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New Delhi, India — Mohammed Azhar holds his baby niece next to a storm drain full of plastic and stinking black sludge, testament to India's failure to treat nearly two-thirds of its urban sewage.
Existing sewage treatment plants in Dhaka treat only 30% of all sewage waste. Emerging pollutants such as antibiotics, microplastics, detergents, toothpastes, shampoos and lotion are found in ...
Second, recycling wastewater and sludge – Sewage recycling already occurs in some form in India today. Nutrient-rich wastewater is applied directly to agriculture as at the KC Valley-Kolar ...
The significance of urban sanitation in India encompasses public health, environmental sustainability, and quality of life, and faces grave challenges. Projects Images Products & BIM Professionals ...
India’s water and wastewater treatment market is the fifth largest globally, worth around $11 billion. It’s projected to reach $18 billion by 2026, according to the International Trade ...
The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors today approved a new program to improve water security for more than four million residents in India’s tech capital, Bengaluru, in the southern state of ...
According to a Times of India report, the Jharia Master Plan, aimed at controlling underground fires and rehabilitating ...
India's sewerage system does not connect to about two-thirds of its urban homes, according to the National Faecal Sludge and Septage Management Alliance (NFSSM). Many of the sewage treatment plants in ...