When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gulu Water Supply and Sanitation Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulu_Water_Supply_and...

    Another component of Phase I, is the building of a new sewage treatment plant in a neighborhood of Gulu called Cubu. New sewage piping to 200 new connections expanded the waste collection and disposal system in the city. Forty-two new public toilets were constructed, capable of accommodating 250 individuals at the same time.

  3. Bugoloobi Wastewater Treatment Plant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugoloobi_Wastewater...

    Bugoloobi Wastewater Treatment Plant (BWTP), also Bugoloobi Sewerage Treatment Plant (BSTP), is a wastewater treatment project in Uganda. It is the largest wastewater treatment plant in the countries of the East African Community , and capable of processing 45,000,000 liters (45,000 m 3 ) of wastewater daily.

  4. Water supply and sanitation in Uganda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_supply_and...

    NWSC Sewage ponds in Katete in Mbarara in western Uganda near River Rwizi. As of 2012, 90 percent of the collected wastewater of Kampala was discharged without any treatment. NWSC operates a small conventional sewage treatment plant in Kampala and another in Masaka. [22] In the case of Kampala, the wastewater is discharged into the Nakivubo ...

  5. Water pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_pricing

    Within this choice set, the preferred water tariff depends on multiple factors including: the goals of water pricing; the capacity of a water services supplier to allocate its costs, to price water, and to collect revenues from its customers; the price responsiveness of water consumers; and what is considered to be a fair or just water tariff.

  6. Water tariff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_tariff

    The term is also often applied to wastewater tariffs. Water and wastewater tariffs are not charged for water itself, but to recover the costs of water treatment, water storage, transporting it to customers, collecting and treating wastewater, as well as billing and collection. Prices paid for water itself are different from water tariffs.

  7. Simplified sewerage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simplified_sewerage

    Schematic of a simplified sewer: Smaller diameter pipes are laid at a shallower depth and at a flatter gradient than for conventional sewers. [1]Simplified sewerage, also called small-bore sewerage, is a sewer system that collects all household wastewater (blackwater and greywater) in small-diameter pipes laid at fairly flat gradients.

  8. Effluent sewer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effluent_sewer

    Effluent sewer systems are a much less common sewage disposal method than gravity sewer systems that use gravity, as well as pumping where needed, to send raw sewage and other wastewater straight from consumers to a sewage treatment plant. There are two main types of gravity sewers, sanitary and combined. Sanitary sewers only treat the ...

  9. Sanitary engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanitary_engineering

    An example of a wastewater treatment system. Sanitary engineering, also known as public health engineering or wastewater engineering, is the application of engineering methods to improve sanitation of human communities, primarily by providing the removal and disposal of human waste, and in addition to the supply of safe potable water.