Sustainable sanitation
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Transcript of Sustainable sanitation
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Sustainable Sanitation
Name :-Gourav KumarEnrollment no.:-228/11Roll no :-62
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Introduction
A Sustainable sanitation service is generally understood to be a system that is affordable to the community and the local government over a long term period without having adverse effects on the environment.
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What sanitation is about
Personal and household hygiene
Solid waste management Greywater disposal Safe excreta disposal
Traditional interpretation:
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Sustainable sanitation - a review
Management& organisation
Residents´ views & actions
Physical arrangementsincluding technology
The challenge is to protect our health and the environment
This challenge can be addressed, if management, residents,policies, technology and engagement are in place
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How do we perceive sanitary conditions?
What functions must a sustainable system fulfil?
Learning objective:
To become familiar with various sanitary conditions in the world, functions of sanitation, and to foster a critical under-standing of statistics and other data.
1.1 Sanitary Conditions
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2.5 billion people (35% of the world's population 2010) lack so called improved sanitation 18% of the world's population lack safe water supply 10% of all wastewater in developing countries is treated The combined effects of poor personal and domestic hygiene and lack of safe water and good environmental sanitation is considered the most important risk factor for disease and death
Sanitation – ‘the silent crisis’
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Source: Stockholm Water Front, No. 4 December 2007
House or yard Connected to connection for water a sewer
(%) (%)
Africa 43 18 Asia 77 45 Latin America & 77 35 Caribbean
Oceania 73 15 Europe 96 82 North America 100 96
Proportion of households in connected to piped water and sewers
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0102030405060708090
Africa Asia LA & C America Europe
Source: UNDP & UNICEF 2003 (Fig. 3.13)
Wastewater - collected and treated by effective treatment plants
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Upgrading environmental sanitation in dense settlements
before after
What Next?
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Diseases related to excreta and wastewaterDisease Mortality
(death/year)Burden of disease
Comments
Diarrhoea 1 800 000 62 000 000 99.8% of deaths occur in dev. countries; 90% are children
Typhoid 600 000 Data not available
Estimate: 16 million cases/year
Ascariasis 3 000 1 800 000 Estimate: 1.45 billion infections, of which 350 million suffer adverse health effects
Hookworm disease
3 000 60 000 Estimate: 1.3 billion infections of which 150 million suffer adverse health effects
Schisto-somiasis
15 000 1 700 000 Found in 74 countries, 200 million estimated infected, 20 million with severe consequences
Hepatitis A Data not available
Data not available
Estimate: 1.4 million cases/yr.
Source: WHO, 2006
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Source: UNICEF and World Health Organization, 2012
Sanitation coverage trends by developing region, and urban-rural divide 1990-2010
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Hazardous waste reduction
Nutrient reuse – (i) X% of excreted N, P, K is reused for crop production, (ii) Y% of used water is reused
Hazardous waste containment
Access – (i) 24-hr access to facility year-round, (ii) privacy, personal security and shelter, (iii) no smell, (iv) preferrably indoors and accessible to men, women, children, elderly
Greywater management – (i) no stagnant water in compound or in streets, (ii) no vectors, (iii) no avoidable pollution e.g. fat or paint residues
A SANITATION LADDER for improved functions
Excreta containment – (i) in use, (ii) no vectors , (iii) no faecal matter , (iv) hand-washing facility in use
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Requirements on sanitation arrangements
Inside the home (old requirements):
- hygienic and protecting human health- comfortable (indoors, no smell, easy to clean, security)
Outside of the home requirements (new! ):
- save resources (little/no water, reuse nutrients, little energy)- protect the environment (ground & surface water, soil, air)
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Sanitary inspectors in Sweden described the sanitary conditions in the workers´ living quarters as deplorable with stagnant storm water and awful smell, and causing ill health (1870s). However, infant mortality in such areas did not differ from that in richer areas with piped water and sewers. Lack of sanitary precaution by all classes was the reason.
Example
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Sanitation versus Water
Sanitation viewed as less important
People assumed to be uninterested
Is less of a public concern, and attracts little public investment in poor urban areas up to now
Water “will do the trick”
Everyone wants water
Water supply is a public concern, and attracts public and private investments
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Conclusion
Sustainable sanitation is an approach that considers sanitation holistically.
Sustainable sanitation is necessary so as to decrease the degradation of environment as well as to decrease its ill effect on hygiene of households and the public.
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THANK YOU
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