Solid Waste Management Overview
Solid Waste Management Overview
1
INTRODUCTION
IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC HEALTH ENGINEERING:
Environmental engineers design municipal water supply system and provide safe
drinking water or secure water supplies for potable and agricultural use.
To achieve these, they examine the watersheds with a hydrological or geological point
of view as well as engineering treatment systems for water purification.
Various water treatment methods are used, including membrane technology,
desalinization, biological water treatment, etc. Water distribution systems are also
designed and built.
Environmental engineers also develop collection and treatment systems to carry
domestic or industrial waste water discharges away and remove some of the pollutants
before discharging it into the environment.
ROLE OF PUBLIC HEALTH ENGINEER:
Public health engineers apply engineering principles in order to detect, control, evaluate
and manage environmental factors that impact public health.
They may investigate public water supplies, sewage systems, public swimming pools
and hospitality businesses regarding water quality controls.
They also may inspect restaurant establishments to verify food and general sanitation.
They also visit industrial companies to check on air and water pollution controls as well
as manufacturing practices.
Public health engineers need to maintain a good knowledge of the principles and
practices of public health engineering and environmental health.
Some specialize in certain areas, such as radiology, air pollution, water purification and
sewage disposal.
Those who work in the office may gather and interpret the results of lab results
regarding sewage, water samples and industrial wastes.
During disease outbreaks, they work with epidemiologists and other public health
officials to investigate the contributing environmental health factors.
Public health engineers should be confident working in the field under a variety of
social, weather and environmental conditions.
The job involves numerous things including:
Address the public or lawmakers about health concerns or regulations
Assist problem facilities or private industries in improving their safety levels
Inspect and analyze public health facilities and systems
Develop plans for improving facilities and health programs
2
Educate public about health concepts and safety measures
Review data and lab reports
Consult with various agencies to enhance safety.
SOURCES OF SOLID WASTES:
Residential Wastes
Commercial Wastes
Institutional Wastes
Municipal solid Wastes
Industrial Solid Wastes
Mining solid Wastes
Agriculture Wastes
Excretory products of humans and livestock Wastes
Electronic wastes
Hospital or Biomedical Wastes
Construction and demolition Wastes
Hazardous waste.
MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTES:
These are solid wastes from home, offices, stores, schools, hospitals, hotels etc.
These domestic solid wastes one usually, thrown in municipal garbage collecting cans
or on road side open waste lands.
They are collected by municipality vehicles to certain garbage disposal site.
They are dumped over a large area of land which becomes the breeding ground of
flies and rats.
Usually, they are not burnt to reduce the volume because burning would cause air
pollution which is still more dangerous.
Figure No.1
3
INDUSTRIAL SOLID WASTES:
Most of the toxic industrial wastes are dumped on waste lands for slow and gradual
decomposition.
Some industries dump their effluents on barren land, road sides creating very
unhygienic environment for the local population.
Some of the effluents have heavy metals which pollute the ground water through
seepage during the monsoon season.
Some heavy metals have been found slowly accumulating on farmland soils.
One such most toxic heavy metal is cadmium which is present in traces in some
fertilizers.
Figure No.2
MINING SOLID WASTES:
They include mine dust, rock tailing, slack and slag. Open cast mining completely
spoils the surrounding soil.
Toxic chemicals and metals present in the mining wastes destroy vegetation and
produce many deformities in animals and human beings.
Figure No.1
4
AGRICULTURAL WASTES:
Chemical fertilizers increase soil fertility and gives better crop yield in lesser time.
Shortly, the land becomes saline, acidic or alkaline and loses fertility.
These toxic chemicals used in crop field which are not ecofriendly.
They enter into crop and then into primary and secondary consumers.
Even human beings are affected due to bio-magnification.
Figure No.4
EXCRETORY PRODUCTS OF HUMANS AND LIVESTOCK:
In underdeveloped and developing countries, the poor sanitary conditions aggravate soil
pollution.
The excreta of man and animals, digested sewage sludge used as manure pollute the
soil.
Several germs present in such wastes contaminate soil, vegetables, and water bodies
causing severe health hazards.
ELECTRONIC WASTES:
The latest solid waste that has appeared in last twenty years commonly known as e-
wastes is no less harmful.
Irreparable computer and electronic goods.
Frequently, more efficient and user-friendly electronic items appear in the market thus
discarding the old generation equipment which simply become garbage or solid wastes.
Over half of the e-wastes generated in developed countries are exported to developing
countries where they ultimately increase the e-garbage proportions.
5
Figure No.5
6
Figure No.6
CONSTRUCTION AND DEMOLITION WASTES:
As per the Construction and Demolition (C&D) Waste Rule 2016, ‘any waste
comprising building materials, debris and rubble resulting from construction,
remodeling, repair and demolition of any civil structure’ is classified as C&D waste.
Characteristics of the waste C&D waste is an inert waste, over 90 per cent of which can
be easily reused or recycled.
A study by Technology Information, Forecasting and Assessment Council (TIFAC) in
2001 noted that C&D waste in India typically contains soil, sand and gravel (36 per
cent), bricks and masonry (31 per cent), concretes (23 per cent), metal (5 per cent),
wood (2 per cent), and others (3 per cent).
Construction and demolition waste is generated whenever any
construction/demolition activity takes place, such as, building roads, bridges, fly over,
subway, remodeling etc.
It consists mostly of inert and non-biodegradable material such as concrete, metal,
wood, plastics etc.
7
MAJOR COMPONENTS
Cement concrete
Bricks
Cement plaster
Steel (from RCC, door/window frames, roofing support, railings of staircase etc.)
Stone (marble, granite, sand stone)
Timber/wood (especially demolition of old buildings)
MINOR COMPONENTS
Conduits (iron, plastic)
Pipes (GI, iron, plastic)
Electrical fixtures (copper/aluminium wiring, wooden baton/plastic switches, wire
insulation)
Panels (wooden, laminated) & Others (glazed tiles)
Figure No.7
HAZARDOUS WASTE:
Industrial and hospital waste is considered hazardous as they may contain toxic
substances.
Certain types of household waste are also hazardous. Hazardous wastes could be highly
toxic to humans, animals, and plants; are corrosive, highly inflammable, or explosive;
and react when exposed to certain things e.g., gases.
India generates around 7 million tons of hazardous wastes every year, most of which
is concentrated in four states: Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu.
8
Household waste that can be categorized as hazardous waste include old batteries, shoe
polish, paint tins, old medicines, and medicine bottles.
Hospital waste contaminated by chemicals used in hospitals is considered hazardous.
These chemicals include formaldehyde and phenols, which are used as disinfectants,
and mercury, which is used in thermometers or equipment that measure blood pressure.
Most hospitals in India do not have proper disposal facilities for these hazardous wastes.
In the industrial sector, the major generators of hazardous waste are the metal, chemical,
paper, pesticide, dye, refining, and rubber goods industries.
Direct exposure to chemicals in hazardous waste such as mercury and cyanide can be
fatal.
Figure No.8
9
Dead animals
Abandoned vehicles
GARBAGE:
It is unwanted materials and objects that people have thrown away. It is often also
called trash, garbage, rubbish, or junk.
Garbage is the waste we produce daily in our homes, including old or unwanted food,
chemical substances, paper, broken furniture, used containers, and other things.
ASHES AND RESIDUES:
These are substances remaining from the burning of wood, coal, charcoal, coke and
other combustible materials for cooking and heating in houses, institutions and small
industrial establishments.
Ashes consists of fine powdery residue, cinders and clinker often mixed with small
pieces of metal and glass.
Since ashes and residues are almost entirely inorganic, they are valuable in landfills.
COMBUSTIBLE AND NON-COMBUSTIBLE WASTES:
These consists of wastes generated from households, institutions, commercial activities
etc. excluding food wastes and other highly putrescible material.
Combustible: paper, cardboard, textile, barrels, rubber, wood, excelsior, tree branches,
yard trimmings, wood furniture.
Non- combustible: metals, tin cans, metal furniture, dirt, glass, crockery, minerals.
Source: Same as garbage.
BULKY WASTES:
Bulky waste items include discarded furniture (couches, recliners, tables), large
appliances (refrigerators, ovens, TVs), and plumbing fixtures (bathtubs, toilets, sinks).
A large amount (30-60%, depending on area) of bulky waste is picked up by scavengers
before it is collected.
STREET WASTES:
These include dust blown from unpaved areas, sometimes from within the city and
sometimes from a great distance, and decaying vegetation such as fallen leaves,
blossoms and seeds which originate from trees and plants in the city.
BIODEGRADABLE AND NON-BIODEGRADABLE WASTES:
A biodegradable substance can be defined as a material which can be decomposed by
microorganisms or decomposers and not be adding to any type of pollution.
10
Waste that cannot be decomposed by the biological ways is called the Non-
biodegradable wastes.
Biodegradable waste can be found in municipal solid waste (sometimes called
biodegradable municipal waste, or as green waste, food waste, paper waste
and biodegradable plastics).
Other biodegradable wastes include human waste, manure, sewage, sewage sludgeand
slaughterhouse waste.
Non-biodegradable wastes are those who cannot be decomposed or dissolved by natural
agents.
They remain on earth for thousands of years without any degradation.
They incorporated some biodegradable materials with plastics and made them easily
and rapidly degradable.
DEAD ANIMALS:
Dead animals are those that die naturally or are accidentally killed on the road. Example:
Dead dogs, cats, rats etc.
If not collected promptly, dead animals pose a threat to public health since they attract
flies and other vermin as they decay.
Their presence in public places is particularly offensive from the aesthetic point of view
as well.
ABANDONED VEHICLES:
This category includes automobiles, trucks and trailers that are abandoned on streets
and other public places.
SEWAGE WASTES:
They are mostly organic and derived from the treatment of organic sludge separated
from both raw and treated sewages.
WASTE GENERATION RATES:
Wastes generation is essential due to discarding of unwanted materials away for
disposal.
Huge quantities of municipal solid wastes are generated in all the megacities of the
world.
The volume of municipal solid wastes generated varies with the lifestyle of the people.
Canada's estimated total waste generation is the largest in the entire world.
Canada's estimated annual waste per capita is 36.1 metric tons.
11
FACTORS AFFECTING THE GENERATION OF SOLID WASTE:
Geographic location
Seasons
Collection frequency
Population density and diversity
Per capita income
Extent of salvaging and recycling
Public attitude
Legislation
GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION:
The influence of geographic location is related primarily to different climates that can influence
both the number of certain types of solid wastes generated and the collection operation.
In the warmer southern areas, where the growing season is considerably longer compared to
the northern areas, yard wastes are collected in considerably larger quantities and over a longer
period of time.
SEASONS:
Seasons of the year have implications for the quantities and compositions of certain types of
solid wastes.
The growing season of vegetable and fruits affect the quantities of food wastes.
For example, mango and melon peelings found are more in summers.
COLLECTION FREQUENCY:
In localities, where there are ultimate collection services, more wastes are collected.
POPULATION DENSITY AND DIVERSITY:
The characteristics of the population influence the quantity and composition of waste
generated.
PER CAPITA INCOME:
The amount of waste generated is more in high income areas compared to that in low-income
areas.
Similarly, the composition differs in terms of paper and other recyclable, which are typically
more in high income areas as against low-income areas.
12
EXTENT OF SALVAGING AND RECYCLING:
The existence of salvaging and recycling operation within a community definitely affects the
quantity of wastes collected.
PUBLIC ATTITUDE:
Significant reduction in the quantity of solid waste is possible, if and when people are willing
to change their habits and lifestyles to conserve the natural resources and to reduce the
economic burden associated with the management of solid wastes.
