ‘MELiSSA Pilot Plant’ at Spain’s University Autònoma of Barcelona. This airtight multi-compartment loop is used to characterize and test different biological processes in combination, keeping ‘crews’ of rats alive and comfortable for months at a time.

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    Ecology European Space Agency Water
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