1 / 37

Cities in Vietnam, classes I - V

WASTEWATER MANAGEMENT (WWM) AND ITS IMPACTS TO WATER ENVIRONMENTS IN VIETNAM. WWM CONCEPTS AND TECHNOLOGIES Hanoi University of Civil Engineering,. Cities in Vietnam, classes I - V. Rapid urbanization and industrialization. Hanoi city: Population 1945: 280,000 1954: 380,000

vine
Download Presentation

Cities in Vietnam, classes I - V

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WASTEWATER MANAGEMENT (WWM) AND ITS IMPACTS TO WATER ENVIRONMENTS IN VIETNAM. WWM CONCEPTS AND TECHNOLOGIES Hanoi University of Civil Engineering,

  2. Cities in Vietnam, classes I - V

  3. Rapid urbanization and industrialization Hanoi city: Population • 1945: 280,000 • 1954: 380,000 • 1960: 1,050,000 • 2001: 1,700,000 among 2,750,000 total urban zone population • 2020: 2.5 million among 4.5 millions total urban zone population • The area of Hanoi urban in 1994 was 4,600 ha, in 2000: 9,000 ha, and it will be up to 25,000 ha in 2020

  4. Rapid urbanization and industrialization • Urbanization and industrialization processes create pressures on the environment and natural resources; destroy the ecological balance, impact on environmental quality and natural resources • These pressures could exceed the “enduring ability” of the environment and natural resources as well as the “response ability”

  5. Pressures Environmental status Air, Water, Soil, Natural resources, Ecosystems, Urban and rural areas Pressures Production, Commerce, Consumption Energy, Transport, Industries, Agriculture, Forestry, etc. Environment, natural resources Information Information Response Legislations, Strategies, Policies, New technologies, Pollution control, Consumption change Conventions, etc. ResponsesDecisions, Actions ResponsesDecisions, Actions Pressure-Status-Response (PSR) Model (Adopted from EPA)

  6. Water resources Surface water resources: • 2360 rivers with lengths over 10 km accounting for a total flow of 835 Billion m3 • Year 2000: 4700 m3 person yr-1(global average: 7400 m3 person yr-1) • Not equally distributed by locality or season: - 5 months wet season: 75 - 80% of total flow - 7 months dry season: 20 - 25% of total flow

  7. Ground water: • 50 - 60 Billion m3 of total potential • Maximum available for exploitation: 10 - 12 Billion m3

  8. Hanoi water supply

  9. Groundwater over-exploitation has caused depression and subsidence phenomenon in some areas of Hanoi city • The highest rate of subsidence (30 mm yr-1) has been found in a 2-km2 radius surrounding Phap Van water treatment plant • Groundwater in Pleistocene (QII) aquifer has been slightly polluted by nitrogen compounds, especially by ammonia, which has being found at Ha Dinh, Tuong Mai and Phap Van water treatment plants (up to 20 mg NH4-N l-1)

  10. Domestic water use • 640 cities and towns with a population of 18 Million (23%) • 200 urban water supply projects, provide 2.7 Million m3 d-1 for 60% of the urban population this is equivalent to 60-80 l d-1 • 40% of the urban population does not have access to an adequate water supply • 90% urban areas are not equipped with adequate sewerage systems • 1995: 28% population in rural areas served by clean water • 1999: 36% • 2002: 50% receiving 50 l d-1

  11. Water use for agriculture • 1990: 47 Billion m3 (90% of total water consumption) • 1999: 60 Billion m3 (85% of total)

  12. Water use for industrial activities • 1990: 5.33 Billion m3 (9.8% of total water consumption) • 1999: 14 Billion m3 (15% of total)

  13. Industrial wastewaters • 90% of industrial enterprises do not meet National effluent standards • 73% of industrial enterprises do not have WW treatment systems • 60% of WW treatment systems are not operated properly

  14. Water quality of river basins Red river delta: Organics pollution • Domestic wastewater is a major pollution source, among domestic, industrial and agricultural activities Rivers in Central Vietnam: • Affordable quality • Lightly affected by salt intrusion due to tidal regime Rivers in the Southern Vietnam: • Increasing levels of organic and inorganic pollutants • Sai Gon, Dong Nai, Thi Vai rivers, etc.

  15. Water environment problems • Flooding • Salt intrusion • Pollution

  16. Monitoring data: 1995 - 2001 • BOD5 , COD, NH+4, NO-3 are generally 2 – 4 times higher than the permissible value • Total coli-form is 100 times higher than the permissible value • In some places Pb and Hg concentrations were several times higher than permissible value • Some rivers are effectively drainage channels Variables Measured: Temp, pH, BOD5, COD, SS, TDS, EC, DO,NH4+, NO3-, PO43-, Cl-, Fe, Pb, Cd, (Cr, Hg, As), Coliform.

  17. Pollution of surface water has increasd

  18. Wastewater re-use in agriculture

  19. Untreated faecal sludge use in aquaculture

  20. Pesticides • Before 1985: 0.3 kg ha-1 • 1986 – 1990: 0.4 – 0.5 kg ha-1 • 1995: 0.85 kg ha-1 • 1999 - 2000: 1.12 kg ha-1 • Concentrated in Red and Mekong River deltas • Improper use

  21. Fertilizer • 5 Million t yr-1 inorganic fertilizers including 3 Million t yr-1 of imported fertilizers • Vietnam: 80-90 kg inorganic fertilizer ha (Rice = 100 - 110 kg ha-1)

  22. Mitigation measures • Legislative base, economical tools • Environmental standards • Urban planning and management • Pollution control technologies • Education and public awareness

  23. Standards • Water quality TCVN 5942:1995 TCVN 5943:1995 TCVN 5944:1995 • Discharges TCVN 5945:1995 TCVN 6772:2000 TCVN 6773:2000 TCVN 6774:2000 TCVN 6980:2001 TCVN 6981:2001 TCVN 6982:2001 TCVN 6983:2001 TCVN 6984:2001 TCVN 6985:2001 TCVN 6986:2001 TCVN 6987:2001 • Reuse: (WHO) Stepwise approach!

  24. Person-to-person Dom. animals, rodents Flies Soil Dishes Food Fish Pathogens in faeces Water Barriers: improved excreta disposal, hygiene and waste management “Critical Control Points” as barriers against disease transmission Containment, treatment

  25. Planning • DEWATS concepts vs centralized WW systems

  26. RURBIFARM ProjectSustainable Farming at the rural-urban interface. Introduction to the NISF research sites in Hanoi, Vietnam by NISF team

  27. What is peri-urban agriculture? Geographically close to cities. Agricultural production mainly for city use. City activities have a direct impact on rural activities.

  28. Two proposed NISF study sites: Tien Phong & Minh Khai Commune

  29. Hanoi meteorological 2000 (Lang station) Inorganic fertilizers pressure in a ha of agricultural land in Vietnam from 1996 - 2000 Organic fertilizers pressure in a ha of agricultural land in Vietnam from 1996 - 2000

  30. Overview of Hanoi city and the study area Tien Phong site Minh Khai site

  31. Degraded land (Acrisols) Tien Phong commune/ACIAR Minh Khai commune Fertile soil (Fluvisols)

  32. Minh Khai site(vegetable-FS)

  33. ACIAR/Tien Phong site(mixed FS)

  34. Land preparation for vegetable planting

  35. Irrigation work

More Related