LEGISLATION:
This refers to the existence of local and state regulations concerning the use and disposal of
specific materials and is an important factor that influences the composition and generation of
certain types of wastes.
The Indian legislation dealing with packing and beverage container materials is an example.
INTEGRATED SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT:
Integrated solid waste management (ISWM) can be defined as the selection and
application of suitable techniques, technologies and management programs to achieve
specific waste management objectives and goals.
The important principle in waste management is 3R’s e.g., reduction, reuse and
recycling.
COMPONENTS OF INTEGRATED SWM:
Waste Minimization at source
Material Recovery and Recycling
Wastes Transformation
Volume Reduction before Disposal
Wastes Disposal
Database Management
PRESENT SCENARIO OF SWM IN URBAN LOCAL BODIES:
Solid waste management (SWM) has emerged as one of the most massive development
challenges in urban India.
Numerous studies indicate that the unsafe disposal of waste generates dangerous gases
and leachates, due to microbial decomposition, climate conditions, refuse
characteristics and land-filling operations.
In India, approach towards waste management is unscientific.
Even today, large portion of solid waste is dumped indiscriminately on outskirts of
places without any prior treatment leading to groundwater contamination and increase
in air pollution.
13
CURRENT ISSUES IN SWM IN INDIA:
According to Dr Kumar, the major problems affecting solid waste management are
unscientific treatment, improper collection of waste, and ethical problems.
This in turn leads to hazards like environmental degradation, water pollution, soil
pollution, and air pollution.
Segregation can help reduce the burden of transportation of waste as well as lower
leachate and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
If the waste is segregated at source, various components can be utilized in different
types of production processes, generating marketable use value.
CAUSES OF URBAN WASTE:
An increasing population, changing consumption patterns, economic development,
improving household incomes, growing urbanization and industrialization have
resulted in increased urban waste-generation.
MANAGE WASTE IN URBAN AREAS:
Composting is an environment- friendly and simple solution for organic waste that is
often successful at the house- hold level.
Another option is biogas production, which can be used to produce electricity or as fuel
for vehicles.
Waste disposal can be improved by constructing different types of sanitary landfills.
DUMPING OF SOLID WASTE:
Dumping or Land Filling is an old way of disposing off wastes. It is an easy method
of disposal of dry refuse.
In this process, solid wastes are dumped in a low-lying area and as a result of bacterial
action, refuse decreases considerably in volume and are converted gradually into
humus.
TYPES:
Open dumping:
In this method, waste materials are dumped in open low lands far away from the city.
This method is not environment friendly.
The waste then is subjected to bacterial decomposition.
Sanitary landfill:
In this method, the waste is packed and dumped daily at the site and is covered with
earth to prevent insects or rodents from entering into the landfill.
14
CAUSES OF DUMPING OF SOLID WASTE:
Solid waste pollution is caused mainly through urbanization and through industrial
waste.
It causes various diseases in human as bacillary dysentery, diarrhea and amoebic
dysentery, plague, salmonellosis, trichinosis, endemic typhus, cholera, jaundice,
hepatitis, gastro enteric diseases etc.
METHODS OF DISPOSAL OF SOLID WASTE:
Preventing or Reducing Waste Generation
Recycling
Incineration
Composting
Sanitary Landfill
Disposal in Ocean/Sea
PREVENTING OR REDUCING WASTE GENERATION:
Extensive use of new or unnecessary products is the root cause of unchecked waste
formation.
The rapid population growth makes it imperative to use secondhand products or
judiciously use the existing ones because if not, there is a potential risk of people
succumbing to the ill effects of toxic wastes.
Disposing of the wastes will also assume formidable shape. A conscious decision should
be made at the personal and professional level to judiciously curb the menacing growth
of wastes.
RECYCLING:
Recycling serves to transform the wastes into products of their own genre through
industrial processing.
Paper, glass, aluminum, and plastics are commonly recycled.
It is environmentally friendly to reuse the wastes instead of adding them to nature.
However, processing technologies are pretty expensive.
INCINERATION:
Incineration features combustion of wastes to transform them into base components,
with the generated heat being trapped for deriving energy.
Assorted gases and inert ash are common by-products.
Pollution is caused by varied degrees dependent on nature of waste combusted and
incinerator design.
15
Use of filters can check pollution.
It is rather inexpensive to burn wastes and the waste volume is reduced by about 90%.
The nutrient rich ash derived out of burning organic wastes can facilitate hydroponic
solutions.
Hazardous and toxic wastes can be easily be rid of by using this method.
The energy extracted can be used for cooking, heating, and supplying power to turbines.
However, strict vigilance and due diligence should be exercised to check the accidental
leakage of micro level contaminants, such as dioxins from incinerator lines.
COMPOSTING:
It involves decomposition of organic wastes by microbes by allowing the waste to stay
accumulated in a pit for a long period of time.
The nutrient rich compost can be used as plant manure.
However, the process is slow and consumes a significant amount of land.
Biological reprocessing tremendously improves the fertility of the soil.
SANITARY LANDFILLS:
Sanitary landfills are sites where waste is isolated from the environment until it is safe.
It is considered when it has completely degraded biologically, chemically and
physically.
In high-income countries, the level of isolation achieved may be high.
A landfill site, also known as a tip, dump, rubbish dump, garbage dump, or dumping
ground, is a site for the disposal of waste materials.
Landfill is the oldest and most common form of waste disposal, although the systematic
burial of the waste with daily, intermediate and final covers only began in the 1940s
Some landfill sites are also used for waste management purposes, such as temporary
storage, consolidation and transfer, or for various stages of processing waste material,
such as sorting, treatment, or recycling.
Sanitary landfill, method of controlled disposal of municipal solid waste (refuse) on
land.
The method was introduced in England in 1912 (where it is called controlled tipping).
Waste is deposited in thin layers (up to 1 metre, or 3 feet) and promptly compacted by
heavy machinery (e.g., bulldozers); several layers are placed and compacted on top of
each other to form a refuse cell (up to 3 metres, or 10 feet, thick).
16
At the end of each day the compacted refuse cell is covered with a layer of compacted
soil to prevent odours and windblown debris.
All modern landfill sites are carefully selected and prepared (e.g., sealed with
impermeable synthetic bottom liners) to prevent pollution of groundwater or other
environmental problems.
When the landfill is completed, it is capped with a layer of clay or a synthetic liner in
order to prevent water from entering.
A final topsoil cover is placed, compacted, and graded, and various forms of vegetation
may be planted in order to reclaim otherwise useless land.
DISPOSAL IN OCEAN/SEA:
Wastes generally of radioactive nature are dumped in the oceans far from active human
habitats.
However, environmentalists are challenging this method, as such an action is believed
to spell doom for aquatic life by depriving the ocean waters of its inherent nutrients.
Ocean waste disposal has been practiced throughout human history.
It consists of dumping materials from land or from a vessel, or discharging them through
a pipe into marine waters.
17
UNIT – II – WASTE WATER MANAGEMENT– SCIA4002
1
INTRODUCTION
SANITARY ENGINEERING:
It is defined as the branch of public health engineering deals with the collection, conveyance,
treatment and safe disposal of wastes for preventing the communicable diseases.
2
INDUSTRIAL SEWAGE:
It consists of spent water from industries and commercial areas.
The degree of foulness depends on the nature of the industry concerned and processes
involved.
SULLAGE:
It is defined as the waste water from domestic buildings especially from bathrooms, kitchens
etc.
It is merely waste water and does not create any bad smell or odour.
SLUDGE:
It is the organic matter deposited in the sedimentation tank during treatment.
SEWERAGE:
The entire system of collecting, carrying & disposal of sewage through sewers is known as
sewerage.
The sewerage system carries two types of flow:
1. DRY WEATHER FLOW (DWF):
Domestic sewage and industrial sewage collectively, is called as DWF.
It does not contain storm water.
It indicates the normal flow during dry season.
2. WET WEATHER FLOW (WWF):
The flow of storm water is called WWF.
SEWERS:
Sewers are underground pipes which carry the sewage to a point of disposal.
TRUNK SEWERS:
A trunk sewer is a one which collects the waste water or sewage from two or more main
sewers.
MAIN SEWERS:
A main sewer is a one which collects the sewage from two or more sub main sewers.
SUB MAIN or BRANCH SEWERS:
A sub main or branch sewer is a one which collects the sewage from lateral sewers and
discharges into main sewer.
3
LATERAL SEWER:
The sewer collecting the sewage directly from the building and discharging to the branch
sewer is called lateral sewer.
COMBINED SEWER:
A sewer carries domestic sewage and storm water is called combined sewer.
OBJECTIVES OF WASTE WATER TREATMENT
The purpose of waste water treatment is to remove contaminant from water so that the
treated water can meet the acceptable quality standard.
The quality standard usually depends whether the water will be reused or discharged
into river.
Before disposing of sewage into river or land, sewage has to be treated to make it safe
and to make it harmless.
Methods of waste water treatment depends on composition of waste water and
required quality for treated water.
Treatment process are broadly classified as physical, chemical and biological
treatments.
Physical treatment methods utilize physical separation of pollutant such as by
filtration etc.
Chemical treatment methods utilize chemical characteristics of pollutant for
purification. For e.g., Coagulation etc.
Biological treatment methods utilize biological characteristics of pollutants such as
bacteria, viruses by purification.
Other purpose of waste water treatment includes:
To reduce strength of sewage
To make waste water less offensive
To prevent public health from toxic effect of pollutant
To conserve nature
4
LAYOUT OF SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT
Figure No.1
STEPS OF SEWAGE TREATMENT PROCESS:
It is the first stage in treatment process, in which the floating materials such as
tree branches, dead animals, papers, pieces of rags, wood etc. are separated from
the sewage.
FUNCTIONS OF PRIMARY TREATMENT:
Figure No.2
TYPES OF SCREENS:
6
Coarse Screen
Medium
Fine Screen
According to the movement of screens:
Fixed Screen
Movable Screen
Moving Screen
COARSE SCREEN:
The coarse screens are also called as racks are having the space between
the bars of 40 mm.
The coarse screens reduce the organic load of sewage considerably.
Hand cleaned coarse screens are generally set at an angle of 45 inclination
to the direction of flow.
Mechanically cleaned coarse screens are generally set almost vertically.
MEDIUM SCREEN:
7
FIXED SCREEN:
The moving screens are moving during their operating period and they are
automatically cleaned when they are in motion.
DISPOSAL OF SCREENINGS:
Following four methods are generally adopted for the disposal of screenings:
Burial
Incineration
Disintegration
Fertilizer
GRIT BASINS or GRIT CHANNELS:
Sewage contains both organic and inorganic materials, and grit is the heavy
mineral material found in raw sewage, it may contain sand, gravel, silt,
cinders, broken glass, small fragments of metal and other inorganic solids.
Grits are small, non-biodegradable particles which are heavier than
suspended organic matters.
Grits are removed by carefully regulating the flow velocity of sewage in
grit removal tank.
They reduce the excessive accumulation of grit in such units.
Grit chambers are provided to remove grit, sand and other inorganic matter
from the sewage.
Grit chambers are provided to protect moving mechanical equipment from
abrasion.
8
They reduce the formation of heavy deposits in channels, pipelines or
conduits.
Figure No.3
SOURCES:
Grease in sewage includes fats, waxes, free fatty acids, calcium and magnesium
soaps, mineral oils and other non-fatty materials.
Oil and grease are obtained from restaurants, kitchens, garages, soap and candle
factories, oil refineries and slaughter houses.
9
The oil and grease create following severe problems and difficulties in sewerage
system.
If sewage with oil and grease is disposed into the stream, the foul odour may be
produces at the surface of the stream.
They reduce the efficiency of other treatment units and clog the trickling filter.
