Vol. I · Essay 03 — Recycled Water

Regulatory · UAE

I. An operator's explainer — recycled water in the UAE

Treated sewage effluent for UAE landscape irrigation — rules, quality, operational implications.

A regulatory and operational explainer on the use of recycled water in UAE amenity landscapes — supply infrastructure, quality grades, irrigation restrictions, and what that means for premium operators.

Primary source dossier

  • · dewa.gov.ae — recycled water network publications, Dubai
  • · ead.gov.ae — Environment Agency Abu Dhabi water reuse publications
  • · ADM — Abu Dhabi TSE distribution and amenity-network publications
  • · moccae.gov.ae — UAE national water strategy and water security framework
  • · Federal water authority publications

Published

Q1 2026

Last updated

2026-05-25

II. The supply landscape

A network built in parallel to the potable supply.

Recycled water in the UAE is not a residual stream — it is a deliberately engineered second water network running in parallel to the potable supply. Each emirate has built it under its own water authority, with its own conveyance assets, distribution geography and end-use rules. There is no single national TSE utility; there is a set of emirate systems, each mature in its own right, and each anchored in the broader UAE policy of using every drop of water available within the country.

In Dubai, the operator is DEWA. DEWA publishes the geography and the operating rules of the recycled water network, the categories of permissible end use, and the connection process for non-residential customers. The Dubai network covers a substantial share of the municipal amenity landscape, the major road medians, and large parts of the older parks and beach corridors. Newer master-planned developments on the city's growth edge are progressively brought onto the recycled network as the conveyance infrastructure reaches them.

In Abu Dhabi, the picture is structured differently. The collection backbone is the Strategic Tunnel Enhancement Programme — STEP — a deep-bore sewer tunnel system that conveys raw municipal flows to centralised treatment. The distribution of the treated output for amenity irrigation is handled within the Abu Dhabi sewerage and water sector framework, with ADM (Abu Dhabi City Municipality) responsible for the amenity-irrigation distribution network on the ground. The Environment Agency — Abu Dhabi (EAD) sets the environmental framework against which the system is evaluated, and publishes the water reuse positions that inform sector planning.

In the northern emirates — Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Quwain, Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah — each emirate operates its own water and sewerage authority. The scale of recycled-water distribution varies, and the regulatory documents that govern end use are published by the emirate authority rather than at federal level. An operator with assets across multiple emirates should therefore expect to read multiple sets of operating rules.

The federal layer — the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment, and the federal water authority publications — sets the strategic context. The UAE national water security framework and the broader national water strategy place reuse at the centre of the long-horizon supply mix. The operational rules, however, remain with the emirate.

"TSE is not a residual stream — it is a parallel water network, engineered and regulated emirate by emirate."

— Prime Oasis operating note on UAE recycled water

III. Quality grades and irrigation restrictions

Categories of quality — defined at emirate level.

The grade determines where the water may go, and what restrictions apply at the receiving site.

UAE TSE is not delivered as a single product. The emirate authorities classify treated effluent into quality categories — most commonly referenced as Class A, Class B and Class C, or equivalent labels in the local regulatory text — with the category determined by the level of treatment and the resulting permitted use. The highest category is generally permitted for unrestricted landscape application, including amenity turf and ornamental beds in publicly accessible areas. Lower categories carry restrictions on the type of vegetation that may be irrigated, the proximity to people, or the irrigation method (for instance, sub-surface delivery in preference to overhead spray).

The specific thresholds that define each class — the limit values for biological oxygen demand, suspended solids, microbiological parameters, residual chlorine, and salt-load indicators — are written into the emirate regulatory publications. We do not reproduce those thresholds here, because the values change between emirates, change between updates of the regulatory documents, and reading the live published text is the correct path for an operator making a connection or compliance decision.

What can be said in general terms is this: TSE in the UAE typically carries a higher dissolved-salt load than the potable supply. This is a consequence of the underlying source water (already saline-influenced in many catchments), the additions through the urban water cycle, and the treatment chemistry itself. The salinity profile is not a defect — it is an operational characteristic of the product. The receiving operator must treat it as such.

The honest framing of the regulatory environment is this: the UAE does not operate a single federal TSE rulebook. Each emirate has its own quality definitions, end-use restrictions, connection procedures and audit posture. An operator with multiple properties across Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah will be operating under three distinct regulatory frames — broadly aligned in intent, distinct in detail.

