
STPs in Bangalore
Difference between STPs in Bangalore and WTPs in Bangalore?
What happens to the Sewage generated by our society?
The sewage treatment process involves converting effluent into relatively cleaner water before it is released into water bodies. STPs serve useful in restoring the groundwater balance, preventing the spread of waterborne diseases, and reducing environmental and water pollution. They can also be applicable in residential apartments, where the treated water could be utilized for activities like gardening, washing cars, construction, irrigation, and toilet flushing. It would save houses from spending money on water tankers due to the abundant availability of groundwater at macro levels and reusable water at community levels.
How do sewage treatment plants function?
Wastewater entering an STP plant goes through four phases of treatment: preliminary, primary, secondary, and tertiary.
Preliminary and Primary phases
During preliminary treatment or screening and filtration, coarse solid particles such as grits, tree branches, plastics, etc. are removed. The wastewater then undergoes primary treatment, a process that takes place within sedimentation tanks. The organic and inorganic wastes are separated and the water is free from 60% of the solids that are collected as sludge.
Secondary and Tertiary treatment
The effluent is released into a secondary clarifier that separates biological floc from the liquid by aerobic or anaerobic processes. Up to 90% of cleaning occurs during this phase. Tertiary treatment reduces pathogens and inorganic compounds by disinfecting water through the use of chemicals, UV light, or micro-filtration. The sludge collected throughout the treatment is treated in digesting tanks before use as fertilizer. The treated effluent is then safely disposed of.
STPs in Bangalore
Problems with STPs
The downstream equipment may fail due to a build-up of materials such as paper, wood, and plastic, which may contribute to problems such as wear and tear, or pipe blockage. The treated effluent may not meet the necessary standards for nitrogen, phosphorous, and other parameters, including BOD (biological oxygen demand). As a result, there may be excess ammonia in the treated effluent and biofilm formation.Health Risk from STPs
Why is it important to test STP-treated effluent?
Legislative standards for regulating STPs in Bangalore
Need for Norms
The design and fabrication of STPs must undergo frequent quality checks and strict regulations need to be implemented. Treated effluent released from STPs should comply with the standards established by the State Pollution Control Board of Bangalore (KSPCB) to avoid environmental and public health problems.Involvement of KSPCB
Section 17 of the Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 has defined various measures that can be undertaken by State boards for regulating the design and fabrication of STPs. KSPCB can monitor STPs for compliance with these regulations, conduct inspection and approval of new STPs, train operators, and make people aware of the importance of STPs and the regulation standards.”Approval Process
The STP-approval process has two stages: CFE (consent for establishment) to the developer and CFO (consent for operation). The CFO authorizes developers to operate STPs. KSPCB would inspect STPs annually for problems related to ageing and overuse. It can then extend one’s CFO till another year if the STPs successfully qualify for the inspection phase. STPs help in treating sewage water and plants can be installed even in residential societies. The treated water can be recycled and used for household purposes. However, regular testing of STP water and equipment is essential to maintain the quality and standard norms of STP water. Incepbio provides STP and WTP services for assisting with the treatment of wastewater and following the legislative standards of compliance.Turning a blind eye to proper sewage treatment & testing only creates more health issues in the society