The digestion of oils and grease is a difficult one for sludge digestion tank.
They affect the biological action of microorganism.
They can be removed from sewage either by floatation or as a scum or sludge.
Formation of scum is promoted by diffusing air through sewage.
SKIMMING:
Figure No.4
10
DISPOSAL OF SKIMMIMGS:
The oil and greasy materials removed by skimming tanks are disposed
either by burning or burial.
Sometimes, the disposal of skimmings can be converted into soap
lubricants, candle and other non-edible products.
Sometimes, it may be digested in digesters, when the vegetable andorganic
matters present are more, and when this is more, digest easily and produces
high fuel value gases.
PRIMARY TREATMENT OF WASTEWATER:
After removal of floatable solids, grits and fats, next step in treatment is removal
of remaining suspended solids as much as possible.
The main objective of primary treatment is to reduce strength of sewage by
removing suspended materials.
Some common technique applied for primary treatment of sewage are:
Sedimentation tanks
Imhoff tanks
Septic tanks
Chemical precipitation tanks
SEDIMENTATION:
11
Sedimentation tanks are also known as settling tanks or wastewater
clarifiers.
TYPES OF SEDIMENTATION TANK:
12
Figure No.5
CONSTRUCTION DETAILS OF RECTANGULAR TANK:
Baffles are required to prevent the movement of organic matter and its escape
along with effluent.
Baffles are provided in the form of troughs or boards for the following purposes:
13
To prevent the entry of floating substances into the outlet channel.
To distribute the sewage uniformly through the cross section of the tank.
SKIMMING TROUGHS:
When the amount of oils and greasy matters present in sewage is small, it
is uneconomical to provide a separate skimming tank.
In such cases, a skimming trough is provided near its outlet end of
sedimentation tank.
In manually operated tanks, skimmings that float on surface may be pushed
into trough by squeezes with hand.
In mechanically operated tanks, skimmings may be pushed by a same
scraper blades which collect sludge while moving bottom and push the
skimmings into trough when they move near the surface along with endless
chain to which they are attached.
CLEANING AND SLUDGE REMOVAL:
14
Sedimentation with coagulation is defined as the process of removing the very
fine suspended particles present in the waste water that cannot be removed by
primary sedimentation by increasing their size by using chemicals.
The chemicals used for increasing the size of the particles are called coagulants.
The various chemicals or coagulants are:
Alum
Ferric Chloride
Ferric Sulphate
Chlorinated Copperas.
The coagulants mixed with water forms a gelatinous precipitate called floc, which
attracts the fine mud particles and other colloidal matters form a bigger sized
flocculated particle.
The process of adding the chemicals is called coagulation and the formation of
bigger sized flocculate particles is called flocculation.
SECONDARY TREATMENT OF WASTE WATER:
15
In this step, microorganisms utilize organic matter and converts them into
inorganic minerals.
Following changes occurs in sewage during secondary treatment:
Organic matter (carbon) is oxidized into CO2 and H2O
Organic nitrogen compounds are first converted into NH3 and then
into NO3
Colloidal matters are coagulated or precipitated out.
Thus, main purpose of secondary treatment of sewage is to reduce BOD level.
FILTRATION PROCESS:
Contact Beds
Intermittent Sand Filters
Trickling Filters
TRICKLING FILTERS:
16
Figure No.6
17
Air circulation in the void space, by either natural draft or blowers,provides
oxygen for the microorganisms growing as an attached biofilm.
During operation, the organic material present in the wastewater is
metabolized by the biomass attached to the medium.
The biological slime grows in thickness as the organic matter abstracted
from the flowing wastewater is synthesized into new cellular material.
The thickness of the aerobic layer is limited by the depth of penetration of
oxygen into the microbial layer.
The micro-organisms near the medium face enter the endogenous phase as
the substrate is metabolized before it can reach the micro-organisms near
the medium face as a result of increased thickness of the slime layer and
lose their ability to cling to the media surface.
The liquid then washes the slime off the medium and a new slime layer
starts to grow. This phenomenon of losing the slime layer is called
sloughing.
The sloughed off film and treated wastewater are collected by an
underdrainage which also allows circulation of air through filter.
The collected liquid is passed to a settling tank used for solid- liquid
separation.
ADVANTAGES:
18
The working of trickling filters is simple and it does not require skilled
supervision.
The trickling filters may reduce the B.O.D and colloidal matter to the
extent of about 75 % and 80 % respectively.
The trickling filters are flexible in operation.
DISADVANTAGES:
Tertiary treatment of waste water is final treatment process in which all the
chemical and biological agents are completely removed from sewage
before disposal into river.
After the primary and secondary treatment of sewage, the sewage is a
stabilized and a harmless one.
However, the primary and secondary treatments remove only conventional
constituents like TSS, BOD, COD, Organic [Link], phosphorus
etc.
The non-conventional compounds and other emerging compounds may
still be present in sewage.
Also, sewage contains some roundworms and bacterial pathogens that are
difficult to control.
All these factors affect the public health and therefore, the sewage needs to
undergo tertiary treatment before disposal or reuse for industrial,
agricultural and municipal purposes.
19
The tertiary treatment required will be always based on the type of water
reuse and degree of quality of the reclaimed water.
OBJECTIVES OF TERTIARY TREATMENT PROCESS:
20
At first sewage is placed in a tank containing nitrifying bacteria.
These bacteria convert ammonium salt and nitrite into nitrate.
Then the sewage is placed into second tank containing denitrifying
bacteria.
These bacteria convert nitrate into Nitrogen gas that leaves the sewage.
Phosphate is also removed by bacteria by microbial assimilation process.
KILLING OF MICRO-ORGANISMS:
21
CONDITIONS FOR DILUTION
The ratio of the quantity of the diluting water to that of the quantity of
sewage is called Dilution Factor.
If the dilution factor is less than 8, the sewage has to be completely
purified under the following circumstances.
• The diluting water has more than 20 ppm of D.O in 5 days.
• The river is being used as a source of water supply on the downstream
side.
• The effluent has to be used disposed of into tidal waters which may be in
the form of river or sea.
SELF-PURIFICATION OF RIVER:
• When sewage is discharged into natural waters. Its organic matter gets
oxidized by the dissolved oxygen content in water, and the receiving water
gets polluted due to the waste products, present in the sewage effluents.
• But this is not happening always due to the natural forces of purification.
• The oxidation of organic matter converts the organic matter to simple
harmless substances. The deficiency of dissolved oxygen is filled by the
absorption of atmospheric oxygen.
• Thus, the oxygen of water is consumed by the sewage and at the same time,
the oxygen is taken from the atmosphere.
22
• This procedure occurs in all-natural waters is called Self-purification of
natural waters.
• The rate of self-purification will depend on various factors such as rate of
re=aeration, type of organic matter present in the sewage, temperature,
velocity of flow, presence of available oxygen in receiving waters,
sedimentation etc.
• The self-purification of process of streams polluted by sewage can be
grouped in the following four zones or divisions.
• Degradation Zone
• Active-Decomposition Zone
• Recovery Zone
• Clear water Zone
23
24
SOURCES OF GETTING OXYGEN:
The rain water is saturated with oxygen and when combines with natural
water results in increase of oxygen content.
SURFACE LEVEL:
25
DILUTION:
26
OXYGEN SAG CURVE:
Figure No.7
DE-OXYGENATION CURVE:
The curve which represents (or) showing the depletion of D.O with time
at the given temperature.
RE-OXYGENATION CURVE:
27
When de-oxygenation takes place, the deficiency or deficit of oxygen is
filled up by the process of re-aeration. This is represented by the re-
oxygenation curve.
The rate of de-oxygenation becomes equal to the rate of re-oxygenation and
the rate of re-aeration depends on the deficiency of oxygen developed by
the sewage.
The rate of re-oxygenation increases and the natural waters become
saturated with D.O content as before.
By using the above two curves, the quantity of net oxygen balance can be
calculated at any stage of the self-purification process.
This is represented by Oxygen sag curve or Oxygen deficit curve.
When the rate of de-oxygenation is equal to the rate of re-oxygenation,
the critical point of maximum deficit is reached.
This point is shown on the oxygen sag curve and after this point is
reached, the rate of re-oxygenation rapidly increases.
Oxygen Deficit, D = Saturation D.O – Actual D.O
LAND DISPOSAL
28
CONDITIONS FAVOURABLE FOR LAND TREATMENT
The area of land treatment is composed of sandy, loamy or alluvial soils.
Such soils are easily aerated and it is easy to maintain aerobic conditions
in them.
The depth of water table is more even in rainy season so that there are no
chances of pollution of underground water sources by land treatment.
The rainfall in the area is low as it will assist in maintaining good
absorption capacity of soil.
There is absence of river or other natural water sources in the vicinity of
disposal of sewage.
There is demand for cash crops which can be easily grown on sewage
farms.
There is availability of large open areas in the surrounding locality for
practicing broad irrigation by sewage.
SEWAGE SICKNESS:
29
At this stage, the land is unable to take any further sewage load.
Organic matter decomposes and foul-smelling gases are produced.
The phenomena of soil are known as sewage sickness of land.
PREVENTIVE MEASURES
There should be ample provision of extra land so that land with sewage
sickness can be given the desired rest.
Alternatively, sewage should be disposed of by some other method when
sewage farms are taking rest.
DEPTH OF SEWAGE:
30
ROTATION OF CROPS:
31
SEWAGE FARMING:
The sludge from primary sedimentation tank and sludge from secondary
sedimentation units contains 96 % to 99 % of moisture content in its
volume.
Before disposing the sludge, the moisture should be removed in order to
reduce the volume of sludge disposal.
To reduce the cost of transport for heavy volume of disposal.
To minimize the land requirement.
To save the additional fuel required for incineration method of sewage
disposal.
CHARACTERISTICS OF SLUDGE:
The sludge has an objectionable odour and it may pollute the environment.
It is bulky and contains large amount of water.
Its specific gravity may be taken as very nearly equal to that of water.
In 100 parts of sludge, about 98 % of water and remaining 2 % only the
solid matter present in the sludge.
In the moisture content of the sludge is reduced to about 70 % to 80 %,
the sludge become viscous.
If the moisture content is reduced to 10 %, the sludge becomes dry and
assumes powder form.
The water is so firmly held in the sludge and it requires special treatment
for water removal from the sludge.
32
QUANTITY OF SLUDGE:
33
To permit increased loading to the sludge digesters.
To increase feed solids concentration to vacuum filters.
To reduce the cost of transport for heavy volume of disposal.
To minimize the land requirement.
To save the additional fuel required for incineration method for sewage
disposal.
There are three types of sludge thickeners:
Gravity thickeners
Floatation thickeners
Centrifugal thickeners.
SLUDGE DIGESTION:
34
UNIT – III – WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT– SCIA4002
1
INTRODUCTION
ROLE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEER:
2
An environmental engineer may assist with a project aimed at improving a
recycling process in a nearby municipality, or may work with an organization
to monitor levels of air pollution and take necessary action.
WATER SUPPLY
The organized water supply to Chennai was commenced in 1872 which is the
nucleus of the protected surface water supply system now in existence in
Chennai.
Water supply is the provision of water by public utilities, commercial
organizations, community endeavors or by individuals, usually via a systemof
pumps and pipes.
TYPES OF WATER SUPPLY:
Continuous system of water supply 24x7 supply is achieved when water isdelivered
continuously to every consumer of the service 24 hours a day, every dayof the year,
through a transmission and distribution system that is continuously full and under
positive pressure.
So, there is no chance of infiltration i.e, negative pressure cannot occur and as a result
the quality of water is better.
As the supply is continuous, so there is more consumption of water and less chances
of contamination.