What the grade governs

  • i.Permitted vegetation type (turf, ornamental, edible cropping is generally separate).
  • ii.Access restrictions (public-access areas vs. enclosed estate).
  • iii.Delivery method (overhead spray vs. sub-surface or drip).
  • iv.Buffer distances from water bodies and the potable network.
  • v.Signage, labelling and operator training requirements.

Specific values per item are set in the emirate regulatory text — DEWA, EAD/ADM or the equivalent emirate authority.

IV. Operational implications for landscape operators

The water is viable. The operation must adapt.

Premium amenity landscape can run on TSE indefinitely. What it cannot do is run on TSE the same way it ran on potable.

i.

Species tolerance

Choose plantings that can carry the local salinity profile.

Not every amenity-grade species is comfortable on UAE TSE. A pre-design pass against the salinity tolerance literature — calibrated for the emirate of operation — is a one-time cost that prevents multi-season decline. Where the existing palette is already in the ground, the question shifts to maintenance strategy rather than replacement.

ii.

Leaching cycle planning

A leaching cycle is not optional — it is part of the irrigation regime.

On TSE feed, the rootzone needs to be flushed periodically to move accumulated salt below the active root mass. The frequency and the dose depend on the species, the soil profile and the season. The decision is operational, not theoretical — but it must be made deliberately, and recorded.

iii.

Soil salinity drift

Drift accumulates silently across the irrigation season.

The rootzone salinity at the end of a UAE summer rarely matches the rootzone salinity at the start. Without a measurement layer, drift becomes visible only when the planting begins to fail — which is several months later than the underlying signal was first detectable. A continuous record is the difference between a leaching cycle that prevents damage and a leaching cycle that comes after damage has begun.

iv.

Irrigation system maintenance

Higher-mineral feed demands more disciplined system care.

Emitters foul faster on TSE than on potable. Lateral lines accumulate biofilm more aggressively. Filter screens load more rapidly. None of this is dramatic — but the cadence of flushing, cleaning and emitter inspection lengthens, and the maintenance budget should be planned around the feed rather than against it.

Prime Oasis treats the rootzone, the canopy and the irrigation regime as a single operational read. The detailed framing of the early-warning case is in /water-stress-early-warning; the property-vertical framing is in residences, golf, resorts and municipal.

V. What changes if you switch from potable to TSE

Three axes of change — read them together.

Cost, agronomy and compliance move in parallel when a property switches feed. None of the three can be considered in isolation.

Axis i.

Water cost trajectory

TSE tariffs are published by the supplying authority and sit materially below the equivalent potable schedule for non-residential consumers. The differential is the explicit policy lever — set, reviewed and adjusted by the regulator in its published tariff documents. For a landscape consuming meaningful annual volumes, the differential is the dominant single financial outcome of a switch.

Source path: published tariff schedules at the supplying authority (DEWA, the Abu Dhabi water and sewerage sector, equivalents).

Axis ii.

Agronomic considerations

The salinity profile is higher; the dose-response of the planting is therefore different. Species palette, soil profile depth, and irrigation method (sub-surface, drip, overhead) all interact with the new feed in ways that the prior regime did not stress. The agronomic re-read is not optional; it is the work that protects the asset across multiple seasons.

Source path: site-specific agronomic review; literature on amenity species tolerances under UAE conditions.

Axis iii.

Reporting and compliance

The regulatory frame shifts. The emirate authority that supplies TSE expects records — of consumption, of permitted end use, of signage and labelling on site, and of audit posture. Sustainability reporting frames (Dubai's quality-of-life trajectory, federal net-zero context, ESG disclosures for institutional owners) increasingly reference recycled-water share. Both the regulatory and the reporting layers reward documented, evidenced operation on TSE.

Source path: emirate authority compliance documents; owner-side sustainability reporting frameworks.

VI. Honest scope — what this explainer is, and is not

What this is, and what it is not.

The boundary is drawn deliberately. An operator should know exactly which questions this page answers, and which require a different professional.

What this is

  • Orientation for landscape operators evaluating, or already operating on, TSE feed.
  • A map of the UAE supply landscape — who runs the network in which emirate.
  • A framing of the operational implications — species, leaching, drift, system care.
  • A pointer to the primary-source regulatory text held by the emirate authorities.

