印度有多少废水未经处理?
How Much Of India's Wastewater Is Left Untreated?

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/how-much-indias-wastewater-left-untreated

在包括印度在内的快速发展中国家,由于人口高速增长和城市化,废水管理成为一项挑战。 仅在德里,就有一些地区的污水未经处理,流经充满塑料和污水的露天排水沟。 尽管污水处理厂从2014年的525座增加到2020年的1093座,但水处理的需求远远超过供应。 印度每天产生约 724 亿升废水,主要集中在马哈拉施特拉邦、北方邦、泰米尔纳德邦和古吉拉特邦。 然而,处理设施只能处理总量的 37% 左右,从而导致传染病以及食物和水源污染等健康危害。 尽管提供更清洁的水和改善卫生设施的努力有所增加,例如印度的 Swachh Bharat 运动,但到 2022 年,超过四分之三的农村家庭缺乏基本的卫生设施,而近三分之一的农村家庭无法使用肥皂和水的洗涤设施。

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原文

As is the case with rapid population growth and urbanization in many so-called developing nations, waste management becomes a problem not only in rural areas but also in densely populated cities.

As Statista's Florian Zandt details below, a textbook example of this growth outpacing infrastructural capacities is the situation in urban hotspots in India like Delhi, where a report by Euronews from May 2023 mentions neighborhoods with "open gutters [...] filled with plastic and grey-colored water". While the number of operational sewage treatment plants doubled between 2014 and 2020, the capacity for water treatment is still severely lacking.

Infographic: How Much of India's Wastewater Is Left Untreated? | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

According to the latest annual report by the Central Pollution Control Board, India generated 72.4 billion liters of wastewater per day across all provinces, with Maharashtra (9.1 billion), Uttar Pradesh (8.3 billion), Tamil Nadu (6.4 billion) and Gujarat (5.0 billion) being responsible for around 40 percent of wastewater.

The 1,093 sewage treatment plants only had operational capacities of 26.9 billion liters of wastewater per day, with around 400 plants either non-operational or under construction as of the latest available tally from 2020/2021. This translates to only 37 percent of sewage being treated, exacerbating the risks of communicable diseases and contaminated food and drinking water.

While India is seemingly hard-pressed to keep up with the amount of wastewater its population generates, measures to grant more people access to potable water and basic sanitation and hygiene were scaled up significantly in recent decades. For example, the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan campaign, translatable to Clean India, initiated in 2014 aims to eliminate open defecation by installing upwards of 100 million toilets in the country.

Nevertheless, in 2022, only 75 percent of rural Indian households had at least basic access to sanitation, while 30 percent of homes didn't have their own washing facility with soap and water according to data from the WHO and Unicef's Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene.

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