If the supply of water is cut off for half an hour daily, then supply cannot be called as
continuous supply.
ADVANTAGES:
In this system water is not stagnant in pipe at any instant & hence fresh water is
always available.
Lesser pipe sizes are required.
Fire hazards can be met within time.
DISADVANTAGES:
If there are some minor leakages etc. in the system, great volume of water is wasted
because of long duration of flow.
3
More water is required at the source which is difficult in tropical countries like India,
which get rains only during a particular season.
More wastage of water due to lack of civic sense.
INTERMITTENT WATER SUPPLY:
For older distribution systems having weaker joints and more leakage, restrained
supply hours can limit leakage
Reduced pressure also helps lowering leakage
Overall scarcity may sometimes be managed by interrupting the water supply and
equally balancing the resources (controversial)
Time is available for repair and maintenance out of supply hours
DISADVANTAGES:
Further water was directly procured from these sources by the persons as per their
requirements and there was no public water supply system.
The service reservoirs, besides supplying water at adequate pressures, serve to
balance the variations in the public demand of water.
Due to relatively less requirement of water in the early times, which was mainly for
domestic purposes, these sources were deemed to be sufficient to meet the
requirements of the persons residing in the nearby areas.
NEED FOR PROTECTED WATER SUPPLIES
Source water protection safeguards public health by ensuring the quality and quantity
of source water used for drinking-water.
Protecting water sources can reduce health risks associated with hazardous agents,
particularly for those agents that cannot be effectively removed by conventional
water treatment.
Furthermore, many public water systems draw all or part of their
supply from groundwater, so protecting the resource protects the public water supply
and impacts treatment costs.
Protecting groundwater will help reduce risks to your water supply.
OBJECTIVES OF WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS
Wholesome water is the water that is safe and potent for drinking to human
health.
It is cleaned of harmful contaminants, transparent, odourless, harmless and
Wholesome water is fit to use for drinking, cooking, food preparation or
washing without any potential danger to human health by meeting the
requirements free from any disease-causing bacteria.
Water which is not chemically pure but does not contain anything harmful to
human health.
REQUIREMENTS OF WHOLESOME WATER:
The water which is tasteful for drinking and aesthetically pure is known as
palatable water.
POTABLE WATER:
The water which has both the characteristics of wholesome water and palatable
water is known as potable water.
POLLUTED WATER:
The water which consists of undesirable substances which make it unfit for
drinking and domestic use is known as polluted water.
CONTAMINATED WATER:
6
The contaminated water is always be polluted but the polluted water may not
be contaminated.
IMPURITIES IN WATER
SUSPENDED IMPURITIES:
Some impurities are dissolved in water when it moves over the rocks, soil
etc.,
Solids, liquids and gases are dissolved in natural waters.
7
These dissolved impurities may contain organic compounds, inorganic salts
and gases etc.
The concentration of total dissolved solids is usually expressed in p.p.m and
is obtained by weighing the residue after evaporation of the water sample from
a filtered sample.
Dissolved impurities include Calcium and magnesium, Sodium, Metal, Gases.
Suspended solids are substances that are not completely soluble in water and
are present as particles.
These particles usually impart a visible turbidity to the water. Dissolved and
suspended solids are present in most surface waters.
CHARACTERISTICS OF WATER
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
Temperature
Colour
Turbidity
Taste and Odours
Specific conductivity of water
TEMPERATURE:
The colour of water is usually due to presence of organic matter, but sometimes
it is also due to mineral and dissolved organic and inorganic impurities.
8
The colour of water is compared with standard colour solution.
The permissible colour for domestic water is 20 ppm on platinum cobalt scale.
The colour in water is not harmful but it is objectionable.
TURBIDITY:
Taste and odours in water may be due to the presence of dead or alive micro-
organisms, dissolved gases such as hydrogen sulphide, methane, carbon
dioxide or oxygen combined with organic matter, mineral substance such as
sodium chloride, iron compounds, and carbonate and sulphates of other
substances.
The test of these is done by sense of smell and taste because these are present
in such small proportions that it is difficult to detect them by chemicalanalysis.
The odour of water also changes with temperature.
The odour may be classified as fishy, mouldy, sweetish, vegetable, greasy etc.
The odour of both cold and hot water should be determined.
The water having bad smell or odour is objectionable and should not be
supplied to the public.
The intensities of the odours are measured in terms of threshold number.
SPECIFIC CONDUCTIVITY OF WATER:
The total amount of dissolved salts present in water can be easily estimatedby
measuring the specific conductivity of water.
9
The specific conductivity of water is determined by means of portable dionic
water tester and it expressed in micro-mohs per cm at 25° C (Mho is the unit
of conductivity).
The specific conductivity of water in micro-mhos per cm at 25° C is multiplied
by a coefficient (generally 0.65) so as to directly obtain the dissolved salt
content in mg/litre or ppm.
The exact value of this coefficient depends upon the type of salt present in
water.
CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
pH-value
Total Solids
Hardness
Chlorides
Dissolved gases
Nitrogen
Iron and manganese
Lead and arsenic
Metals and chemical substance
Acidity
Alkalinity
Sulphates
PH-VALUE:
Depending upon the nature of dissolved salts and minerals, the water found in
natural sources may be acidic or alkaline.
The acidity or alkalinity is usually measured in p.p.m. of the dissolved salts
and is expressed in terms of equivalent weight of calcium carbonate.
Denotes the concentration of hydrogen ions in the water and it is a measure of
acidity or alkalinity of a substance.
pH = - log 10[H +] (or) 1 / log 10[H +]
10
Depending upon the nature of dissolved salts and minerals, the PH value
ranges from 0 to 14.
For pure water, pH value is 7 and 0 to 7 acidic and 7 to 14 alkaline ranges.
For public water supply pH value may be 6.5 to 8.5.
The lower value may cause tuberculation and corrosion, whereas high value
may produce incrustation, sediment deposits and other bad effects.
pH value of water is generally determined by pH papers or by using pH
meter.
Its knowledge is also helpful in controlling softening and coagulation
processes in water treatment.
There are two methods of determine pH value of water:
Colourimetric method,
Electrometric method
TOTAL SOLIDS:
11
Sometimes the presence of chlorides and nitrates of calcium and magnesium
also cause hardness in the water.
Hardness is of two types.
Temporary hardness:
It is caused due to the presence of carbonates and sulphates of calcium and
magnesium. It is removed by boiling.
Permanent hardness:
It is caused due to the presence of chlorides and nitrates of calcium and
magnesium. It is removed by zeolite method.
Hardness is usually expressed in mg/litre or ppm. of calcium carbonate in
water.
Hardness of water is determined by EDTA method.
For potable water hardness ranges from 5 to 8 degrees.
CHLORIDE CONTENT:
The presence of nitrogen in the water indicates the presence of organic matters
in the water. The nitrogen may be present in the water may be in one or more
of the following forms.
Nitrites
Nitrates
Free ammonia
Albuminoid nitrogen.
Excess presence of nitrogen will cause “MATHEMOGLOBINEMIA” disease
to the children.
NITRITES:
The presence of nitrites in the water due to partly oxidized organic matters, is
very dangerous.
Therefore, in no case nitrites should be allowed in the water, their presence
must be nil.
The nitrites are rapidly and easily converted to nitrates by the full oxidation
of the organic matters.
The presence of nitrates is not so harmful.
But in no case its quantity should increase 45 p.p.m., because excess presence
of nitrate will cause “mathemoglobinemia” disease to the children.
Nitrite in water is either due to oxidation of ammonium compounds or due to
reduction of nitrate.
As an intermediate stage in the nitrogen cycle, it is unstable.
A usual concentration in natural water is in the range of some tenths of mg/L.
Higher concentrations are present in industrial wastes, sewage and in
biologically purified effluents and in polluted streams.
Very high nitrite levels are usually associated with water of unsatisfactory
microbiological activity.
13
The presence of nitrites or nitrate can be determined by colour matching
methods.
For determining the presence of nitrites, the colour is obtained by adding
sulphonic acid and napthamine.
For testing presence of nitrates, the colour is obtained if phenol-di-sulphonic
acid and potassium hydroxide are added.
The colours so developed are compared with standard colours to ascertain the
p.p.m. contents.
NITRATE:
Nitrate constitutes the final stage in the oxidation of nitrogen compounds, and
normally reaches important concentrations in the final stages of biological
oxidation.
The nitrate contained in pure well water derived from an extensive catchment
is largely the result of biological activity in the surface layers of the soil,
enhanced by cultivation and the application of manures.
When the nitrate in in the excessive amounts, it contributes to the illness known
as infant methemoglobinemia.
Nitrate is measured either by reduction to ammonia or by matching thecolours
produced with phenol-di-sulphonic acid.
FREE AMMONIA:
14
Concentrations of ammonia above a certain level in water polluted either due
to sewage or industrial waste is toxic to fish.
The proportions of the two forms of ammonia nitrogen in surface water
depend on pH.
For accurate results, it is generally preferable to distill off ammonia from the
sample, and absorb in boric acid.
It is then determined either by titration or colorimetrically using Nessler
reagent.
ALBUMINOID NITROGEN:
Oxygen and carbon di-oxide are the gases mostly found in the natural water.
The surface water contains large amount of dissolved oxygen because they
absorb it from the atmosphere.
Algae and other tiny plant life of water also give oxygen to the water.
The presence of oxygen in the water in dissolved form keeps it fresh and
sparkling.
But more quantity of oxygen causes corrosion to the pipe’s material. Water
absorbs carbon-dioxide from the atmosphere.
If water comes across calcium and magnesium salts, carbon-dioxide reacts with
the salts and converts them into bicarbonates, causes hardness in the water.
The presence of carbon-dioxide is easily determined by adding lime solution
to water gives milky white colour.
IRON & MANGANESE:
15
If these are present less than 0.3 p.p.m., it is not objectionable, but if exceeds
0.3 p.p.m. the water is not suitable for domestic, bleaching, dyeing and
laundering purposes.
The presence of iron and manganese in water makes brownish red colour in
it, leads to the growth of microorganism and corrodes the water pipes.
Iron and manganese also cause taste and odour in the water.
The quantity of iron and manganese is determined by colorimetric methods.
LEAD & ARSENIC:
16
BIOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
17
In the confirmation test some sample from the presumptive tube is taken and
placed in another fermentation tube containing “brilliant green lactose bile” as
culture medium.
It is again kept in incubator at 37 C for 48 hours, if there is formation of gas
in the tube, it confirms the presence of B-coli and the water is unsafe for use.
Nowadays a new technique of finding out the B-coli is developed which is
called ‘Membrane Filter Technique”.
This is a very simple method.
In this method the sample of water is filtered through a sterilized membrane
of special design due to which all the bacteria are retained on the membrane.
The member is then put in contact of culture medium-M-Endo’s medium in
the incubator for 24 hours at 37 C.
The membrane after incubating is taken out and the colonies of bacteria are
counted by means of microscope.
This method is known as ‘membrane filter technique”.
MEMBRANE FILTER TECHNIQUE:
It is the number which represents the bacterial density which is most likely to
be present.
COLIFORM INDEX:
18
The total coliform group consists of members whose normal habitat is the –
(lower portion of intestines) of humans and warm and cold-blooded animals
and soil.
Some members which are not found in soil and vegetation constitute about
96% of all the coliforms of human fecal.
Such members are called fecal coliforms and recently named by WHO
The total coliform group is widely used as a indicator organism of choice for
drinking water.
Escherichia coli (E-Coli) is the predominant member of the fecal coliform
group.
Used to measure coliform bacteria present in water sample.
It is defined as the reciprocal of the smallest quantity of sample which would
give a positive B-coli test.
