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Indian arsenic clean-up 'working well'

T. V. Padma

16 October 2009 | EN

Flickr/wester

[NEW DELHI] A new chemical-free method to remove arsenic from water is working well in pilot plants in India, scientists report.

The method, developed by a team of European and Indian scientists, was tested in six plants set up to supply safe arsenic-free water to Kasimpore village in India's West Bengal state, one of the most arsenic-contaminated sites in the world.

An estimated 140 million people in Asia are affected by arsenic contamination of groundwater. Chronic exposure can cause cancers of the skin, lungs, heart and kidneys.

The six plants produce 2,000 litres of safe drinking water, with arsenic levels of about two micrograms per litre. In Kasimpore, 70 per cent of tube wells have arsenic levels of 50 micrograms per litre of water, much higher than WHO guidelines of ten micrograms per litre.

The plants contain a spray nozzle or water jet air pump that sprays oxygen into aquifers, freeing the arsenic.
Treated water is pumped up from the aquifer into a storage tank, and distributed to nearby households through pipelines.

Bhaskar Sengupta, senior lecturer at the department of civil engineering at Queens University, United Kingdom, told SciDev.Net, that an added benefit is that the treatment kills most diarrhoea-causing bacteria in water so that less than one per 100 millilitres remain. "It is automatic disinfection," he says.

Sengupta says setting up a treatment plant could cost about US$2,200 and most of the parts can be purchased from local shops and installed by local plumbers and electricians. The operation cost is US$1 per day to produce 2,000 litres of clean water.

Mohammad Yunus, a senior scientist at the public health sciences division at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, says that, "overall, the technology seems to be simple and innovative and has potential for supplying arsenic safe water to mass people in affected areas".

But an objective evaluation of the plants for performance, operation and maintenance — as well as community participation — is essential before wider application of the technology, he adds.

The scientists published their findings online in Environmental Pollution last week (9 October). The project is funded by the European Commission.

Comments (3)

Sakthidaran R.T. ( India )

10 December 2009

Dear Editor,

This article is very appropriate for our country. Drinking water is scarce not just in villages and West Bengal but also in urban areas through out the country. It is interesting to note that a team of European and Indian scientists have established that "arsenic" can be removed by just passing air (containing "Oxygen") in to water. The operational cost is just 2.5 Paise/litre. This is the kind of socially relevant research that our universities should undertake. This scientific finding should be passed on to engineering design organizations to design cost effective and modular plants of different capacities. Then, the license to manufacture and sell such plants can be given to small industries through out the country.

Let us appreciate the European Foundation that has supported such a project.

Prof. R.T.Sakthidaran

Sandip Chatterjee ( India )

22 December 2009

I was impressed by the claims and immediately visited 2 of the 6 plants they are running, near Basirhat. We are the PHE Dept. in West Bengal and are implementing the largest arsenic mitigation project ever in the world. After that I have repeatedly contacted the scientist because we need dozens of such plants soon. The only problem is they have built on a pilot scale and our requirement is 10 to 100 times larger plants. Now the investigators are not interested to upscale their design or even sell their design to us for a scale up by us. A pity, since the tech is good. At the end of the day, only the people suffer.

Nripendra Kumar Sarma ( India )

8 December 2010

I would like to thank Mr. Sandip Chatterjee for his concern and efforts. However, I am surprised to know that the investigators are not interested to upscale their design to suit the demand of community. Perhaps, the design can suitably be upscaled for use at both household and community level and so my humble request to the investigators is to do the needful in this regard for the benefit of the mankind. But I would like to know something more on the logic behind the results from the socalled "automatic disinfection".

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