Long-haul trucking, biocide management, endless permits! It seems there was never a great way to treat and manage distributed sanitation wastewater, until now 🚽💡 Watch this week's #WastewaterWednesday to learn how we are tackling the biggest challenges in septic and distributed sanitation wastewater, ensuring your porta potties meet necessary standards ➡️https://hubs.ly/Q02Lj5Vg0 #distributedsanitation #septicwaste #wastewatermanagement #aquacycl
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A Comprehensive Guide to Essential Water Treatment Equipment https://hubs.ly/Q02SMnSM0 Water treatment is an essential process that ensures clean and safe water for human consumption, agriculture, and industrial uses. #WaterTreatment #WaterPurification #FiltrationSystems #CleanWater #ReverseOsmosis #WaterSafety #Disinfection #SustainableWater #WaterQuality #WaterTech
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Did you know that almost 80% of wastewater ends up back into our ecosystem untreated? With #EarthDay approaching, this frightening fact highlights the importance of improving sanitation and the adoption of innovative sanitation systems in order to protect our already fragile ecosystem. #SanitationForAll #SASTEP #sanitationinnovation #sanitationtechnology
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The Bay Area Clean Water Agencies along with its wastewater treatment agencies have collaborated for more than a decade on nutrient management strategies. In this article, Michael Falk explores BACWA’s compliance approach and its potential to become a template for other watersheds contemplating nutrient management strategies. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gT7ZBg57 #Water #Wastewater #NutrientManagement
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I recently read an interesting article in the Observer about how sewage spills into rivers, lakes, and oceans in England increased by 54% from the previous year. I was just in Sweden, and it's a similar situation with wastewater going into the water! So, where should the waste go instead? The quick answer: Into the soil! Soil loves carbon and nutrients. How? By using non-sewage sanitation, preferably container-based sanitation. It's easy to maintain, affordable, and makes reuse much simpler. I can send you our document Let´s talk sh*t if want to know more. Let´s make sh*t happen! Link to the Observer article: https://lnkd.in/d5v3rF5p #sanitationambassadors #SDG6 #nonsewagesanitation #nextgenerationsanitation #Containerbasedsanitation #CBSA
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California's state Water Resources Control Board has signed off on regulations to turn more recycled wastewater from homes into drinking water These regulations allow local water agencies to take wastewater from toilets or showers, treat it, before reintroducing it back to the drinking water system. The regulations were approved unanimously by the board on Tuesday and now give the go-ahead for local water agencies to plan to turn wastewater into drinkable water through a process called Direct Potable Reuse, with the division of drinking water director of the State Water Resources Control Board Darrin Polhemus saying this approval was a very big step for California, "It really will be the highest quality water delivered in the state when it's done." This will make California the second American state to adopt direct potable reuse following Colorado. It will be soon be pending vote from local water agencies on its presence in cities. Most of California's wastewater is reused now through agriculture, outdoor irrigation or for facilities where treated water soaks into the ground to replenish aquifers. The new process would take the already recycled water through various stages of treatment, passing through activated carbon filters and reverse-osmosis membranes, undergoing disinfection with UV light, among other treatments, even through extra processes to remove pathogens and viruses more than once. Implementation of the regulations will help to boost the state's water resilience, and reduces water wastage. #California #wastewatter #watertreatment This content is jointly prepared by ripple2wave and ZWEEC Analytics Pte Ltd. Follow us for more interesting content on #water and #sustainability. Sourced from: https://lnkd.in/gX8uM9Rt
New regulations will turn California wastewater to drinking water. Here's what we know
cbsnews.com
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California's state Water Resources Control Board has signed off on regulations to turn more recycled wastewater from homes into drinking water. These regulations allow local water agencies to take wastewater from toilets or showers, treat it, before reintroducing it back to the drinking water system. The regulations were approved unanimously by the board on Tuesday and now give the go-ahead for local water agencies to plan to turn wastewater into drinkable water through a process called Direct Potable Reuse, with the division of drinking water director of the State Water Resources Control Board Darrin Polhemus saying this approval was a very big step for California, "It really will be the highest quality water delivered in the state when it's done." This will make California the second American state to adopt direct potable reuse following Colorado. It will be soon be pending vote from local water agencies on its presence in cities. Most of California's wastewater is reused now through agriculture, outdoor irrigation or for facilities where treated water soaks into the ground to replenish aquifers. The new process would take the already recycled water through various stages of treatment, passing through activated carbon filters and reverse-osmosis membranes, undergoing disinfection with UV light, among other treatments, even through extra processes to remove pathogens and viruses more than once. Implementation of the regulations will help to boost the state's water resilience, and reduces water wastage. #California #wastewatter #watertreatment This content is jointly prepared by ZWEEC Analytics Pte Ltd and ripple2wave. Follow us for more interesting content on #water and #sustainability. Sourced from: https://lnkd.in/gX8uM9Rt