Should be preferably less than 3 and should not exceed 10.
But due to the development of the ‘Membrane Filter technique” the MPN or
C.I methods are not used.
For the drinkable water it is necessary that it must be free from pathogenic
bacteria.
WATER QUALITY STANDARDS:
19
They also include measures of toxicants such as insecticides, herbicides and
metals.
IMPORTANCE OF WATER QUALITY STANDARD:
Water quality standards specify the conditions water must meet to protect those
specific uses.
Measuring lakes and rivers against water quality standards shows which bodies
of water need restoration and protection, and dictates how we setlimits on
pollutant discharges from public and private facilities.
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT:
Keeping the water running while brushing your teeth or shaving, wastes about
4-5 gallons of water on average.
SOAK YOUR DISHES IN WARM WATER FIRST:
Soaking your dishes is more effective than scraping them in running water.
20
You will save water and a whole lot of effort.
RUN YOUR DISHWASHER AND LAUNDRY ONLY WHEN ITS FULL:
Your dishwasher and washing machine can each use a whopping 10-15
gallons of water per cycle.
For laundry machines, an older agitator model uses up to 40 gallons of water,
and a front-loader uses about 7 gallons.
So, you will get better value for your money and save water by doing fewer,
fuller loads.
CUT THOSE LONG SHOWERS SHORT:
There’s nothing like a long, hot shower to fire up your grey cells. Or a
relaxed bath at the end of a hard day.
USE ENERGY-EFFICIENT, WATER-SAVING DEVICES:
If long showers are your thing, you could install low-flow shower heads
instead.
They tend to have lesser water pressure and therefore, lesser water flow,
while still offering a satisfying shower.
You could also opt for Ultra-low flush (ULF) toilets. They use less water per
flush but are just as effective.
FIX PLUMBING LEAKS:
If you’ve done everything, but your water bills are still high, leaky plumbing
could be the problem.
Keep a close eye on your utility bills.
And get your plumbing checked and fixed to reduce water wastage.
GO EASY ON YOUR SPRINKLERS AND GARDENING HOSE:
While watering the lawn, ensure your sprinkler system is effectively watering
just your lawn.
USE DRIP IRRIGATION TO WATER YOUR PLANTS:
21
That way, your plants will have enough water consistently.
REUSE WATER FOR LANDSCAPE GARDENS:
Instead of washing your fruits and vegetables in running water, rinse them in
a bowl of water.
This water is not ideal for drinking or personal use, but you can use it to
water your plants.
The EPA explains how to recycle and reuse water sustainably.
With small steps, we can make a big difference to ensure our planet stays
healthy and habitable.
RAIN WATER HARVESTING:
Rainwater harvesting (RWH) is the collection and storage of rain, rather than
allowing it to run off.
The harvested water can also be committed to longer-term storage or
groundwater recharge.
Rainwater harvesting helps utilities reduce peak demands during summer
months, saving treated water for more important and appropriate water uses.
While rainwater can be a perfect primary water source for many uses and
situations, it is also a great backup water supply for emergency situations.
Figure No.1
22
The main purpose of the rainwater harvesting is to use the locally available
rainwater to meet water requirements throughout the year without the need of
huge capital expenditure.
This would facilitate the availability of uncontaminated water for domestic,
industrial, and irrigation needs.
Rainwater harvesting is a sustainable process that helps in preserving water for
future needs.
Water scarcity is a major concern in today's scenario.
The process of rainwater harvesting is a good way to conserve water.
WATER CONSERVATION BENEFITS OF RAINWATER HARVESTING:
The rainwater that falls on your roof and property is essentially free.
All it takes is a method to harvest it into a tank or cistern for later use.
Rainwater harvesting can be a great educational tool to get people to recognize
their individual or household water usage.
This can get them to start conserving water in other areas around their home.
For communities that depend on imported water to supply their needs,
collecting rainwater that falls naturally in the community can reduce the need
for imported water.
Rainwater harvesting helps utilities reduce peak demands during summer
months, saving treated water for more important and appropriate water uses.
ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS OF RAINWATER HARVESTING:
24
FACTORS AFFECTING ARTIFICIAL RECHARGE:
25
UNIT – IV – HEALTH IMPACTS – SCIA4002
1
INTRODUCTION
WATER POLLUTION
Water pollution is the pollution of bodies of water, such as lakes, rivers, seas, the oceans,
as well as groundwater.
It occurs when pollutants reach these bodies of water, without treatment.
Water pollution is a problem for the species and ecosystems there. It affects plants and
organisms living in the water.
Water pollution is the release of substances into bodies of water that makes
water unsafe for human use and disrupts aquatic ecosystems.
Water pollution occurs when harmful substances often chemicals or microorganisms
contaminate a stream, river, lake, ocean, aquifer, or other body of water, degrading
water quality and rendering it toxic to humans or the environment.
Water pollution occurs when harmful substances often chemicals or microorganisms
contaminate a stream, river, lake, ocean, aquifer, or other body of water, degrading
water quality and rendering it toxic to humans or the environment.
Water pollution is a change caused in the chemical, physical or biological properties
of the water that has the capacity of hurting the living organism.
In simple terms, water pollution is the contamination of water bodies like lakes, rivers,
oceans, aquifers, groundwater, or the sea.
The pollution is usually caused due to human interference.
TWO TYPES OF WATER POLLUTION:
Organic pollution due to microorganisms - bacteria and viruses - present in the water,
generated by excrement, animal and vegetable waste.
Chemical pollution generated by the nitrates and phosphates of pesticides, human and
animal drugs, household products, heavy metals, acids and hydrocarbons used in
industries.
CAUSES OF WATER POLLUTION
SEWAGE OR WASTEWATER:
The waste from households, factories, or agricultural land gets discharged into rivers
or lakes.
This waste can either be in the form of liquid waste, garbage, or sewage.
The harmful chemicals oozing out of this waste can damage aquatic life.
DUMPING:
Most water bodies get converted into dumping grounds by nearby localities.
2
And this causes a huge problem because the dump contains everything from plastic,
aluminum to glass, Styrofoam, etc.
And since all the waste takes different time to degrade in the water, they tend to harm
the aquatic life until degraded.
OIL POLLUTION:
One of the worst types of water pollution is oil pollution.
This is because the oil spills from tankers and ships tend to create a thick layer above
the water in seas or oceans.
And since oil doesn’t dissolve, the sludge stays forever.
ACID RAIN:
Even though acid rain may seem like a natural problem but it is wise to note that Acid
rains are caused due to acidic particles in the contaminated air.
These particles in the atmosphere get mixed with water vapor and result in acid rains.
INDUSTRIAL WASTE:
Industrial waste is filled with lead, asbestos, petrochemicals, and even mercury.
All of these chemicals are highly hazardous for both humans and aquatic life.
But many industries tend to discharge the waste into major water bodies like rivers
and lakes around living localities, thus, contaminating the fresh water.
EFFECTS OF WATER POLLUTION
Pollution of water affects both humans and aquatic life.
Most water sources close to cities and urban centres are polluted by garbage and
dumping of chemicals, legally or illegally.
EFFECTS ON HUMAN BEINGS:
Adding contaminants to water bodies has affected the human family in several ways.
According to a 2017 WHO report, 2.1 billion people do not have access to safe water.
In 2019, it stated that 785 million people lack access to essential drinking water.
One of the main effects of this is diseases.
World Health Organization notes that there are about 120,000 cholera-related deaths
annually.
DEATH OF AQUATIC LIFE:
Animals and plants that depend on water for life are the most affected by polluted
water.
Aquatic life is destroyed due to the non-biodegradable pesticides and chemicals.
3
DESTRUCTION OF ECOSYSTEMS:
The introduction or elimination of certain microorganisms distorts the ecosystem.
Nutrient pollution, for example, leads to an increase in algae, which depletes the water
of oxygen, thereby leading to the death of fish and other aquatic life.
Ecosystems are extremely dynamic and respond to even small changes in the
environment.
Destroys life in the water-based ecosystem which is polluted which in turn disrupts
natural food chain.
Water pollution affects the microbial population.
There is a steep increase in the BOD levels of water.
The effect of water pollution can have a huge impact on the food chain.
FOOD CHAIN DISRUPTION:
Pollution disrupts the food chain by moving the toxins from one level in the chain to
higher levels.
Microscopic pollution of a body of water as big as the Pacific Ocean might seem
negligible, but tiny microplastics, chemicals, heavy metals and other contaminants can
be ingested by microorganisms and interfere with their inner organs.
These are then consumed by larger animals and so pollution gradually works it wayup
the food chain.
At some point, it’s feasible for the contaminants to wipe out a link altogether, or else
reach the very top of the pyramid by compromising human health.
DISEASES:
In humans, drinking or consuming polluted water in any way has many disastrous
effects on our health.
It causes typhoid, cholera, hepatitis and various other diseases.
According to the UN, every year, approximately 297,000 children under five die from
diseases linked to poor sanitation, poor hygiene, or unsafe drinking water.
Humans are affected by pollution and can contract diseases such as hepatitis through
faecal matter in water sources.
Poor drinking water treatment and unfit water can always cause an outbreak of
infectious diseases such as cholera, etc.
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF WATER POLLUTION
Firstly, the disappearance of biodiversity and aquatic ecosystems.
Also, humans are harmed by the alteration in the food chain and by contracting illnesses
when drinking or using contaminated water.
4
When particles like sulfur dioxide get high into the air they can combine with rain to
produce acid rain.
Acid rain can turn lakes acidic, killing fishes and other animals.
Water pollution can have disastrous effects on the environment.
Small fishes absorb pollutants, such as chemicals, into their bodies.
Pollution may muddy landscapes, poison soils and waterways, or kill plants and
animals.
Acid rain can turn lakes acidic, killing fishes and other animals.
Water pollution can have disastrous effects on the environment.
Sometimes pollution affects the entire food chain.
Harm to any of these organisms can create a chain effect, imperiling entire aquatic
environments.
When water pollution causes an algal bloom in a lake or marine environment, the
proliferation of newly introduced nutrients stimulates plant and algae growth, whichin
turn reduces oxygen levels in the water.
Human health is affected by the direct damage of plants and animal nutrition.
Water pollutants are killing sea weeds, mollusks, marine birds, fishes, crustaceans and
other sea organisms that serve as food for human.
Insecticides like DDT concentration is increasing along the food chain.
WAYS TO PREVENT WATER POLLUTION
Pick up litter and throw it away in a garbage can.
Blow or sweep fertilizer back onto the grass if it gets onto paved areas.
Mulch or compost grass or yard waste.
Wash your car or outdoor equipment where it can flow to a gravel or grassed area
instead of a street.
Don't pour your motor oil down the storm drain.
DO NOT pour fat from cooking or any other type of fat, oil, or grease down the sink.
DO NOT dispose of household chemicals or cleaning agents down the sink or toilet.
DO NOT flush pills, liquid or powder medications or drugs down the toilet.
Avoid using the toilet as a wastebasket.
Avoid using a garbage disposal.
5
CATEGORIES OF WATER POLLUTION
GROUNDWATER:
For some folks in rural areas, it’s their only freshwater source.
Groundwater gets polluted when contaminants from pesticides and fertilizers to waste
leached from landfills and septic systems make their way into an aquifer, rendering it
unsafe for human use.
Ridding groundwater of contaminants can be difficult to impossible, as well as costly.
Once polluted, an aquifer may be unusable for decades, or even thousands of years.
Groundwater can also spread contamination far from the original polluting source as it
seeps into streams, lakes, and oceans.
SURFACE WATER:
Nutrient pollution, which includes nitrates and phosphates, is the leading type of
contamination in these freshwater sources.
