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Key criteria for considering decentralization in municipal wastewater management

Diana Paola Bernal, Inés Restrepo, Simón Grueso-Casquete

2021Heliyon63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wastewater pollution problems are associated with population growth and the concentration of population in large urban centers. According to United Nations projections for 2050, the world population will reach 9 billion people, increasing the pressures on water resources due to their demand and pollution. Based on UNICEF and World Health Organization estimates, 2.4 billion people worldwide currently lack access to improved sanitation facilities, with 946 million practicing open defecation. Decentralized wastewater treatment systems are a viable and necessary alternative for wastewater management, thus, minimizing environmental impacts, facilitating resource recovery, and providing rural and peri-urban inhabitants with access to basic sanitation. This literature review article uses the multicriteria analysis tool to present the key economic, institutional, social, environmental, and technological aspects, criteria, and indicators that must be considered for successful decentralized system implementation planning to strengthen basic sanitation service coverage in the rural and peri-urban areas where it does not exist.

Topics & Concepts

DecentralizationKey (lock)WastewaterProcess managementEngineeringEnvironmental planningEngineering managementPublic administrationPolitical scienceWaste managementEnvironmental scienceComputer scienceComputer securityLawWastewater Treatment and ReuseChild Nutrition and Water AccessWater resources management and optimization
Key criteria for considering decentralization in municipal wastewater management | Litcius