Water Pollution Control
Water Pollution Control
In urban areas, reducing materials carried away by the storm runoff is helpful.
As we have already seen, human and animal wastes usually create the most
serious health-related water pollution problems. More than 500 types of disease-
causing (pathogenic) bacteria, parasites, and viruses can travel from human to
animal excrement through water. There are ways in how to prevent the spread of
these diseases:
1. NATURAL PROCESSES
In a typical septic system, wastewater is first drained into a septic tank. Grease
and oils rise to the top and solids settle to the bottom, where they are subject to
bacterial decomposition. The clarified effluent from the septic tank is channeled
out through a drain field of small perforated pipes embedded in gravel just below
the surface of the soil. The rate of aeration is high in this drain field so that
pathogens (most of which are anaerobic) will be killed, and soil microorganisms
can metabolize any nutrients carried by the water. Excess water percolates up
through the gravel and evaporates. Periodically, the solids in the septic tank are
pumped out into a tank truck and taken to a treatment plant for disposal.
1. NATURAL PROCESSES
Figure 6.2. A domestic septic tank and drain field system for sewage and wastewater disposal. To work properly, a septic tank must
have healthy microorganisms, which digest toilet paper and feces. For this reason, antimicrobial cleaners and chlorine bleach should
never be allowed down the drain.
2. MUNICIPAL SEWAGE TREATMENT
Over the past 100 years, sanitary engineers have developed ingenious and
effective municipal wastewater treatment systems to protect human health,
water quality, and ecosystem stability. The typical municipal sewage treatment
facility works like this:
Figure 6.3. (a) Primary sewage treatment removes only solids and suspended sediment. (b) Secondary treatment, through aeration of
activated sludge (or biosolids), followed by sludge removal and chlorination of effluent, kills pathogens and removes most organic
material. (c) During tertiary treatment, passage through a trickling bed evaporator and/or a lagoon or marsh further removes
inorganic nutrients, oxidizes any remaining organics, and reduces effluent volume.
3. LOW-COST WATER TREATMENT
The municipal sewage systems that are used in developed countries are often too
expensive to build and operate in the developing world where low-cost, low-tech
alternatives for treating wastes are needed.
Effluent Sewerage
Use natural or
artificial wetlands
3. LOW-COST WATER TREATMENT
Figure 6.4. In India, a poplar plantation thrives on raw sewage water piped directly from nearby homes. Innovative solutions like this
can make use of nutrients that would pollute water systems.
4. ON-SITE SANITATION AND SAFELY MANAGED SANITATION
Households or businesses not served by a municipal treatment plant may have an
individual septic tank, which pre-treats the wastewater on site and infiltrates it
into the soil. This can lead to groundwater pollution if not properly done.
Discharge of toxic chemicals such as motor fuels and concrete washout is prevented
by use of:
Effective control of urban runoff involves reducing the velocity and flow of storm
water, as well as reducing pollutant discharges.
Water Remediation
Extraction
Containment
Phytoremediation
Water Pollution:
One of the most effective and significant pieces of environmental legislation ever
passed by the U.S. Congress. It also is an immense and complex law, with more
than 500 sections.
The goal of the Clean Water Act was to return all U.S. surface waters to “fishable
and swimmable” conditions. For specific “point” sources, the act requires
discharge permits and best practicable control technology (BPT). It sets
national goals of best available, economically achievable technology (BAT), for
toxic substances and zero discharge for 126 priority toxic pollutants.
The Passage of the Clean Water Act of 1972
Critics complain that standards and enforcement policies are too lax, especially for rural water districts
and small towns. Some researchers report pesticides, herbicides, and lead in drinking water at levels
they say should be of concern (fig. 6.5.). Atrazine, for instance, was detected in 96 percent of all surface-
water samples in one study of 374 communities across 12 states. Remember, however, that simply
detecting a toxic compound is not the same as showing dangerous levels.
Figure 6.5 Nine herbicide active ingredients and metabolites found in drinking water samples in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in spring of 1995,
compared to federal Maximum Concentration Levels (MCL). The use of these chemicals, and their presence in water sources, has increased
in subsequent years.
The Superfund program for remediation of toxic waste sites was created
in 1980 by the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and was amended by the
Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) of 1984.
Because of that, a law was signed to “pursue a policy of economic growth in a manner
consistent with the protection, preservation and revival of the quality of our fresh, brackish
and marine waters” (Section 2[4]).
Philippine Clean Water Act of 2004
Aims to protect the country’s water bodies from pollution from land-based
sources, (such as industries and commercial buildings, agriculture, and also
community/household activities.