The survey found
that 1.1m urban farmers used wastewater
for irrigation |
Urgent action is needed to
remove pollutants from urban wastewater, which is
often used in cities to grow food, an
international study has warned.
Data collected by the International Water
Management Institute (IWMI) found that 85% of
cities discharged the water without any
appropriate treatment.
With many developing nations swiftly
urbanising, the authors said people were at
increasing risk of disease.
The findings are being presented at an
international water summit in Sweden.
"As the world flips over from a
predominantly rural to a predominantly urban
population base, cities are going to take more
and more water for agriculture," explained
IWMI director general Colin Chartres.
"However, most of the water going into
urban areas comes out the other end in the sewers,"
he told BBC News.
"We know that there is an informal sector
within many cities that is using [wastewater] to
grow vegetables, but there has been no data on
how much of this water was being used or what the
risks were."
Waste not, want not
The study, based on case studies from 53
cities in developing nations, examined where
wastewater was being generated, how much was
being used in urban agriculture, and to what
degree the water was being treated.
Food irrigated
with wastewater can ease the pressure on
supplies |
With increasing food prices and growing
concerns about water scarcity, the authors of the
report highlighted a number of benefits of using
wastewater to irrigate crops.
They said that it allowed food production in
places where there was a lack of water, or where
no alternative clean water sources were available.
It also recycled nutrients, meaning that
farmers did not have to buy expensive fertilisers.
And irrigating farmland with wastewater also
has environmental benefits, explained Dr Chartres.
"It is a pretty useful way of treating
water in the sense that if the water just went
straight into a river, it would cause a lot more
eutrophication problems further downstream.
"So in a way it is performing an
ecological service by cleaning up some of the
water and recycling the nutrients." Samples of wastewater
taken at regular intervals from a river in India,
showing how the water gets cleaner as it flows
through natural wetlands
However, Dr Chartres warned that using
wastewater for irrigation was not risk free,
especially as the world became more urbanised.
"If this practice is going to be
increasingly commonplace and more and more people
are going to be eating food produced this way,
then there needs to be a bit more concern about
the heavy metals and other contaminants in there.
|
WHAT IS
WASTEWATER? Urban wastewater
is usually a combinations of one or more
of the following: domestic effluent,
including "blackwater" (excreta,
urine) and "greywater" (water
from kitchen sinks etc) water from
commercial buildings and institutions, eg
hospitals industrial effluent storm and
other urban run-off (Source: IWMI) |
"Ideally, the end product should be
treating the water to a standard that means there
is no risk, but most developing nations cannot
afford to do this.
"Apparently, what happens now in areas
with very polluted water is that the farmers do a
smell test or a taste test," he added.
"If the water tastes too foul or smells
too bad, then they won't use it to irrigate their
crops - but that's a pretty dangerous way to go
about things."
The IWMI report found that wastewater was
being used in 80% of the cities surveyed.
This equated to 5.6 million farmers and family
members dependent upon the wastewater in order to
earn a living.
It added that very often industrial and
domestic waste streams were mixed together.
Ensuring the two were kept apart would reduce the
risks from chemical contamination.
"It is really just about minimising the
risks from field to fork with a series of simple
measures," Dr Chartres explained.
"[These include] letting the water settle
in a pond, so a lot of the eggs from worms drop
out of the water, and irrigating around the crops
rather than on top of them.
"When the crop is harvested, it also
needs to be washed with fresh, clean water in the
market, and that water needs to be constantly
changed so everything else is not contaminated."
The authors said that the international
community needed to develop policies and
practices to reduce the health and environmental
risks, while maintaining the financial and food
production benefits.
The findings are being presented at the World
Water Week summit in Stockholm, Sweden - a week-long
conference attended by water and sanitation
experts from more than 140 countries.
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