While plants and animals need these nutrients to grow, they have become a major
pollutant due to farm waste and fertilizer runoff.
Municipal and industrial waste discharges contribute their fair share of toxins as well.
OCEAN WATER:
Eighty percent of ocean pollution (also called marine pollution) originates on land
whether along the coast or far inland.
Contaminants such as chemicals, nutrients, and heavy metals are carried from farms,
factories, and cities by streams and rivers into our bays and estuaries; from there they
travel out to sea.
Meanwhile, marine debris particularly plastic is blown in by the wind or washed in via
storm drains and sewers.
Our seas are also sometimes spoiled by oil spills.
POINT SOURCE:
When contamination originates from a single source, it’s called point source pollution.
Examples include wastewater (also called effluent) discharged legally or illegally by a
manufacturer, oil refinery, or wastewater treatment facility, as well as contamination
from leaking septic systems, chemical and oil spills, and illegal dumping.
The EPA regulates point source pollution by establishing limits on what can be
discharged by a facility directly into a body of water.
While point source pollution originates from a specific place, it can affect miles of
waterways and ocean.
6
NONPOINT SOURCE:
Nonpoint source pollution is contamination derived from diffuse sources.
These may include agricultural or stormwater runoff or debris blown into waterways
from land.
SEWAGE AND WASTEWATER:
Used water is wastewater.
It comes from our sinks, showers, and toilets (think sewage) and from commercial,
industrial, and agricultural activities (think metals, solvents, and toxic sludge).
The term also includes stormwater runoff, which occurs when rainfall carries road salts,
oil, grease, chemicals, and debris from impermeable surfaces into our waterways.
OIL POLLUTION:
Big spills may dominate headlines, but consumers account for the vast majority of oil
pollution in our seas, including oil and gasoline that drips from millions of cars and
trucks every day.
Moreover, nearly half of the estimated 1 million tons of oil that makes its way into
marine environments each year comes not from tanker spills but from land-based
sources such as factories, farms, and cities.
At sea, tanker spills account for about 10 percent of the oil in waters around the world,
while regular operations of the shipping industry through both
legal and illegal discharge contribute about one-third.
Oil is also naturally released from under the ocean floor through fractures known as
seeps.
RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCES:
Radioactive waste is any pollution that emits radiation beyond what is naturally released
by the environment.
It’s generated by uranium mining, nuclear power plants, and the production and testing
of military weapons, as well as by universities and hospitals that use radioactive
materials for research and medicine.
Radioactive waste can persist in the environment for thousands of years, making
disposal a major challenge.
Accidentally released or improperly disposed of contaminants threaten groundwater,
surface water, and marine resources.
CHEMICALS IN DRINKING WATER
Examples of chemical contaminants include nitrogen, bleach, salts, pesticides, metals,
toxins produced by bacteria, and human or animal drugs.
7
Biological contaminants are organisms in water.
They are also referred to as microbes or microbiological contaminants.
The most common drinking water contaminants are microorganisms, nitrate,
and arsenic. Water quality monitoring has improved over the past five years.
Bacteria, viruses, and protozoa (such as Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium) are
drinking water contaminants that can rapidly cause widespread and serious illnesses.
THE FIVE MOST COMMON CONTAMINANTS FOUND IN DRINKING WATER:
Nitrates.
Arsenic.
Microorganisms, Bacteria, and Viruses.
Aluminum.
Fluoride.
CONTAMINANTS IN TAP WATER:
Lead - Lead is a toxic metal that can cause damage to health even at low doses.
Chlorine.
Chloramines.
Mercury.
VOCs.
Pharmaceuticals.
Herbicides.
Pesticides.
CONTAMINANTS IN WELL WATER:
Heavy metals include arsenic, lead, copper, chromium, selenium and more.
Heavy metals can contaminate private wells through groundwater movement and
surface water seepage and run-off.
People that consume high levels of heavy metals risk acute and chronic toxicity, liver,
kidney, and intestinal damage, anemia, and cancer.
COMMON DISEASES CAUSED BY WATER POLLUTION
DYSENTERY:
Dysentery is a combination of nausea, abdominal cramps coupled with severe
diarrhoea.
8
In cases of acute dysentery, one may also experience a high fever and traces of blood
in the faecal matter.
There are two types of dysentery—Bacillary dysentery, caused by bacteria and
Amoebic dysentery caused by amoebae.
ARSENICOSIS:
Arsenic is a poisonous substance often released as wastewater by industrial units
situated on the banks of rivers.
Arsenicosis or Arsenic Poisoning is caused due to chronic exposure to small amounts
of arsenic through drinking water.
This disease is characterised by painful skin lesions (keratosis), which can progress to
cancer.
It can also affect your lungs, kidneys, and bladder.
POLIO (INFANTILE PARALYSIS):
Poliomyelitis is commonly known as polio.
It’s an acute viral infection caused by a virus, which passes through water from the
faeces of an infected individual.
This disease affects the central nervous system.
Once an individual contracts this virus, they suffer from fever, headache, and seizures,
followed by paralysis.
TRACHOMA (EYE INFECTION):
This infection is caused by bacterium Chlamydia Trachomatis that’s found in
contaminated water.
Trachoma results in a coarsening of the inner surface of the eyelids.
This leads to pain in the eyes, lesion on the outer surface or cornea, and eventual
blindness.
Trachoma spreads because of poor sanitation and hygiene conditions.
TYPHOID FEVER:
Across the world annually, around 12 million people are affected by Typhoid fever.
This infection is caused by Salmonella Typhi bacteria.
This disease is contracted by consuming contaminated food or water.
The bacteria pass through the intestinal tract and can be identified in stool samples.
Its symptoms include nausea, loss of appetite, and headache.
9
SCHISTOSOMIASIS:
This disease is caused by worms that are spread by freshwater snails living in polluted
water.
It’s very common in rural areas where people use local water bodies for bathing and
recreational purposes.
The worms in the water penetrate into one’s skin while in contact with the
contaminated water, causing infections in the liver, lungs, intestines, and bladder.
CHOLERA:
Cholera is an infection of the small intestine by the bacterium Vibrio Cholerae.
This disease can kill within hours if not treated on time.
Symptoms of cholera include diarrhoea and vomiting, as well as abdominal cramps
and headache.
According to the WHO, every year, there are 21,000 to 143,000 deaths worldwide due
to this infection.
DIARRHOEA:
Diarrhoea is one of the most common diseases caused by water pollution.
It is most often caused by water-borne viruses.
But bacteria and parasites from water contaminated with faeces are also common
causes.
It results in passage of loose, watery stools that can cause dehydration and death to
young children and infants.
MALARIA:
Water pollution has resulted in increased breeding of parasite-carrying mosquitoes.
Malaria is a disease caused by parasites, which are spread by female mosquitoes
called Anopheles.
When mosquitoes bite a person infected with malaria, they can spread the infection to
other people.
This disease causes high fever, headache, and shivering.
In severe cases, it can even lead to complications like severe anaemia, coma, and
death.
LEAD POISONING:
Lead poisoning is caused due to consumption of water contaminated with lead, often
coming from old pipes as well as surface water pollution.
10
This disease is particularly harmful to children and can cause a number of health
problems, including organ damage, nervous system disorders, anaemia, high blood
pressure, kidney disease and problems with the reproductive system.
PREVENTIVE MEASURES
Use Less Plastic. It is very difficult to break down plastic after it is produced.
Reuse Items.
Recyclable Options.
Do Not Dispose of Oils in the Sink.
Cleaning Chemicals.
Handle Toxic Chemicals Properly.
Shop to Stop Water Pollution.
Do Not Throw Away Medicines.
Avoid Toilets For Throwing Household Items
Garbage Disposal
Dishwashing or Laundry
Limit the Use of Detergents and Bleaches
Use Phosphate-Free Detergent
Use Environmentally Friendly Detergents
Gardening
Avoid Pesticides
Conserve Soil
Do Regular Car Maintenance
Oil Spill
Cellar Drains or Septic Tanks
Just Do Not Litter!
Use Water Sparingly
Plant Fauna at Lakes or Rivers
Clean Up Litter
Stop Chemical Pollution
Eat Organic Food More
Choose Food Wisely
11
Buy Sustainable Meats
Best Is Cutting Down on Meat Consumption
Stop Immersion of Ashes in the River
AIR POLLUTION
Air pollution is a mixture of solid particles and gases in the air.
Car emissions, chemicals from factories, dust, pollen and mold spores may be
suspended as particles.
Ozone, a gas, is a major part of air pollution in cities.
When ozone forms air pollution, it's also called smog.
Air pollution is a mix of hazardous substances from both human-made and natural
sources.
Vehicle emissions, fuel oils and natural gas to heat homes, by-products of
manufacturing and power generation, particularly coal-fueled power plants, and fumes
from chemical production are the primary sources of human-made air pollution.
Air pollution refers to the release of pollutants into the air that are detrimental to human
health and the planet as a whole.
SOURCES OF AIR POLLUTION
Mobile sources – such as cars, buses, planes, trucks, and trains.
Stationary sources – such as power plants, oil refineries, industrial facilities, and
factories.
Area sources – such as agricultural areas, cities, and wood burning fireplaces.
Fuel combustion from motor vehicles (e.g., cars and heavy-duty vehicles)
Heat and power generation (e.g., oil and coal power plants and boilers)
Industrial facilities (e.g., manufacturing factories, mines, and oil refineries)
The combustion of fossil fuels like coal, petroleum and other factory combustibles is a
major cause of air pollution.
These are generally used in power plants, manufacturing facilities (factories) and waste
incinerators, as well as furnaces and other types of fuel-burning heating devices.
CAUSES OF AIR POLLUTION
5 MAJOR CAUSES OF AIR POLLUTION
Industry - Industries are a major contributor to air pollution.
Vehicle Emissions. Source.
Household and Farming Chemicals.
12
Deforestation.
Smoking.
INDUSTRY:
Industries are a major contributor to air pollution.
Industrial processes discharge pollutants such as nitrous oxide and hydrofluorocarbons
into the air.
Petroleum refineries also liberate lots of hydrocarbons into the air.
Agricultural practices like livestock rearing and landfills also add to atmospheric
methane concentrations.
The overall effect is amplification in the global warming probability.
VEHICLE EMISSIONS:
Vehicle emissions are another source of fossil fuel emissions which invariably leads
to air pollution.
Cars, heavy duty trucks, shipping vessels, trains, and airplanes all burn lots of fossil
fuels to work.
Emissions from automobile engines hold both primary and secondary pollutants.
Figure No.1
13
This is a major cause of pollution and one that is very difficult to deal with as
transportation is a major industry in itself.
Private transportation accounts for about 10 percent of an individual’s carbon footprint,
or the amount of carbon dioxide our activities and lifestyle contribute to the atmosphere.
HOUSEHOLD AND FARMING CHEMICALS:
Fumigating homes, crop dusting, painting supplies, household cleaning products, over
the counter insect/pest killers, fertilizer dust, all of these emit harmful chemicals into
the air and lead to pollution.
In many cases, when we use these chemicals at offices or homes with no or little
ventilation, we may fall sick if we breathe them in for an extended period of time.
DEFORESTATION:
Deforestation affects the atmosphere in more than a few ways.
When forests are burned and destroyed on purpose and to tremendous extents, this
storage area for carbon dioxide is removed, thus increasing the amount of atmospheric
carbon dioxide.
Wood fires are also another effect of deforestation and can be cause air pollution by
discharging particulate matter into the air.
These particles can become lodged in the respiratory system, causing irritation to lung
tissues.
The particles can also worsen existing health conditions such as asthma and other
respiratory disorders.
Figure No.2
14
SMOKING:
One can still be at a risk of the dangers of smoking even if they are a nonsmoker.
