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Wastewater 'Widely Used' in Urban
Agriculture, Report Finds
Many of the major cities
in developing countries are using untreated or partially treated
wastewater to irrigate nearby farmland, according to the International
Water Management Institute (IWMI).
In a report, released yesterday (18 August) at the World
Water Week summit in Stockholm, Sweden, the IWMI highlights
the need to develop practical measures in utilising wastewater
while avoiding potential environmental and health risks.
Wastewater, mainly produced in cities, is directly used to
solve the shortage of irrigation water in many developing
countries. The IWMI says that wastewater irrigation occurs
on around 20 million hectares of farmland across the developing
world.
The authors of the report surveyed 53 cities across Africa,
Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. They found that over
80 per cent of the cities studied used untreated or partially
treated wastewater for agriculture.
Wastewater can contain high amounts of nutrition for crops,
such as nitrogen and phosphorus, saving fertiliser costs for
farmers. However, untreated water may also contain high amounts
of organic pollutants or heavy metals, which can enter the
food chain directly through irrigation.
But the authors do not recommend banning or reducing the
practice by imposing stricter water criteria, since poor infrastructure
and lack of funding in developing countries would hinder such
measures and adversely affect farmers dependent on wastewater.
Instead, they say that innovative indigenous practices can
be built upon to help reduce the health risks from wastewater
agriculture. For example, in Ghana, Indonesia, Nepal and Vietnam,
farmers store wastewater in ponds to allow suspended solids
to settle out before use in irrigation.
The authors say the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on
clean water should more closely link policies and investments
for improvements in the water supply sector with those of
the sanitation and waste disposal sector.
"The MDGs should rightly have a sanitation goal, but
also mention safe disposal of water for productive and environmentally
friendly reuse where feasible," David Molden, deputy
director-general for research at the IWMI, told SciDev.Net.
Feng Shaoyuan, deputy director of China Agricultural Water
Research Centre, says the report highlights the need for better
policies to regulate wastewater farming.
"For example, wastewater irrigation should only be used
for forest, grasslands and non-food crops. Also, wastewater
irrigation should not be used near potable or clean water
sources to avoid pollution," Feng told SciDev.Net.
"With these policies, the health and environmental impacts
of it can be greatly reduced even if there is insufficient
infrastructure to treat wastewater,"
Source:
SicDev Net
Date: August 19, 2008

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