Weber B.,
Juanico M. and Avnimelech Y. (1996). Salt
enrichment of municipal sewage: new approaches to prevent it in Israel. Environ.
Managem., 20(4):487-495.
ABSTRACT
Wastewater irrigation
is an environmentally sound wastewater disposal practice, but sewage is more
saline than the supplied fresh water and the salts are recycled together with
the water. Salts have negative environmental effects on crops, soils, and
groundwater. There are no inexpensive ways to remove the salts once they enter
sewage, and the prevention of sewage salt enrichment is the most immediately
available solution. The body of initiatives presently structured by the Ministry
of the Environment of Israel are herein described, with the aim to contribute to
the search for a long-term solution of salinity problems in arid countries. The
new initiatives are based on: (1) search for new technologies to reduce salt
consumption and discharge into sewage; (2) different technologies to cope with
different situations; (3) raising the awareness of the public and industry on
the environmental implications of salinity pollution; and (4) an elastic legal
approach expressed through new state-of-the-art regulations. The main
contributor to the salinity of sewage in Israel is the water-softening process
followed by the meat koshering process. Some of the adopted technical solutions
are: the discharge of the brine into the sea, the substitution of sodium by
potassium salts in the ion-exchangers, the construction of centralized systems
for the supply of soft water in industrial areas, the precipitation of Ca and Mg
in the effluents from ion-exchangers and recycling of the NaCI solution, a
reduction of the discharge of salts by the meat koshering process, and new
membrane technology for salt recovery.
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