The University of Minnesota estimated that up to 90 percent of the population is
habitually exposed to secondhand smoke.
Tobacco smoke contains up to 40 carcinogens, making it an especially fatal form of
air pollution.
If you have smokers in the family air purifiers will ensure that the other members
don’t suffers from second hand smoke.
Figure No.3
16
CLIMATE CHANGE:
Climate Change is another consequence of global warming.
When the temperature of the planet increases, there is a disturbance in the usual climatic
cycles, accelerating the changes of these cycles in an evident way.
Due to climate change, the mass of the poles is melting, and this is leading to flooding
and the rising of sea levels.
ACID RAIN:
The gases emitted by industries, power plants, boilers, heating and transport are very
toxic.
Those gases include sulphur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) issued into the
atmosphere that come from fossil fuels burning.
When those substances accumulate in the atmosphere and react with water, they form
dilute solutions of nitric and sulphuric acid, and when those concentrations become rain,
both the environment and surfaces suffer.
SMOG EFFECT:
The smog effect or beret effect happens when there is a kind of dark fog concentrated
over the cities and fields.
That fog is a load of pollutants and can be of 2 types:
sulphurous smog and photochemical smog, both dangerous and harmful to health.
Both types of smog are a consequence of industrial and urban action.
However, sulphurous smog has its origin mainly in the use of coal in many industrial
processes.
DETERIORATION OF FIELDS:
Acid rain, climate change and smog all damage the Earth surface.
Contaminated water and gases seep into the earth, changing the composition of soils.
That directly affects agriculture, changing crop cycles and the composition of the food
we all eat.
EXTINCTION OF ANIMAL SPECIES:
As the ice masses of the poles melt and sea levels rise, many animal species, whose
survival depends on oceans and rivers, are threatened.
Currents change, ocean temperatures change and migratory cycles change, and many
animals are forced to seek food in environments unknown to them.
Deforestation and poor soil quality also mean the disappearance of ecosystems and
habitats.
17
And definitively, an imbalance in the behavior of many wild species.
RESPIRATORY HEALTH PROBLEMS:
It is probably one of the most obvious and worrying effects for human beings.
Pollutants can cause respiratory illnesses and allergies ranging from coughs to asthma,
cancer or emphysema.
Inhalation of toxic agents directly affects the lungs and other organs that make up the
respiratory system.
Also, poor oxygenation can lead to cardiovascular problems.
DETERIORATION IN BUILDING MATERIALS:
Air pollutants also deteriorate and change the constitution of building materials, so
many buildings and infrastructure are weakened, eroded or destroyed at an accelerated
rate over time.
CHEMICAL SENSITIVITY:
People develop intolerances and allergies to many agents present in the atmosphere and
to other external agents that can go through due to the holes in the ozone layer.
This is because there is a high concentration of chlorofluorocarbons that alter the
thickness of the ozone layer.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are released using aerosols, industrial refrigerants,
solvents and other very harmful chemicals.
SKIN DAMAGE:
Many of the chemical intolerances directly affect people’s skin.
However, one of the worst damages is skin cancer.
That disease in many cases develops from the direct incidence of ultraviolet light rays
on the skin.
The ozone layer acts as a filter for those rays.
If the ozone layer is thinner, the effectiveness of the filter decreases, letting rays pass,
which are very harmful to humans.
All those important effects can increase if their causes are not rapidly acted upon.
Most of them are the result of very intense, polluting and uncontrolled industrial
activity.
18
DISEASES
Air pollution is the cause and aggravating factor of many respiratory diseases
like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) , asthma, and lung cancer.
The most common diseases caused by air pollution include ischemic heart disease,
stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), lung cancer and acute lower
respiratory infections in children.
Short term exposure to air pollution can irritate the eyes, nose and throat and
cause upper respiratory infections, headaches, nausea and allergic reactions.
Long-term exposures can lead to chronic respiratory disease, lung cancer, and heart
disease.
40% – ischaemic heart disease.
40% – stroke.
11% – chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
6% - lung cancer.
3% – acute lower respiratory infections in children.
80%- [(asthma)].
PREVENTIVE MEASURES
Trees take up carbon dioxide and release oxygen.
We should use CNG; instead of petrol and diesel in automobiles.
Avoid unnecessary usage of vehicles.
Try using public transport more.
USING PUBLIC TRANSPORTS:
Using public transport is a sure short way of contributing to less air pollution as it
provides with less gas and energy, even carpools contribute to it.
In addition to less release of fuels and gas, using a public transport can also help in
saving money.
TURN OFF THE LIGHTS WHEN NOT IN USE:
The energy that the lights take also contribute to air pollution, thus less consumption
of electricity can save energy.
Use energy saving fluorescent lights to help the environment.
19
RECYCLE AND REUSE:
The concept of recycle and reuse is not just conserved resources and use them judicially
but also is helpful for air pollution as it helps in reducing pollution emissions.
The recycled products also take less power to make other products.
NO TO PLASTIC BAGS:
The use of plastic products could be very harmful to the environment as they take a very
long time to decompose, due to their material made up of oil.
The use of paper bags instead is a better alternative as they decompose easily and are
recyclable.
REDUCTION OF FOREST FIRES AND SMOKING:
The collecting of garbage and getting it on fire in dry seasons or dry leaves catching
fires is a huge factor for causing air pollution, moreover smoking also causes air
pollution and causes the air quality to worsen along with obviously damaging one’s
health.
USE OF FANS INSTEAD OF AIR CONDITIONER:
The usage of AC’s takes a lot of energy and emits a lot of heat which is bad for the
environment.
AC’s also take a lot of power and energy to work as compared to fans.
USE FILTERS FOR CHIMNEYS:
The gas that is emitted from fireplaces in homes and factories are extremely dangerous
for air pollution and harms the air quality severely.
The use of filters should be used at least if the consumption couldn’t be lessened, this
will help to reduce the effect of harmful gases absorbing in the air.
AVOID USAGE OF CRACKERS:
The use of crackers during festivals and weddings is sadly one of the biggest
contributors to air pollution, leading to a layer of smog which is extremely harmful for
health.
So, practice of no crackers should be implemented.
AVOID USING OF PRODUCTS WITH CHEMICALS:
Products that use the chemicals in their usage or smell strongly, like paints or perfumes
should be used less or outside the house.
There can also be an alternative to use products with low chemical content and organic
properties.
20
IMPLEMENT AFFORESTATION:
Last but not the least, plant and grow as many trees as possible.
The practice of planting trees provides a lot of benefits to the environment and helps
with the release of oxygen.
LAND POLLUTION
Land pollution refers to the deterioration of the earth's land surfaces, at and below
ground level.
The cause is the accumulation of solid and liquid waste materials that contaminate
groundwater and soil.
The higher the permeability of the soil, the more likely that land pollution will occur.
Land pollution, the deposition of solid or liquid waste materials on land or underground
in a manner that can contaminate the soil and groundwater, threaten public health, and
cause unsightly conditions and nuisances.
Some common examples include soil erosion or drastically changed climate patterns,
particularly where it concerns agriculture.
Land pollution can be caused by a few things.
The expansion of cities and deforestation, making for less tree over, is a common cause.
TYPES OF SOIL POLLUTANTS:
Biological Agents.
Biological agents work inside the soil to introduce manures and digested sludge (coming from
the human, bird and animal excreta) into the soil.
Agricultural Practices.
Radioactive Pollutants.
Urban Waste.
Industrial Waste.
SOURCES OF LAND POLLUTANTS
The source of land pollution comes from the human element such as littering, and waste
that is washed ashore from boats, oil rigs, and sewage outlets.
Land pollution is a result of dumping garbage, waste, and other toxins making the
land contaminated or polluted.
INCREASE IN URBANIZATION:
Construction uses up forest land.
21
More constructions mean increase in demand for raw materials like timber.
This leads to the exploitation and destruction of forests.
INCREASE IN AGRICULTURAL LAND:
As the human population grew there was a greater demand for food.
This caused more land allocated to agriculture.
Forests were cut down for this purpose.
DOMESTIC WASTE:
Every single day, tons and tons of domestic waste is dumped ranging from huge pieces
of rubbish such as unused refrigerator to fish bones.
If all these wastes are not disposed of properly, the damage they can do to the
environment and humankind can be devastating.
While waste collected from homes, offices and industries may be recycled or burnt in
incinerators, a large amount of rubbish is neither burnt nor recycled but is left in certain
areas marked as dumping grounds.
We throw away more things today and there is an increase in the quantity of solid waste.
This has given rise to problems as new dumping grounds have to be found.
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES:
Besides domestic waste, pesticides and herbicides used by farmers to increase crop
yields also pollute the land when they are washed into the soil.
Pesticides which are persistent in nature are chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides e.g.,
DDT, HCH, endrin, lindane, heptachlor, endosulfan etc.
Residues of these pesticides in soils have long term effects especially under the
temperate conditions.
INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITIES:
Industrial activities also are a contributing factor to land pollution.
Industrial wastes are the effluents discharged from chemical industries, paper and pulp
mills, tanneries, textile mills, steel industries, distilleries, refineries, pesticides and
fertilizer industries, pharmaceutical industries, food processing industries, cement
industries, thermal and nuclear power plants, mining industries etc.
Thermal power plants generate a large quantity of ‘Fly ash’. Huge quantities of these
wastes are dumped on land which cause land pollution.
Mining also affects ground and surface waters, the aquatic life, vegetation, soils,
animals, and the human health. Acid mine drainage can cause damage to streams which
in return can kill aquatic life.
22
CAUSES OF LAND POLLUTION
Deforestation and Soil Erosion.
Deforestation carried out to create drylands is one of the major concerns.
Agricultural Activities.
Mining Activities.
Overcrowded Landfills.
Industrialization.
Urbanization.
Construction Activities.
Nuclear Waste.
DEFORESTATION AND SOIL EROSION:
Deforestation carried out to create drylands is one of the major concerns.
Land conversion, meaning the alteration or modification of the original properties of
the land to make it use-worthy for a specific purpose, is another major cause.
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES:
With the growing human population, the demand for food has increased considerably.
Farmers often use highly toxic fertilizers and pesticides to get rid of insects, fungi and
bacteria from their crops.
However, with the overuse of these chemicals, they result in contamination
and poisoning of soil.
MINING ACTIVITIES:
During extraction and mining activities, several land spaces are created beneath the
surface.
We constantly hear about land caving in, which is nothing but nature’s way of filling
the spaces left out after mining or extraction activity.
OVERCROWDED LANDFILLS:
Each household produces tonnes of garbage each year. Garbage like aluminum,
plastic, paper, cloth, wood is collected and sent to the local recycling unit.
Items that can not be recycled become a part of the landfills that hamper the beauty of
the city and cause land pollution.
INDUSTRIALIZATION:
Due to an increase in demand for food, shelter, and house, more goods are produced.
23
This resulted in the creation of more waste that needs to be disposed of.
To meet the demand of the growing population, more industries were developed, which
led to deforestation.
Research and development paved the way for modern fertilizers and chemicals that
were highly toxic and led to soil contamination.
URBANIZATION:
We humans have been making permanent settlements for at least the past 10,000 years.
Most of the cities and towns, and the infrastructure created, will remain with us for
thousands of more years into the future.
CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES:
Due to urbanization, a large number of construction activities are taking place, which
has resulted in huge waste articles like wood, metal, bricks, plastic that can be seen by
naked eyes outside any building or office which is under construction.
NUCLEAR WASTE:
Nuclear plants can produce a huge amount of energy through nuclear fission and fusion.
The leftover radioactive material contains harmful and toxic chemicals that can affect
human health.
