Tuesday, March 8, 2011
GlobalNet21 - a network for the 21st Century
GlobalNet21 started as 21st Century Network in April 2007 to discuss some of the great issues of the 21st century and then follow this up with further debate and action. It is about enlarging the Public Square where debate takes place using social networks to bring new audiences of people into that debate.
GlobalNet21 believes that the coming century will be one of the most critical facing the human race and that if we do not tackle the great inequalities within societies and between them then the future will be one of conflict and turmoil. GlobalNet21 embraces the humanistic values of global compassion, personal self-discovery, shared development, planetary concern and a love of community; and it is committed to a more equal society where all are valued.
thanks to:
a) Kunihiko Kato, my japanese collegue and friends:
His new web site is also in english. He works on Reed NET Co, Ltd http://reed-net.com/eindex.php.
He build and make research on treatment wetlands for animal and agroindustry wastewaters. His wetlands are really good and treat a lot!
b) rainbow water coalition:
http://rainbowwatercoalition.blogspot.com: a beautiful, complete and really interesting blog with a lot of news on greywater. The Rainbow Water Coalition received an honorable mention as one of the top 30 water blogs. See all the winners at http://www.siswebs.org/water/story.php?title=30_Best_Water_Blogs.
Take a look to the interesting "Colors of water"
The full post ( http://rainbowwatercoalition.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2011-01-22T10:22:00-08:00&max-results=5
c) landscape architecture:
http://landscapearchitecture.tumblr.com/: Thanks for put into this web a link to the post of the modular system for stormwater treatment.
Monday, March 7, 2011
what about on google search?
[Ferrari have 193.000.000 pages, Paris Hilton 64.100.000 pages, Cannondale bikes 8.700.000 pages, Activated sludges 2.640.000 pages, Solar panel 6.970.000 pages]
results for " special offer" on wetland design
Monday, January 10, 2011
special offers for January and February 2011
CONTACT ME I will tell you which could be the best treatment wetland systems for your needs, I'll tell you the surface need, the management needs and more.
After this first stage we can build up together an executive project, the engeneering aspect and search funds (if available) or still be friends!!
greetings and all the best
Saturday, January 8, 2011
treatment wetlands and winery wastewaters
Treatment wetland for winery wastewater in central Italy (one month after planting) |
Friday, January 7, 2011
more than 6750 pages view...
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Vetiver: sewage and wastewater treatment in Banda Aceh
A summary from "Assessment of Sanitation Standards in Reconstruction in Aceh" by Norm van’t Hof - www.bicg.org :
• In the majority of reconstruction projects, sanitation systems, which comply with Indonesian Law or effectively protect public and environmental health, were not installed.
• Assessment results indicate that, in most cases, International Aid & Development Organizations & Agencies were not able to implement legal/sustainable sanitation systems. This illuminates a skills-gap in a core technical sector of International Aid and Development.
• A few reconstruction projects did successfully implement sustainable/legal sanitation systems.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
VETIVER plant and wastewater treatment
This plant have a long and strong root system that is usually use for soil erosion control, slope protection, agriculture improvement and also wastewater treatment.
The Vetiver grass will tolerate high levels of nitrates, phosphates, heavy metals, and agricultural chemicals. Can be used for treating wastewater, rehabilitating mine tailings, stabilizing landfills and general rubbish dumps. The plants takes up the toxic materials and confines the contaminates to the effected area.
Here below some photos about applications for water treatment:
(photo: Truong, THE VETIVER SYSTEM | FOR | IMPROVING WATER QUALITY) |
I also use vetiver in a research for aquaculture wastewater treatment with floating wetlands.
And the Dick Grimshaw (Founder and Chairman of The Vetiver Network International) send me, when I was an university student, a lot of books and paper related to vetiver plants and his use. It was 1995.
More dwnld books and publications, photos and articles could be found at http://www.vetiver.org/g/pubs.htm
More on applications and all about THE VETIVER SYSTEM at www.vetiver.org
Natural wetlands and Human population
Wetlands and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
Understanding the linkages
From Chapter 1 - Introduction:
" People’s health and well being are influenced by water supply, sanitation and hygiene WASH). Interventions to improve these have long been an important aspect of the development agenda. Such interventions are normally based on a community’s needs and local conditions, but in the past they have generally not taken into account linkages with and effects upon the surrounding natural environment and its water sources. Yet WASH interventions interact with natural water sources, such as wetlands in a number of ways:
1. water resources, of a certain quality, are tapped as a source of water inflow;
2. waste flows, usually in the form of lower quality water, are produced and discharged;
3. the natural system receiving the discharge is often either the same as, or connected upstream or downsteam, to the original water resource.
from Box 4.1 The capacity of wetlands to treat waste water
"When a critically high load of pollutants enters a wetland it changes the balance between the various naturally occurring processes. If its treatment capacity is rapidly exceeded, the ecology of the wetland system can exhibit a sudden, drastic change often involving a shift in species dominance and species composition. If there is a steady overloading of the system, this can result in a gradual shift in species composition that will slowly compromise the ability of the wetland to provide water treatment and degrade the important provisioning services of the wetland, such as fish production".
Wetlands International, 2010. Wetlands & Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) - understanding the linkages.
Wetlands International, Ede, The Netherlands.
Published by Wetlands International www.wetlands.org
Thursday, December 30, 2010
treatment wetlands on landscapearchitecture.tumblr.com/
http://landscapearchitecture.tumblr.com/
xxx
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
a good example from Germany!
Technology Review | Constructed wetlands
Overview of subsurface flow constructed wetlands for greywater and domestic wastewater t reatment in developing countries.
From the foreword:
"This publication is an important contribution of the GTZ program “Sustainable sanitation – ecosan” towards the topic of constructed wetlands in developing countries as it provides valuable guidance on using this technology in developing countries for domestic wastewater treatment. The program is commissioned by the German Federal
Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).
The ecological sanitation (ecosan) approach is able to address both: child health which needs to be improved through better household sanitation and wastewater treatment, and sustainable management and safe recycling".
A very beautiful and interesting publication that reports a lot of examples, a complete summary on wetland treatment systems and the best pre.treament, and a full bibliography.!!!
You can find it here:
http://www.susana.org/docs_ccbk/susana_download/2-930-gtz2010-en-technology-review-constructed-wetlands.pdf
Sunday, December 12, 2010
The ZER0-m Project
On the other side wastewater shall be treated specifically for the planned reuse purpose. All resources contained in the wastewater, namely water and nutrients, shall be reused. The aim is to introduce "low tech - high concept" solutions developed for small communities.
- constructed wetlands
- anaerobic digestion
- biomembrane treatment
- waste stabilisation ponds
- composting of sludge and night soil
- reuse of treated wastewater for minor domestic purposes as flushing, garden watering but also crop irrigation or landscaping.
- reuse of nutrients in agriculture and gardening
- rainwater harvesting and reuse options
THE SCIENCE BARGE - NEW YORK


