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Sanitation Systems

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Reduce nutrient pollution to the environment ... In the pit, excreta undergoes decomposition into humus-like solids, water, and gases; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sanitation Systems


1
Sanitation Systems
  • Issues for Consideration

2
To remember before we start on technology
  • Remember not just for the adults
  • Very context specific
  • Large number of taboos and difficulties in
    researching defecation behavior
  • Few people care about sanitation

3
Waste to be managed
  • Managing human and animal excreta
  • Solid waste management
  • run-off drainage

4
Sanitation of human excreta
  • Why
  • Minimize risk of disease transmission
  • Ease and privacy to users
  • Reduce nutrient pollution to the environment
  • Recycle nutrients of value to agriculture or fish
    production
  • Reducing smell and files
  • Managing a by product (150g-500g faeces and 1l to
    1.5l of urine per day)

5
Excreta Disposal
  • For a sanitation facility to protect public
    health it needs to (Carr and Strauss 2002)
  • Isolate the user from their own excreta
  • Isolate communities from exposure to excreta
    (e.g. through contaminated drinking water)
  • Prevent nuisance animals (e.g. flies) from
    contacting the excreta and subsequently
    transmitting disease to humans
  • Contain the excreta and/or inactivate the
    pathogens.

6
Sanitation of Human Excreta
  • Decomposition process
  • anaerobic
  • aerobic

7
Classification of Sanitation Systems
  • on site/off site
  • wet/dry
  • permeable/confined

8
Classification of Sanitation Systems
  • on-site systems in which safe disposal of
    excreta takes place on or near the housing plot
    pit latrines and septic tanks fall into this
    category.
  • Some on-site systems, particularly in densely
    populated regions, require off-site treatment
    components as well. For example, the faecal
    sludges accumulating in single pit or vault
    latrines in urban areas and in septic tanks
    periodically need to be removed and treated
    off-site for use or disposal
  • Off-site systems in which excreta are collected
    from individual houses and carried away from the
    plot to be disposed of sewerage is the most
    important option in this category.

9
On Site Sanitation
  • Show graphs

10
On Site Sanitation
  • With respect to a simple pit latrine or a VIP pit
    latrine discuss advantages /disadvantages
  • protection of population from transmission?
  • cost, maintenance and management?
  • Social, gender and cultural aspects?
  • Soil and water aspects?

11
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12
On Site Sanitation - Pit Latrine
  • Relatively low cost and limited organizational
    capacity needed
  • Superstructure can be made from locally available
    materials and by household members
  • Slaps may require inputs from outside
  • Superstructure affords privacy to the user and
    can be made child friendly
  • Design and location determines use
  • Relatively safe disposal into a hole and limited
    occupational risk
  • Because of the long storage time in the pit,
    disease-causing organisms (pathogens) are
    eventually killed
  • Relatively small volume of water used
  • Liquid is allowed to seep from the pit into the
    surrounding ground but may results in local
    contamination of water sources
  • In the pit, excreta undergoes decomposition into
    humus-like solids, water, and gases

13
Problems with - Pit latrines?
  • Pit latrines are smelly and attract flies?
  • Pit latrines cannot be used on small plots?
  • On-site systems pollute groundwater?

14
Communal Sanitation Facilities
  • With respect to communal pit latrines discuss
    advantages/disadvantages
  • protection of population from transmission?
  • cost, maintenance and management?
  • Social, gender and cultural aspects?
  • Soil and water aspects?

15
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16
On Site Sanitation - Septic tank
  • Show graphs

17
On Site Sanitation - Septic tank
  • With respect to septic tanks discuss
    advantages/disadvantages
  • protection of population from transmission?
  • cost, maintenance and management?
  • Social, gender and cultural aspects?
  • Soil and water aspects?

18
On Site Sanitation - Septic tank
  • Relatively expensive
  • Comprises a sealed tank having both an inlet and
    an outlet into which excreta are flushed from a
    conventional cistern flush toilet.
  • In the tank, solids settle out and undergo a
    process of anaerobic decomposition resulting in
    the production of water, gases, sludge, and a
    layer of floating scum.
  • The effluent which flows out of the septic tank
    is commonly disposed of through absorption into
    the ground using a soakage pit or trench (may
    require a large area of land).

19
Off Site Sanitation
  • With respect to simplified sewerage discuss
    advantages/disadvantages
  • protection of population from transmission?
  • cost, maintenance and management?
  • waste treatment?
  • Social, gender and cultural aspects?
  • Soil and water aspects?

20
Approaches to sanitation promotion
  • Identifying key target groups to be reached
  • Identifying core messages to be communicated
  • Awareness of the prevailing socio-cultural
    framework, to understand what motivates people to
    invest
  • Consideration of sanitation as a consumer good,
    not just as a potential health benefit
  • Use a mix of communication methods, with simple
    language and clear messages
  • Identify cost-effective means of communication
  • Encourage the widest possible stakeholder
    participation
  • Promote only appropriate technology (including
    gender and cost considerations)
  • Consider demand based approaches

21
Demand based approach
  • Demand based approaches focus on what people
    want, but are limited by what they know. Two
    steps to be taken
  • Establish demand assessments need to be made to
    see whether households want improved sanitation
    where people do not show through their actions
    that they want sanitation it will be necessary to
    stimulate demand through promotion campaigns
  • Inform demand demand may not be realistic once
    it has been established. Potential users may have
    an incomplete understanding of options open to
    them, the likely costs and benefits. Unrealistic
    expectations about who pays for the desired
    service will also need to be addressed.
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