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Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area

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dc.contributor.author Roux, SP
dc.contributor.author Oelofse, Suzanna HH
dc.contributor.author De Lange, Willem J
dc.date.accessioned 2010-08-25T13:19:50Z
dc.date.available 2010-08-25T13:19:50Z
dc.date.issued 2010-04
dc.identifier.citation Roux, S.P., Oelofse, S.H.H., and De Lange, W. 2010. Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the Crocodile-West Marico water management area. WISA 2010 Biennial Conference and Exhibition ICC Durban, South Africa, 18 - 22 April 2010, pp 18 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4209
dc.description WISA 2010 Biennial Conference and Exhibition ICC Durban, South Africa, 18 - 22 April 2010. en
dc.description.abstract Substantial quantities of water can be made available for use if the quality of return flows is of sufficient quality or treated to the desired quality. In 2006, in the order of 50% of urban and industrial drainage were returned for re-use in urban and industrial areas such as Johannesburg and Pretoria (3). The reuse potential of return flows is however largely dependent on the quality of the return flow combined with the quality requirements of the users. The four most important water quality problems are salinity, eutrophication, microbial pollution and sediments. The results of this study clearly indicate that pollution reduces the quality and therefore the economic value of the available water in the case study area. The most measurable impact in economic terms is the analysis of the costs incurred by municipal and private entities responsible for waste water treatment and potable water purification. Technology used to treat relative good quality water less than a decade ago must now be viewed as outdated and inadequate based on the deteriorated quality of intake water. The cost of recent technology upgrades in order to continue to produce water of potable quality clearly indicates the financial impact of pollution in the study area. This investigation clearly indicates the importance of pollution prevention over attempts to control the inevitable effects of current pollution practices in this study area. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Water Research Council en
dc.subject WRC en
dc.subject Microbial pollution en
dc.subject Sediments en
dc.subject Water quality en
dc.subject Sewage treatment en
dc.subject Crocodile-West Marico water management area en
dc.subject Water pollution en
dc.subject Potable water en
dc.subject WISA 2010 en
dc.title Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area en
dc.type Conference Presentation en
dc.identifier.apacitation Roux, S., Oelofse, S. H., & De Lange, W. J. (2010). Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4209 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Roux, SP, Suzanna HH Oelofse, and Willem J De Lange. "Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area." (2010): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4209 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Roux S, Oelofse SH, De Lange WJ, Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area; 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4209 . en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Conference Presentation AU - Roux, SP AU - Oelofse, Suzanna HH AU - De Lange, Willem J AB - Substantial quantities of water can be made available for use if the quality of return flows is of sufficient quality or treated to the desired quality. In 2006, in the order of 50% of urban and industrial drainage were returned for re-use in urban and industrial areas such as Johannesburg and Pretoria (3). The reuse potential of return flows is however largely dependent on the quality of the return flow combined with the quality requirements of the users. The four most important water quality problems are salinity, eutrophication, microbial pollution and sediments. The results of this study clearly indicate that pollution reduces the quality and therefore the economic value of the available water in the case study area. The most measurable impact in economic terms is the analysis of the costs incurred by municipal and private entities responsible for waste water treatment and potable water purification. Technology used to treat relative good quality water less than a decade ago must now be viewed as outdated and inadequate based on the deteriorated quality of intake water. The cost of recent technology upgrades in order to continue to produce water of potable quality clearly indicates the financial impact of pollution in the study area. This investigation clearly indicates the importance of pollution prevention over attempts to control the inevitable effects of current pollution practices in this study area. DA - 2010-04 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Water Research Council KW - WRC KW - Microbial pollution KW - Sediments KW - Water quality KW - Sewage treatment KW - Crocodile-West Marico water management area KW - Water pollution KW - Potable water KW - WISA 2010 LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2010 T1 - Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area TI - Rising costs of both sewage treatment and the production of potable water associated with increasing levels of pollution in a portion of the crocodile-west Marico water management area UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/4209 ER - en_ZA


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