1st Edition

Water Treatment in Developed and Developing Nations An International Perspective

Edited By Victor M. Monsalvo Copyright 2015
    384 Pages 75 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    384 Pages 75 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press



    UN studies show that high-income, developed nations treat about 70 percent of their wastewater. However, in low-income developing nations, only 8 percent of wastewater undergoes any kind of treatment. Inadequate water treatment has serious consequences for both human health and the environment.





    The articles in this compendium provide a representative cross sample of both developing and developed nations' water treatment facilities. Included are the following topics:





    • Reclaimed water for irrigation reuse in developing countries


    • Sludge-handling practices in Micronesia


    • The removal of phthalate esters from Chinese water sources


    • Disposal of domestic wastewater in Nigeria


    • Ameba-enrichment in a South African water treatment plant


    • Bioenergy from wastewater produced by a Brazilian meat-processing plant


    • The presence of various pharmaceutical contaminants in the River Thames


    • Wastewater recycling in Greece


    • The impact on surface water from contaminants released from German water treatment plants


    • A Canadian constructed wetland's effectiveness for the removal of various contaminants from wastewater


    • Accessing irrigation from treated wastewater in the United States


    • The spacial distribution of fecal indicator bacteria in the groundwater beneath two American water treatment plants


    • Detection of contamination from retinoid acid reception agonists in Japanese water treatment plants




    The editor, a respected international expert in the field, has selected investigations that offer essential information for ongoing research at the graduate and professional levels, as well as for environmental engineers and others responsible for choosing the most efficient water treatment technologies.

    Introduction

    Part I: Developing Countries

    Comparative Study of Three Two-Stage Hybrid Ecological Wastewater Treatment Systems for Producing High Nutrient, Reclaimed Water for Irrigation Reuse in Developing Countries; Florentina Zurita and John R. White

    Sustainability of Wastewater Treatment and Excess Sludge Handling Practices in the Federated States of Micronesia; Joseph D. Rouse

    Occurrence and Removal Characteristics of Phthalate Esters from Typical Water Sources in Northeast China; Yu Liu, Zhonglin Chen, and Jimin Shen

    Assessment of Domestic Wastewater Disposal in Some Selected Wards of Maiduguri Metropolis, Borno State, Nigeria; Abba Kagu, Hauwa Lawan Badawi, and Jimme M. Abba

    Detection of Free-Living Amoebae Using Amoebal Enrichment in a Wastewater Treatment Plant of Gauteng Province, South Africa; P. Muchesa, O. Mwamba, T. G. Barnard, and C. Bartie

    Water and Wastewater Management and Biomass to Energy Conversion in a Meat Processing Plant in Brazil: A Case Study; Humberto J. José, Regina F. P. M. Moreira, Danielle B. Luiz, Elaine Virmond, Aziza K. Genena, Silvia L. F. Andersen, Rennio F. de Sena, and Horst Fr. Schröder

    Part II: Developed Nations

    Intra- and Inter-Pandemic Variations of Antiviral, Antibiotics and Decongestants in Wastewater Treatment Plants and Receiving Rivers; Andrew C. Singer, Josef D. Järhult, Roman Grabic, Ghazanfar A. Khan, Richard H. Lindberg, Ganna Fedorova, Jerker Fick, Michael J. Bowes, Björn Olsen, and Hanna Söderström

    Wastewater Recycling in Greece: The Case of Thessaloniki; Andreas Ilias, Athanasios Panoras, and Andreas Angelakis

    Do Contaminants Originating from State-of-the-Art Treated Wastewater Impact the Ecological Quality of Surface Waters?; Daniel Stalter, Axel Magdeburg, Kristin Quednow, Alexandra Botzat, and Jörg Oehlmann

    Performance of a Constructed Wetland in Grand Marais, Manitoba, Canada: Removal of Nutrients, Pharmaceuticals, and Antibiotic Resistance Genes from Municipal Wastewater; Julie C. Anderson, Jules C. Carlson, Jennifer E. Low, Jonathan K. Challis, Charles S. Wong, Charles W. Knapp, and Mark L. Hanson

    Irrigation with Treated Wastewater: Quantification of Changes in Soil Physical and Chemical Properties; Pradip Adhikari, Manoj K. Shukla, John G. Mexal, and David Daniel

    Spatial Distribution of Fecal Indicator Bacteria in Groundwater beneath Two Large On-Site Wastewater Treatment Systems; Charles Humphrey, Michael O’Driscoll, and Jonathan Harris

    Detection of Retinoic Acid Receptor Agonistic Activity and Identification of Causative Compounds in Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in Japan; Kazuko Sawada, Daisuke Inoue, Yuichiro Wada, Kazunari Sei, Tsuyoshi Nakanishi, and Michihiko Ike

    Index

    Biography

    Professor Victor Monsalvo is an environmental scientist with a PhD in chemical engineering from the University Autonoma de Madrid, where he later became a professor in the chemical engineering department. As a researcher, he has worked with the following universities: Leeds, Cranfield, Sydney, and Aachen. He is part of an active research team working in areas of environmental technologies, water recycling, and advanced biological systems, including membrane bioreactors. He has led eight research projects with private companies and an R&D national project, coauthored two patents (national and international), and written around fifty journal and referred conference papers. He has given two key notes in international conferences and has been a member of the organizing committee of five national and international conferences, workshops, and summer schools, and is currently involved in fifteen research projects sponsored by various entities. He is currently working as senior researcher in the Chemical Processes Department at Abengoa Research.