What this is not

  • Legal advice on TSE connection permits or end-use compliance. Use the emirate authority and qualified counsel.
  • Water authority procurement guidance. Connections and tariffs are negotiated with the supplier; we are not party to those processes.
  • A substitute for site-specific agronomic review. Species, soil, and zone behaviour need a qualified agronomist on the ground.
  • A reproduction of the regulatory text. The emirate publications are the authoritative source; read them.
VII. Frequently asked — TSE for UAE landscape

Questions on recycled water in practice.

What is TSE in the UAE context? +
TSE — treated sewage effluent — is municipal wastewater that has been processed through a sequence of treatment stages and distributed back into the urban water system for non-potable use. In the UAE, TSE is the primary alternative-water source for amenity landscape irrigation in parks, road medians, large estate plantings and a growing share of resort and golf turf. It is produced by the emirate-level water and sewerage authorities and conveyed through dedicated recycled-water networks separate from the potable supply.
Is TSE used widely for landscape irrigation in the UAE? +
Yes. Each emirate publishes its own water strategy and reuse position, and recycled water has been an explicit pillar of UAE water policy for more than a decade — set out at federal level by the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment under the national water strategy framework, and implemented at emirate level by DEWA in Dubai, the Abu Dhabi sewerage services framework in Abu Dhabi, and equivalent authorities in the northern emirates. The municipal landscape, large estates, and the majority of golf and resort plantings in the older parts of Dubai and Abu Dhabi already operate at least partially on TSE feed.
What quality grades exist and what can each be used for? +
UAE TSE is categorised into quality grades — typically referenced as Class A, Class B and Class C, or equivalent labels — defined at emirate level rather than federally. The grade determines the permitted end uses: the highest grade is generally permitted for unrestricted landscape application including amenity turf and ornamental beds, while lower grades carry restrictions on contact, vegetation type or proximity to public access. The specific thresholds that define each grade are set in the emirate regulatory publications (DEWA, EAD, ADM and equivalents) and an operator should read the grade definitions applicable to the emirate in which the property sits.
Does TSE damage premium plantings over time? +
Not inherently. TSE delivered at an appropriate quality grade is a legitimate amenity-grade irrigation source. However, TSE typically carries a higher dissolved-salt load than potable water in the UAE supply, and the effect of that load accumulates in the rootzone over the irrigation season. Without a leaching strategy and without species selection that tolerates the local TSE salinity profile, premium plantings can lose vigour over multiple seasons. The damage, when it occurs, is from operational mismanagement of a viable water source — not from the water itself.
How does TSE cost compare to potable water for landscape? +
TSE is materially cheaper than potable supply for landscape volumes — this is one of the explicit policy aims of the emirate water authorities. The exact tariff differential is set in the published tariff schedules of the supplying authority (DEWA's tariff publication, the Abu Dhabi sewerage and water authority schedule, and equivalents) and operators on TSE feed should reconcile their billing against the relevant published schedule. The cost gap widens as potable tariffs adjust upward, which strengthens the operational case for TSE connection over time. See /dewa-water-tariff-landscape for the published-tariff framing.
How is TSE quality monitored at the receiving end? +
The supplying authority is responsible for delivering water that meets the published grade at the point of supply. Beyond the supply point, the receiving operator carries the operational duty: monitoring rootzone salinity, soil moisture, electrical conductivity of the applied water and the response of the planting itself. Good practice is a continuous in-ground monitoring layer that records salinity drift across the irrigation season — so that leaching cycles are scheduled on evidence, not on the calendar.
How does Prime Oasis help operators run on TSE? +
Prime Oasis is an intelligence layer for amenity landscapes. For operators on TSE feed, the platform records salinity drift by zone, flags the approach of species tolerance, recommends a leaching cycle when one is warranted, and reports the action against the trajectory observed. See /our-methodology for what the platform produces, and /water-stress-early-warning for the broader operational case. Applied vertically through golf, residences, resorts and municipal. We do not supply TSE; we help operators run on it without plant damage.

Begin

Operating on TSE — measured, not assumed.

A sixty-day pilot on a single property. We instrument the rootzone, record the salinity trajectory, and report what the planting is actually receiving. Decide phase two on evidence, not on description.