Wastewater Treatment
Wastewater treatment is the separation and extraction of solid waste from liquid waste, and the removal of nutrients and pathogens.
Wastewater treatment is the separation and extraction of solid waste from liquid waste, and the removal of nutrients and pathogens.
Most of our wastewater is domestic sewage discharged into the environment daily from kitchens, bathrooms, laundries, and toilets. Domestic wastewater flows through networks of pipes and pump stations to central wastewater treatment plants, where it is treated before being discharged to land or water. Industrial and commercial industries also discharge large quantities of wastewater that is usually first treated on site. Domestic rural wastewater is usually also treated on-site in septic systems.
Wastewater treatment stations significantly impact the environment and require a Resource Consent to discharge into water, the air, or on to land.
Kaitiaki Tools will help you identify activities and environmental impacts specifically related to wastewater treatment.
- Mitigation and best practice options
- What is Kaitiaki Tools?
- What is the proposed activity or industry?
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What impacts interest you?
- Chemical contamination
- Mitigation and best practice options
- Dissolved oxygen
- Infectious substances
- Instream barriers and altered water flow
- Modified habitat
- Nutrient overloading
- Sediment
- Temperature changes
- Water clarity
- Loss of riparian vegetation
- Mahinga kai - what species interests you?
- About the resource consent process
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Wastewater treatment activities
Rural, urban, and suburban wastewater treatment methods. -
Impacts of wastewater treatment
How does wastewater treatment impact water quality and mahinga kai?