Waste Water Managment SURAJ PRAJAPATI (3rd Biochemical Engineering)
Waste Water Managment SURAJ PRAJAPATI (3rd Biochemical Engineering)
Waste Water Managment SURAJ PRAJAPATI (3rd Biochemical Engineering)
Department of Biochemical Engineering and Food Technology Harcourt Butler Technological Institute Email: [email protected] Contact No. 9044104914 Abstract Water is vital to the existence of all living organisms, but this valued resource is increasingly being threatened as human populations grow and demand more water of high quality for domestic purposes and economic activities. It is estimated that about 38,254 million litres per day (mld) of wastewater is generated in urban centres comprising Class I cities and Class II towns having population of more than 50,000 (accounting for more than 70 per cent of the total urban population). So in that senario the managment and treatment of waste water is highly important. The volume of wastewater generated by domestic, industrial, and commercial sources has increased with population, urbanization, improved living conditions, and economic development. The productive use of wastewater has also increased, as millions of small-scale farmers in urban and peri-urban areas of developing countries depend on wastewater or wastewater polluted water sources to irrigate high-value edible crops for urban markets, often because they have no alternative sources of irrigation water. Conventionally, sewage is collected through a vast network of sewerage systems and transported to a centralized treatment plant, which is resource intensive. Instead of transporting it long distance for centralized treatment, the Central Pollution Control Board is promoting decentralized treatment at the local level using technology based on natural processes. After proper treatment, sewage can be used in pisciculture, irrigation, forestry, and horticulture. Its conventional treatment generates sludge, which acts as manure. The sludge can also be used for energy recovery. Some STPs in the country are recovering this energy and utilizing it. The principal of reuse/recycling of wastewater differs from the age-old sewage farming practices as the present technology, that is, Land Treatment means a controlled application of pre-treated wastewater on land surface to achieve a designated degree of treatment through natural bio-geochemical process wastewater reuse.