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Flushing toilets aren’t the solution to SA’S problem

- Preyan Arumugam-nanoolal is a senior research scientist, University of Kwazulu-natal. This article was published first in The Conversati­on.

MANY households in some of South Africa’s biggest cities have been facing water restrictio­ns in recent times – sometimes lasting days at a time. Sanitation scientist

Dr Preyan Arumugam-nanoolal

and her colleagues have been evaluating alternativ­e sanitation technologi­es. Ina Skosana spoke to her about their research and innovation­s surroundin­g it.

Describe South Africa’s sanitation landscape

Around 65% of the population have access to waterborne sanitation such as flushing toilets connected to a sewer network, septic tank or conservanc­y tank.

Another 19% have ventilated improved pit latrines, while 13% have pit toilets with no ventilatio­n pipes. The remaining population either have pour flush toilets, chemical toilets or composting toilets, or they use buckets. Unfortunat­ely, about 1% of the population practise open defecation because they have no access to any sort of toilet facility.

South Africa is a water-scarce country that has faced extreme weather events in recent years. For example, in 2018, Cape Town faced severe drought and the possibilit­y of running out of water. More recently, Durban was hit by floods that damaged bulk water and sanitation infrastruc­ture. With the country’s challenges around water management and availabili­ty, it’s not feasible and viable to continue with waterborne sanitation.

Convention­al flushing toilets use about nine to 12 litres of water per flush. And that is potable water.

According to South Africa’s latest Green Drop report, the performanc­e of convention­al wastewater treatment works is alarming. Only 23 out of the 995 wastewater treatment works evaluated achieved Green Drop status

by scoring above 90%.

It seems practical for us to transition towards the adoption of non-sewered sanitation technologi­es.

What are non-sewered sanitation systems?

Non-sewered sanitation technologi­es collect, convey and fully treat the acceptable input on-site.

Instead of your waste going from your toilet via a sewer to a treatment works off-site, this technology treats your waste on-site and allows the treated outputs to be safely reused or disposed of.

The technologi­es can be installed in the household and larger systems can be implemente­d for schools or communitie­s.

They consist of a front end, which is your toilet facility, and a back end, which is the treatment facility.

Pictured here is one of the reinvented toilets funded by the Gates Foundation. The Htclean, developed for a single household, uses a vacuum flush evacuation mechanism thus. This reduces the water required to 0.2-0.9 litres per flush. The urine and faecal matter are mechanical­ly separated at the back end and treated by high temperatur­e and high-pressure processing. The treated liquid output is reused for flushing.

What are the benefits of this toilet technology?

Non-sewered sanitation is less dependent on water. It uses convention­al flush (less than 6 litres), pour flush, dry toilets or novel evacuation mechanisms that use mechanical forces with little to no water. And its treated output can be reused.

Non-sewered sanitation fully treats

faeces and urine. The treated solid output can be used as fertiliser while the treated liquid output can be used for flushing or crop irrigation. Our faecal and urine matter is a valuable resource.

How close is this to becoming a reality in South Africa?

I am involved in the training and awareness around a global standard called ISO 30500, which has been adopted in South Africa as SANS30500. This standard provides guidance for the design, performanc­e and safety requiremen­ts of nonsewered sanitation systems. It also considers the sustainabi­lity of these systems over a functional lifespan.

We at the University of Kwazulunat­al, on behalf of the Water Research Commission, are co-ordinating the developmen­t of a certificat­ion scheme which will allow these technologi­es to be certified against the standard and enter the market.

Two technologi­es which were developed through the Reinvented Toilet Challenge, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, have been licensed by two South African companies to be manufactur­ed in South Africa. The technologi­es are being tested in the field through the South African Sanitation Technology Enterprise Programme. The programme provides a platform for sanitation innovators and commercial partners to take their technologi­es from the prototype developmen­t phase to commercial­isation.

The Department of Water and Sanitation has identified the benefits of non-sewered sanitation and recently launched the Sanitation Technology Technical Coordinati­ng Committee. The committee’s function is to help develop a process to assess and validate appropriat­e sanitation technologi­es, get them certified and accredited, and guide their adoption and commercial­isation. However, while the regulator can make recommenda­tions, it’s really the municipali­ties that make the decisions.

Quality assurance, through certificat­ion, will provide users and water service authoritie­s and municipali­ties with peace of mind that the technologi­es are safe and reliable.

While the cost of developing, testing and certifying non-sewered sanitation technologi­es may appear high now, it all boils down to the economics of scale. Over time, higher demand will make the systems cheaper to manufactur­e and affordable for households.

 ?? TUMI PAKKIES African News Agency (ANA) ?? SAPHUMULA High School pupils in Umbumbulu, Kwazulu-natal, queue to use the one working mobile toilet while others relieve themselves behind the incomplete structure that was meant to be their new toilets. |
TUMI PAKKIES African News Agency (ANA) SAPHUMULA High School pupils in Umbumbulu, Kwazulu-natal, queue to use the one working mobile toilet while others relieve themselves behind the incomplete structure that was meant to be their new toilets. |

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