They are dumped beneath the earth to avoid any casualty.
SEWAGE TREATMENT:
A large amount of solid waste is leftover once the sewage has been treated.
The leftover material is then sent to the landfill site, which ends up polluting the
environment.
LITTERING:
Littering is a common problem, no matter it is a city or a rural region.
People just throw their garbage on the ground without caring about the adverse effects
on the environment.
A common instance is that people just throw their cigarette butt on the ground every
time.
Since cigarettes contain elements harmful to the environment, it leads to land
contamination.
24
EFFECTS OF LAND POLLUTION
SOIL POLLUTION:
Soil pollution is another form of land pollution, where the upper layer of the soil or the
topsoil’s composition is damaged or becomes altered.
This is caused by the overuse of chemical fertilizers, soil erosion triggered by running
water and other pest control measures, leading to loss of fertile land for agriculture,
forest cover, fodder patches for grazing, etc.
GROUNDWATER POISONING:
When harmful substances from industrial processes, chemicals are improperly disposed
of on the land or in illegal landfills or storages, the chemicals and other substances could
end up in the groundwater system.
The process is called leaching.
It can happen on farms, industrial sites, and landfills and affect the health of animals,
plants and also humans.
DRINKING-WATER PROBLEM:
Drinking water is highly affected by land pollution. Nearly 50% of the world’s
population does not have access to safe drinking water, and each year water-based
diseases cause up to 10 million deaths.
CHANGE IN CLIMATE PATTERNS:
The effects of land pollution are very hazardous and can lead to the loss of ecosystems.
When land is polluted, it directly or indirectly affects the climate patterns.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT:
When deforestation is committed, the tree cover is compromised.
This leads to a steep imbalance in the rain cycle.
A disturbed rain cycle affects a lot of factors.
EFFECT ON HUMAN HEALTH:
The land, when contaminated with toxic chemicals and pesticides, lead to potentially
fatal problems like skin cancer and the human respiratory ailments in particular.
Globally, 9,500 people are diagnosed with skin cancer every day.
The toxic chemicals can reach our body through foods and vegetables that we eat as
they are grown in polluted soil.
Land pollution also caused developmental deficiency in children.
25
Chemicals, such as lead that are commonly found in contaminated soil and water, can
impact a child’s cognitive development even when the exposure is very low.
CAUSES AIR POLLUTION:
Landfills across the city keep on growing due to an increase in waste and are later
burned, which leads to air pollution.
They become home for rodents, mice, etc., which in turn transmit diseases.
DISTRACTION FOR TOURISTS:
The city loses its attraction as a tourist destination as landfills do not look good when
you move around the city.
It leads to a loss of revenue for the state government.
EFFECT ON WILDLIFE:
The animal kingdom has suffered most in the past decades.
They face a serious threat with regard to the loss of habitat and natural environment.
The constant human activity on land is leaving it polluted, forcing these species to move
further away and adapt to new regions or die trying to adjust.
Several species are also pushed to the verge of extinction, due to no homeland.
WILDFIRES:
When land areas are polluted, they usually become quite dry. The dry conditions created
by pollutants in the soil create the perfect environment for wildfires and increases the
probability of wildfires dramatically.
HABITAT SHIFTING:
When deforestation and soil erosion are in progress, animals are forced to move from
their natural habitat to find shelter and food.
The change is too traumatic for some animals, and this even leads to loss of life.
OTHER ISSUES:
Other issues that we face include increased temperature, unseasonal weather activity,
acid rains, etc.
The discharge of chemicals on land makes it dangerous for the ecosystem too.
These chemicals are consumed by the animals and plants and thereby making their way
in the ecosystem.
This process is called biomagnification and is a serious threat to the ecology.
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF LAND POLLUTION:
Effect on Our Environment: Our environment is very badly affected by land pollution.
26
Soil erosion and deforestation caused by soil and land pollution lead to landslides and
mudslides.
Toxic waste mixing in the water and land affects flora and fauna very adversely.
As land pollution and soil erosion progress, animals are forced to shift habitats and
adapt to new conditions.
As a result, some species are at risk of extinction.
The potential effects of soil contamination on human health include breathing
disorders, birth defects, skin diseases, and cancer.
DISEASES:
SHORT TERM DISEASES AND SYMPTOMS:
The exposure to environmental pollution caused by soil contaminants may result in an
increased risk for developing a series of conditions.
One of the most frequently encountered effects of toxic contamination is a series of
symptoms that appear immediately after the exposure.
• The most common symptoms that appear after direct exposure to soil contaminants
are the following:
headache
nausea and vomiting
chest pain
coughing and lung problems
fatigue
skin rash
eye irritations
LONG TERM DISEASES:
The inhalation of soil particulate matter and the ingestion of contaminated food can
potentially result in serious conditions, of which the most common include:
Cancer, including leukemia – caused by the contact with soils contaminated with
chemicals (e.g. gasoline, benzene)
Nervous system damage – caused especially by the presence of lead (Pb) in soil, and
affecting especially children.
Neuromuscular blockage and depression of the central nervous system
Kidney and liver damage – caused by chemicals such as mercury (Hg)
27
PREVENTIVE MEASURES:
Reduce toxic materials.
Recycle waste materials.
Buy organics products, especially organic cleaners, pesticides, insecticides and
fertilizers.
Avoid littering.
Take initiative to inform others about the harmful effects of littering.
Improve fertility of the land by reforesting.
Get a better understanding of the soil environment quality baseline.
Develop necessary legislation on soil pollution control.
Proper management of agricultural land and the practice of organic farming.
Proper Solid Waste Treatment.
28
UNIT – V – GUIDELINES FOR WATER ACT & AIR ACT – SCIA4002
1
INTRODUCTION
REGULATORY BODY:
2
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)
Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)
LOCAL BODIES
Principal Functions of the CPCB, as spelt out in the Water (Prevention and
Control of Pollution) Act, 1974, and the Air (Prevention and Control of
Pollution) Act, 1981, (i) to promote cleanliness of streams and wells in
different areas of the States by prevention, control and abatement
of water pollution.
The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) is an autonomous agency.
3
It plays an advisory role to the Government and State Pollution Control Boards
(SPCB) in matters relating to the implementation and enforcement of the Air,
Water and Environmental Acts.
Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 is a
comprehensive legislation that regulates agencies responsible for checkingon
water pollution and ambit of pollution control boards both at the centre and
states.
The Water Act is enacted with the objective of prevention & control of
pollution in India.
The Act aims at the maintaining or restoring the wholesome nature of
water for the establishment of Boards and to vest them with such powersso
as to enable them to carry out the purposes of the Act.
SALIENT FEATURES OF THE WATER POLLUTION ACT:
Advise the Central Government on any matter concerning the prevention and
control of water pollution.
Co-ordinate the activities of the State Boards and provide technical assistance
and guidance.
TAMIL NADU WATER SUPPLY AND DRAINAGE BOARD (TWAD):
Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage Board coordinates with the
Government of India's Ministry of Rural Development and Departments of
Drinking Water Supply, Ministry of Water Resources, National River
Conservation Directorate, Rajiv Gandhi National Drinking Water Mission,
Central Ground Water Board, Non-Government Organisations (NGOs),
academic institutions, etc., to implement the water supply and sewerage
schemes in Tamilnadu.
TWAD Board is a public agency formed by the Government of Tamil Nadu,
under the Ministry of Local Administration and Water Supply, assigned with
the task of implementing all water supply and sewerage schemes to the state of
Tamil Nadu (except the Chennai Metropolitan Area).
The Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage Board (Twad Board) Is A
Statutory Body Corporate Constituted Under Twad Board Act, 1970 On
14.04.1971.
Twad Board Is Entrusted with The Development of Water Supply and
Sewerage Facilities in The State of Tamil Nadu.
4
CHENNAI METROPOLITAN WATER SUPPLY AND SEWERAGE BOARD (CMWSSB)
5
NATIONAL CONCERN FOR ENVIRONMENT:
A serious threat to human beings and their environment is the continuous and
accelerating overuse and destruction of natural resources.
A necessary condition may be an increase in environmental concern and
knowledge about the effects and consequences of the ongoing
environmental deterioration for future generations.
The environmental problems like global warming, acid rain, air pollution,
urban sprawl, waste disposal, ozone layer depletion, water pollution,
climate change and many more affect every human, animal, and nation on this
planet.
Major current environmental issues may include climate change, pollution,
environmental degradation, and resource depletion.
The conservation movement lobbies for protection of endangered species and
protection of any ecologically valuable natural areas, genetically modified
foods and global warming.
The list of issues surrounding our environment go on, but there are three major
ones that affect the majority of them overall: global warming and
climate change; water pollution and ocean acidification; and loss of
biodiversity.
IMPORTANT ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ACTS IN INDIA
Some of the important legislations for environment protection are as follows:
The National Green Tribunal Act, 2010.
The Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981.
The Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974.
The Environment Protection Act, 1986.
The Hazardous Waste Management Regulations, etc.
Environment Protection Act, 1986 Act of the Parliament of India.
They relate to the protection and improvement of the human environment and
the prevention of hazards to human beings, other living creatures, plants and
property.
6
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) was passed in 1970 along with
the Environmental Quality Improvement Act and the
National Environmental Education Act.
The main objective of these laws was to protect the environment against public
and private harms.
IMPORTANCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL LAW:
7
The Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of
Forest Rights) Act, 2006.
Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution), 1974.
Wild Life (Protection) Amendment Act, 2002.
Wildlife Protection Act of 1972.
Noise Pollution Act.
Hazardous waste Handling and management act, 1989.
WATER PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF POLLUTION ACT:
An Act to provide for the prevention and control of water pollution and the
maintaining or restoring of wholesomeness of water, for the establishment,
with a view to carrying out the purposes aforesaid, of Boards for the
prevention and control of water pollution, for conferring on and assigning to
such Boards powers.
Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 is a
comprehensive legislation that regulates agencies responsible for checkingon
water pollution and ambit of pollution control boards both at the centre and
states.
OBJECTIVES OF THE WATER ACT:
The main objectives of the Water Act are to provide for prevention, control and
abatement of water pollution and the maintenance or restoration of the
wholesomeness of water.
It is designed to assess pollution levels and punish polluters.
GOALS OF CLEAN WATER ACT:
The CWA aims to prevent, reduce, and eliminate pollution in the nation's water
in order to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the Nation's waters “.
The Clean Water Act is a U.S. federal law that regulates the discharge of
pollutants into the nation's surface waters, including lakes, rivers, streams,
wetlands, and coastal areas.
Passed in 1972 and amended in 1977 and 1987, the Clean Water Act was
originally known as the Federal Water Pollution Control Act
8
The Clean Water Act (CWA) establishes the basic structure for regulating
discharges of pollutants into the waters of the United States and regulating
quality standards for surface waters.
Under the CWA, EPA has implemented pollution control programs such as
setting wastewater standards for industry.
AIR PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF POLLUTION ACT:
An Act to provide for the prevention, control and abatement of air pollution,
for the establishment, with a view to carrying out the aforesaid purposes, of
Boards, for conferring on and assigning to such Boards powers and functions
relating thereto and for matters connected therewith.
Air pollutant" means any solid, liquid or gaseous substance 2[(including
noise)] present in the atmosphere in such concentration as may be or tend to be
injurious to human beings or other living creatures or plants or property or
environment; "Air pollution," means the presence in the atmosphere of any
air.
According to the World Health Organization, the capital city of New Delhi is
one of the top ten most polluted cities in the world.
Surveys indicate that in New Delhi the incidence of respiratory diseases due to
air pollution is about 12 times the national average.
CLEAN AIR ACT:
Four major regulatory programs affecting stationary sources were initiated: