A kit designed to treat household waste water for reuse could be one of the ways to tackle water scarcity in rural areas of the Middle East and North Africa, according to a Canadian organisation.
"This is a household-based technology mainly for rural areas to treat grey water that comes from the kitchen sink and bath for re-use," said Hammou Laamrani, project coordinator at the Regional Water Demand Initiative [WaDImena] of the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), based in Canada.
[...] The kit consists of two large PVC barrels about 1.2m high, each able to contain up to 200 litres of water, pipes and sand. Before reaching the barrels, the waste water goes through a separate filter where things like small bits of food are removed. The barrels are filled with sand; there is an anaerobic digestion of the organic matter when the water goes through the sand filter and becomes cleaner.
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