Thursday, 1 January 2015

Stop polluting Ganga or shut shop: Uma Bharti

Government is now serious about river Ganga and directed the polluting industries to set up online effluent monitoring system by 31st march next year. This tough message to polluting units is said by water resources minister Uma Bharti. "If the child (industry) would suck mother's (Ganga) blood, she would prefer the mother to survive", said Bharti. Her remarks came after several rounds of consultation with representatives of polluting industries. Environment minister Prakash Javadekar and many experts including Vinod Tare, coordinator of IIT Consortium that is preparing the Ganga River Basin Management Plan and R K Pachauri, director general of TERI and chairman of the UN's IPCC — attended the consultations and pitched for quick action to save the river. The online effluent monitoring will bring the transparency in the process of monitoring. As per the new system, the industries are required to install "continuous effluent and emission monitoring devices" at their discharge outlets and this devices would be linked online with State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) offices in state capitals and with the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) headquarters in Delhi. It will allow the central pollution watchdog to monitor the discharges from the industries on real-time basis.

Read more here - TOI - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/pollution/Stop-polluting-Ganga-or-shut-shop-Uma-Bharti/articleshow/44730184.cms

Effluent Treatment Plant is used to make water more acceptable for a desired end-use. Our Commercial Effluent Treatment Plants (Industrial ETP System) covers the mechanisms and processes used to treat waters that have been contaminated in some way by anthropogenic industrial or commercial activities prior to its release into the environment or its re-use. To know about please click Swimming Pool Designer.

Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Effluent Sewage and RO Water Treatment Plant

Sewage treatment plant (Industrial STP System) helps in removing contaminants from wastewater and household effluent, both runoff (effluents) and domestic. It includes physical, chemical, and biological processes to remove physical, chemical and biological contaminants. Its objective is to produce an environmentally safe fluid waste stream (or treated effluent) and a solid waste (or treated sludge) suitable for disposal or reuse (usually as farm fertilizer).

Effluent Treatment Plant is used to make water more acceptable for a desired end-use. Our Commercial Effluent Treatment Plants (Industrial ETP System) covers the mechanisms and processes used to treat waters that have been contaminated in some way by anthropogenic industrial or commercial activities prior to its release into the environment or its re-use. Most industries produce some wet waste although recent trends in the developed world have been to minimise such production or recycle such waste within the production process. However, many industries remain dependent on processes that produce wastewaters. Sewage is generated by residential, institutional, and commercial and industrial establishments. It includes household waste liquid from toilets, baths, showers, kitchens, sinks and so forth that is disposed of via sewers. In many areas, effluent also includes liquid waste from industry and commerce.

Reverse osmosis (used in RO Systems) is a membrane-technology filtration method that removes many types of large molecules and ions from solutions by applying pressure to the solution when it is on one side of a selective membrane. The result is that the solute is retained on the pressurized side of the membrane and the pure solvent is allowed to pass to the other side. To be "selective," this membrane should not allow large molecules or ions through the pores (holes), but should allow smaller components of the solution (such as the solvent) to pass freely. In the normal osmosis process, the solvent naturally moves from an area of low solute concentration (High Water Potential), through a membrane, to an area of high solute concentration (Low Water Potential). The movement of a pure solvent to equalize solute concentrations on each side of a membrane generates osmotic pressure.

Tuesday, 21 October 2014

MCG is to set up sewage and effluent treatment plant in villages of GURGAON

GURGAON: MCG is now going to install a low-capacity sewage treatment plant (STP) and effluent treatment plant (ETP) in every village that comes under its jurisdiction. The existing STP plant and ETP plant are not able to handle the load that’s why the new plan is being formulated to setup sewage treatment plant for each and every village and the cost for this is also being discussed. The MCG had already come under severe criticism for failing to increase the capacity of the existing plant. The untreated sewage is now flowing into the Yamuna River.

Read more here – TOI - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/gurgaon/MCG-to-set-up-sewage-treatment-plant-in-every-village/articleshow/43189867.cms

Friday, 3 October 2014

Modi-Obama meet: US to help India develop three smart cities

The successful and satisfactory visit to US by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has come up with a great deal to help India to develop three smart cities - Allahabad, Ajmer and Visakhapatnam. Apart from this, provide clean water and sewage facilities in 500 cities in the country. This deal will surely help the Indian government’s plan of developing 100 smart cities and in this regards a large amount of Rs. 7,060 crore was proposed in the Union Budget.

Read more here – TOI - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Modi-Obama-meet-US-to-help-India-develop-three-smart-cities/articleshow/43981483.cms

Saturday, 20 September 2014

Trial run of sewage interceptor sewage project to start on Friday

NEW DELHI: The contentious interceptor sewage project, conceptualized by Delhi Jal Board as the answer to the Yamuna's pollution problem, is finally set to be rolled out. The trial run for the first phase of the project, involving interception of 9 million gallons per day of sewage in the Palam drain as it flows into the Najafgarh drain, will begin on Friday and will be commissioned within the next two weeks.

The project involves laying of parallel channels along the three major drains of Delhi—Najafgarh, Supplementary and Shahdara drains. These will intercept sewage from the several smaller drains that flow into these three drains, carrying it to the nearest sewage treatment plant and discharging the treated effluent back into the main drains before they meet the Yamuna.

Read more here - TOI - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/trial-run-of-sewage-interceptor-sewage-project-to-start-on-friday/articleshow/41723038.cms