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Improving the efficiency and sustainability of disinfection at a small rural water treatment plant


MNB Momba
N Makala
Z Tyafa
BM Brouckaert
CA Buckley
PA Thompson

Abstract



The Alice Water Treatment Plant (AWTP) has several operating problems, which often result in poor turbidity removal and
inadequate disinfection residual. Some progress has been made in upgrading the skills of plant operators, but the plant performance
has failed to improve because of faulty equipment, a shortage of maintenance staff and treatment chemicals that are not delivered
in time. The coagulant-dosing pump was found to be malfunctioning for an extended period of time resulting in overdose problems.
The self-backwashing filters were no longer backwashing as per design and were producing poor quality filtrate. This in turn
increased the chlorine demand and combined with frequent failure of the chlorinators, the plant was producing poor microbiological quality final water. The storage system in the bulk distribution system was investigated and it was found that adequate chlorine
residual could be achieved, provided the plant problems were rectified. The difficulties experienced in training and retaining adequately skilled people to run water treatment plants in impoverished rural municipalities have been among the major hurdles
to providing acceptable water services in these areas. However a partnership between the Universities and the AWTP came up as a possible solution to these problems. It is therefore recommended that rural municipalities consider this approach and strengthen
this relationship, as it played a large role in plant improvement.

Water SA Vol. 30 (5) 2005: pp.69-74

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1816-7950
print ISSN: 0378-4738