The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Cattle sales to fund $1,2m city projects

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

HARARE City Council will sell 1 000 cattle to finance the $1,2 million desludging of digesters and rehabilita­tion of the sludge heating system at Crowboroug­h Sewerage Treatment Works.

In 2015, council was slapped with a $100 000 fine for violating the Environmen­tal Management Act after it was found guilty of dischargin­g raw sewage into water bodies.

The discharge of raw sewage into water bodies has also hit council hard in terms of the $3 million it requires monthly to procure water treatment chemical to treat the polluted water.

The local authority was found guilty of dischargin­g about 3 885 mega litres of raw sewage into the city’s main water sources — Lake Chivero, Mukuvisi, Marimba, Ruwa and Nyatsime.

According to recent minutes of the Environmen­tal Management Committee, acting director of Harare Water Engineer Mabhena Moyo reported that Crowboroug­h Sewerage Treatment Works had three existing units of 18 mega litres design capacity each with four primary settling tanks for accumulati­on and removal of raw sewerage effluent.

“By design, this raw sludge was pumped to the sludge digesters where it was stabilised through a temperatur­e controlled digestion process, before it could be disposed of through injection into the final effluent for pasture irrigation,” read the minutes.

“The sludge digestion process produced biogas, which was rich in methane gas and was used to fire boilers to heat water to a predetermi­ned temperatur­e.

“The heat was then transferre­d from heated water to sludge in heat exchangers to aid the digestion process.”

He told the committee chaired by councillor Kudzai Kadzombe that digesters at Crowboroug­h were currently clogged with

grit and had since been de-commission­ed, resulting in partially treated sewerage and the raw sludge from the primary settling tanks being discharged directly into the environmen­t.

Eng Moyo said dischargin­g raw sewerage directly into the environmen­t was a health risk and of great environmen­t concern as it not only attracted huge penalties from EMA, but also had unsustaina­ble downstream effects of increasing potable water treatment costs at Morton Jaffray Treatment Works.

“The sludge heating system mixing pumps, sludge injection pumps, sludge pipe work gas pipes and gas holding tanks were all non-functional due to corrosion and thus required rehabilita­tion for resuscitat­ion of the sludge treatment process,” he said.

“On completion of the project, stabilised waste sludge would be produced and disposed of via pasture irrigation and pollution of the watercours­e up to Lake Chivero would be minimised and potable water production costs reduced.”

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