A Chinese expert has recently found a new way of
dealing with the mounting sludge produced in sewage treatment and
dumped in city suburbs amid rapid urbanization process.
Weng Huanxin, a professor with the Environmental and
Biological Geochemistry Institute of the Zhejiang University, east
China's Zhejiang Province, has developed a method of
transferring sludge into innoxious materials for bricks and cement
at a low cost.
Sludge is threatening to besiege more than 700 cities
in China. Beijing alone produces 1,000 tons of sludge a day,
Shanghai 700 tons and Shenzhen 300 tons.
It is estimated that China's sludge amount will rise
at an annual rate of 10 to 15 percent in the following years.
Beijing is expected to discharge more than 2 million tons of sewage
every day in 2008, which is likely to yield more than 2,000 tons of
sludge if all the sewage is treated.
Most of the sludge is just piled up in open air or
land filled, which occupies too much land and may cause pollution.
Direct burning will produce toxic fumes.
According to Weng's new technology, sludge can be
dried at a low temperature, under which toxic components are
permanently fixed and won't volatilize any more. It is then made
into hard bean-sized granules.
The granules, mixed with clays, can be burnt into
light-weight bricks. Since each granule contains 1,500 kilocalories
of heat, they themselves can contribute to burning and help save
fuels.
Meanwhile, small holes emerging inside the granules
after burning will reduce the weight of bricks and enhance their
resistance against pressure.
Weng said that a production line using the new
technology to deal with 100 tons of sludge a day will help save
about 1 million yuan (US$125,000) of landfill cost.
Statistics show that accumulating sludge is also
plaguing the United States and European countries. The United
States will see its sludge amount to 8.2 million tons in 2010, and
Britain produces about 1.1 million tons of thickened sludge every
year.
(Xinhua News Agency September 11, 2006)
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