The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries

The volume of wastewater generated by domestic, industrial and commercial sources has increased with population, urbanization, improved living conditions, and economic development. The productive use of wastewater has also increased, as millions of small-scale farmers in urban and peri-urban areas of developing countries depend on wastewater or wastewater polluted water sources to irrigate high-value edible crops for urban markets, often as they have no alternative sources of irrigation water. Undesirable constituents in wastewater can harm human health and the environment. Hence, wastewater irrigation is an issue of concern to public agencies responsible for maintaining public health and environmental quality. For diverse reasons, many developing countries are still unable to implement comprehensive wastewater treatment programs. Therefore in the near term, risk management and interim solutions are needed to prevent adverse impacts from wastewater irrigation. A combination of source control, and farm-level and post-harvest measures can be used to protect farm workers and consumers. The WHO guidelines revised in 2006 for wastewater use suggest measures beyond the traditional recommendations of producing only industrial or non-edible crops, as in many situations it is impossible to enforce a change in the current cash crop pattern, or provide alternative vegetable supply to urban markets. There are several opportunities for improving wastewater management via improved policies, institutional dialogues and financial mechanisms, which would reduce the risks in agriculture. Effluent standards combined with incentives or enforcement can motivate improvements in water management by household and industrial sectors discharging wastewater from point sources. Segregation of chemical pollutants from urban wastewater facilitates treatment and reduces risk. Strengthening institutional capacity and establishing links between water delivery and sanitation sectors through inter-institutional coordination leads to more efficient management of wastewater and risk reduction.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qadir, Manzoor, Wichelns, Dennis, Raschid-Sally, Liqa, McCornick, Peter G., Drechsel, Pay, Bahri, Akissa, Minhas, P.S.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:wastewater irrigation, water reuse, policy, health hazards, wastewater management, developing countries,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40537
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-405372023-06-13T07:00:08Z The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries Qadir, Manzoor Wichelns, Dennis Raschid-Sally, Liqa McCornick, Peter G. Drechsel, Pay Bahri, Akissa Minhas, P.S. wastewater irrigation water reuse policy health hazards wastewater management developing countries The volume of wastewater generated by domestic, industrial and commercial sources has increased with population, urbanization, improved living conditions, and economic development. The productive use of wastewater has also increased, as millions of small-scale farmers in urban and peri-urban areas of developing countries depend on wastewater or wastewater polluted water sources to irrigate high-value edible crops for urban markets, often as they have no alternative sources of irrigation water. Undesirable constituents in wastewater can harm human health and the environment. Hence, wastewater irrigation is an issue of concern to public agencies responsible for maintaining public health and environmental quality. For diverse reasons, many developing countries are still unable to implement comprehensive wastewater treatment programs. Therefore in the near term, risk management and interim solutions are needed to prevent adverse impacts from wastewater irrigation. A combination of source control, and farm-level and post-harvest measures can be used to protect farm workers and consumers. The WHO guidelines revised in 2006 for wastewater use suggest measures beyond the traditional recommendations of producing only industrial or non-edible crops, as in many situations it is impossible to enforce a change in the current cash crop pattern, or provide alternative vegetable supply to urban markets. There are several opportunities for improving wastewater management via improved policies, institutional dialogues and financial mechanisms, which would reduce the risks in agriculture. Effluent standards combined with incentives or enforcement can motivate improvements in water management by household and industrial sectors discharging wastewater from point sources. Segregation of chemical pollutants from urban wastewater facilitates treatment and reduces risk. Strengthening institutional capacity and establishing links between water delivery and sanitation sectors through inter-institutional coordination leads to more efficient management of wastewater and risk reduction. 2010 2014-06-13T14:47:52Z 2014-06-13T14:47:52Z Journal Article Qadir, Manzoor; Wichelns, Dennis; Raschid-Sally, Liqa; McCornick, Peter G.; Drechsel, Pay; Bahri, Akissa; Minhas, P. S. 2010. The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries. Agricultural Water Management, 97(4):561-568. Special issue with contributions by IWMI authors. 0378-3774 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40537 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic wastewater irrigation
water reuse
policy
health hazards
wastewater management
developing countries
wastewater irrigation
water reuse
policy
health hazards
wastewater management
developing countries
spellingShingle wastewater irrigation
water reuse
policy
health hazards
wastewater management
developing countries
wastewater irrigation
water reuse
policy
health hazards
wastewater management
developing countries
Qadir, Manzoor
Wichelns, Dennis
Raschid-Sally, Liqa
McCornick, Peter G.
Drechsel, Pay
Bahri, Akissa
Minhas, P.S.
The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
description The volume of wastewater generated by domestic, industrial and commercial sources has increased with population, urbanization, improved living conditions, and economic development. The productive use of wastewater has also increased, as millions of small-scale farmers in urban and peri-urban areas of developing countries depend on wastewater or wastewater polluted water sources to irrigate high-value edible crops for urban markets, often as they have no alternative sources of irrigation water. Undesirable constituents in wastewater can harm human health and the environment. Hence, wastewater irrigation is an issue of concern to public agencies responsible for maintaining public health and environmental quality. For diverse reasons, many developing countries are still unable to implement comprehensive wastewater treatment programs. Therefore in the near term, risk management and interim solutions are needed to prevent adverse impacts from wastewater irrigation. A combination of source control, and farm-level and post-harvest measures can be used to protect farm workers and consumers. The WHO guidelines revised in 2006 for wastewater use suggest measures beyond the traditional recommendations of producing only industrial or non-edible crops, as in many situations it is impossible to enforce a change in the current cash crop pattern, or provide alternative vegetable supply to urban markets. There are several opportunities for improving wastewater management via improved policies, institutional dialogues and financial mechanisms, which would reduce the risks in agriculture. Effluent standards combined with incentives or enforcement can motivate improvements in water management by household and industrial sectors discharging wastewater from point sources. Segregation of chemical pollutants from urban wastewater facilitates treatment and reduces risk. Strengthening institutional capacity and establishing links between water delivery and sanitation sectors through inter-institutional coordination leads to more efficient management of wastewater and risk reduction.
format Journal Article
topic_facet wastewater irrigation
water reuse
policy
health hazards
wastewater management
developing countries
author Qadir, Manzoor
Wichelns, Dennis
Raschid-Sally, Liqa
McCornick, Peter G.
Drechsel, Pay
Bahri, Akissa
Minhas, P.S.
author_facet Qadir, Manzoor
Wichelns, Dennis
Raschid-Sally, Liqa
McCornick, Peter G.
Drechsel, Pay
Bahri, Akissa
Minhas, P.S.
author_sort Qadir, Manzoor
title The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
title_short The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
title_full The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
title_fullStr The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed The challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
title_sort challenges of wastewater irrigation in developing countries
publishDate 2010
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/40537
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