Juanico M. (1993). Alternative Schemes for
Municipal Sewage Treatment and Disposal in Industrialized Countries:
Israel as a Case Study. Ecological Eng., 2:101-118.
ABSTRACT

The selection of
appropriate technology for municipal sewage treatment and disposal requires not
only a proper characterization of modern municipal sewage but also the analysis
of agriculture-generated pollution. Modern municipal sewage contains a wide
spectrum of xenobiotic pollutants with negligible oxygen demand, and BOD is no
longer the descriptor of effluent quality. Intensive sewage treatment systems
(such as activated sludge) successfully remove BOD but fail to remove refractory
pollutants and pathogens. A proper combination of semi-intensive reactors (such
as aerated lagoons) for the partial removal of BOD, with extensive reactors
(such as wastewater reservoirs) for the removal of refractory pollutants and
pathogens, will release effluents of much better quality than other alternative
schemes, at lower costs.
Wastewater irrigation fails to assure nutrient
recycling through agriculture products if not accompanied by a change in
fertilization practices.
The present system of subsidies to agriculture in
industrialized countries promotes the over-application of fertilizers and
biocides, and the over-production of agriculture commodities.
The incorporation
of the rural sector to the sewage treatment system of the urban sector will
substitute the present conflict of interests between the two sectors by a
partnership with strong environmental and economic bases.
" ... towards the end of this century, we must reach the conclusion
of which the idea that
the solution of pollution is
dilution is only... an
illusion."
Laszlo Somlyody
Key note address to the Plenarium
IAWPRC 25 Anniversary Conference,
Kyoto, Japan, 1990
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