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Duckweed Based Waste Water Treatment
One of the major problems with waste water
treatment methods is that none of the available
technologies has a direct economic return. The
available technologies are unaffordable due to high
capital and maintenance costs. With no economic
return, local authorities are generally not interested in taking up treatment of waste water, thereby
causing severe health hazards and environmental
pollution. In India out of about 4700 towns / cities,
only 232 have the sewerage system, and that too only partial. Most of the untreated waste water is,
therefore, discharged into rivers or other water
bodies. In rural areas it is a common practice to
discharge waste water/sullage without collection.
There is no question of treatment/recycle or even
reuse of waste water/sullage as people are not
aware of this technology.
The Sulabh has successfully developed demonstration projects on duckweed-based costeffective
waste water treatment in rural and urban
areas with direct economic returns from
pisciculture. Although duckweed is found in ponds
and ditches, due to almost complete absence of
any know-how of this technology in the country, the
potential of duckweed for the waste water
treatment, its nutrient value and economic benefits
have not been fully exploited.
Duckweed – a small free-floating and fast growth
aquatic plant-has great ability to reduce the BOD,
COD, suspended solids, bacterial and other
pathogens from waste water. It is a complete feed
for fish, and due to the high content of proteins and
vitamins A & C, it is also a highly nutritious feed for to 3 times when fed with duckweed, than with other
conventional feeds in ponds. Reduction of BOD,
COD in effluents varies from 80-90% at the retention
time of 7-8 days. The first project funded by the
Ministry of Environment & Forests, Govt. of India,
was successfully completed in collaboration with
the Central Pollution Control Board, New Delhi.
Based on the R & D outputs of the project, the CPCB
has made guidelines on the use of duckweed for
waste water treatment. |