New regulations will turn California wastewater to drinking water. Here's what we know
cbsnews.com
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California's state Water Resources Control Board has signed off on regulations to turn more recycled wastewater from homes into drinking water These regulations allow local water agencies to take wastewater from toilets or showers, treat it, before reintroducing it back to the drinking water system. The regulations were approved unanimously by the board on Tuesday and now give the go-ahead for local water agencies to plan to turn wastewater into drinkable water through a process called Direct Potable Reuse, with the division of drinking water director of the State Water Resources Control Board Darrin Polhemus saying this approval was a very big step for California, "It really will be the highest quality water delivered in the state when it's done." This will make California the second American state to adopt direct potable reuse following Colorado. It will be soon be pending vote from local water agencies on its presence in cities. Most of California's wastewater is reused now through agriculture, outdoor irrigation or for facilities where treated water soaks into the ground to replenish aquifers. The new process would take the already recycled water through various stages of treatment, passing through activated carbon filters and reverse-osmosis membranes, undergoing disinfection with UV light, among other treatments, even through extra processes to remove pathogens and viruses more than once. Implementation of the regulations will help to boost the state's water resilience, and reduces water wastage. #California #wastewatter #watertreatment This content is jointly prepared by ripple2wave and ZWEEC Analytics Pte Ltd. Follow us for more interesting content on #water and #sustainability. Sourced from: https://lnkd.in/gdCEinZV
New regulations will turn California wastewater to drinking water. Here's what we know
cbsnews.com
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Wondering why ag drainage matters? It's about more than just water management – it's about securing our food's future. We help farmers increase productivity and ensure consistency, contributing to a healthier, more resilient food supply chain. Learn more here: https://lnkd.in/dD-A4FYU #McCainExcavating #AgDrainage #SustainableFarming #CommercialDevelopment #ResidentialDevelopment #LandImprovement #Grading #Drainage #McCainExcavating
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Good to see the translations #EAWAG What is also needed is a political- economy analysis of sanitation in global south. Why recommended sanitation systems and technologies are seldom applied in urban and rural settings, and when applied are distorted in the application that don’t serve the purpose intended in terms of pollution abetment ? Piers Blaikie book “Political Economy of Soil Erosion in Developing Counties”, published in 1985 - is a seminal work of analysis that needs to be applied to urban sanitation systems in understanding why we are consistently failing in addressing urban and even rural sanitation challenges in global south. The book needs to be re-read today and the approach of political economy analysis applied to sanitation systems thinking, theory and practice. Then we will understand better : 1. Why India and much of global south have jumped from low cost and decentralised sanitation systems to high cost, centralised and complex electro mechanical treatment systems. 2. Why these systems fail and why more stringent norms and standards are introduced despite such failures. Ensuring more failures and more hi tech investment. Just see how we transitioned from ASP to SBR and UASB Sewage Treatment Plants. And how we are consistently denying the need for decentralised non sewered sanitation systems. 3. Why there is no long term strategy for addressing sanitation challenges. Who gains and who loses from this will be obvious if we try to see the vast unplanned and informal urban settlements and the denial of water and sanitation services there. Drawing attention here to peers from academia and practice. Arne Panesar , Stefan Reuter ,Kala Vairavamoorthy , Mona Iyer , Jagan Shah , Rajesh Ramakrishnan , Aromar Revi , Siddharth Patil , Vishwanath S , Avinash Kumar , Roland Schertenleib , Prof. Sabitri Tripathi ,NC Narayanan , Barbara Evans ,Damir Brdjanovic , Prof. PARAG SADGIR , Ruchika Shiva , Lemessa Mekonta , Mahesh Kankal , Biranchi Upadhyaya , Philippe Cullet , Rajeswari Raina , Dhawal Patil , SAURABH KALE , Avinash Krishnamurthy ,Åsa Persson ,Kartik Chandran , Francis de los Reyes III, Ph.D., BCEEM , Abishek S Narayan , Christoph Luthi Dr. George Wainaina Linda Strande Jonathan Demenge
#Sandec ends #2023 by promoting our publication: Compendium of Sanitation Systems and Technologies. Authored by Elizabeth Tilley and edited by Paul Donahue, cited more than 1000 times, translated into 10 languages, it is open access and free to download at: https://bit.ly/2zKhtbq #eawag #water #sanitation #solidwaste #wash #researchanddevelopment #researchfordevelopment
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In response to environmental concerns about wastewater contamination, the EPA is updating water pollution rules for slaughterhouses and processing plants. With the new guidelines expected by August 2025, businesses will need to reevaluate their waste management approaches to meet compliance standards. Meat and poultry processors - are you aware of these new guidelines? Please reach out to our water processing team if you need help meeting the new standards: [email protected]. Please follow #Moleaer to learn more about #nanobubbletechnology and #wastewater. #nanobubbles #EPAguidelines #poultryprocessing
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