Greywater Reuse
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
treatment wetlands are a good option after natural disasters
Decentralised wastewater management using constructed wetlands in Nepal
Monday, November 29, 2010
Europe Aid - brief summary of Dr. Koos Richelle and Gary Quince

Sunday, November 28, 2010
the United Nations MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
What about the Millenium Development goals (http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals)....great targets but how many of these are really accessible with this Society?
for example the 2010 target 7B Reduce biodiversity loss, achieving, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of loss:
- The world has missed the 2010 target for biodiversity conservation, with potentially grave consequences
- Key habitats for threatened species are not being adequately protected
- The number of species facing extinction is growing by the day, especially in developing countries
- Overexploitation of global fisheries has stabilized, but steep challenges remain to ensure their sustainability
- The world is on track to meet the drinking water target, though much remains to be done in some regions
- Accelerated and targeted efforts are needed to bring drinking water to all rural households
- Safe water supply remains a challenge in many parts of the world
- With half the population of developing regions without sanitation, the 2015 target appears to be out of reach
- Disparities in urban and rural sanitation coverage remain daunting
- Improvements in sanitation are bypassing the poor
Monday, October 18, 2010
NEWS: the modular system for stormwater treatment
Saturday, October 16, 2010
significant systems in Hokkaido... they work very well!!!



Thursday, October 14, 2010
small treatment wetland


wastewater gardens international
Sunday, July 25, 2010
project Fitosuini
Thursday, June 17, 2010
the best Treatment wetlands books
I list below the best books you can use for design and understand the wetland systems (buy online onhttp://www.amazon.com/ orhttp://www.ibs.it/):
Constructed Wetlands in the Sustainable Landscape
(Craig S. Campbell, Michael Ogden)
Treatment Wetlands, Second Edition
(Robert H. Kadlec, Scott d Wallace)
Biogeochemistry of Wetlands: Science and Applications
(K. Ramesh Reddy, Ronald D. DeLaune)
Wetland Plants: Biology and Ecology
(Julie K. Cronk , M. Siobhan Fennessy)
Wastewater Treatment in Constructed Wetlands with Horizontal Sub-Surface Flow (Environmental Pollution)
(Jan Vymazal, Lenka Kröpfelová)
Small Scale Constructed Wetland Treatment Systems: Feasibility, Design Criteria and O&M Requirements (Werf Reports)
Efficient Management of Wastewater, Its Treatment and Reuse in Water Scarce Countries”,
(Al Baz Ismail, Otterpohl Ralf, Wendland Claudia)
Friday, June 11, 2010
Constructing a wetland model
Time requirement
- Preparation time: 2-3 hours (incl. shopping)
- Teaching time: 1.5 hours
Material requirement
- 1 transparent plastic box 35*23*31cm
- 15 kg of gravel 4-16mm
- 25 litre of expanded clay (LECA) 1-4 mm
- 2 plastic buckets (10 litres)
- 25 cm transparent plastic hoses, diameter 20 mm
- 1 plastic water tap (with screw and nut)
- 1 measure cup 1 litre
- 1 measuring tape (tailor)
- 1 roll adhesive tape
- plants: e.g. indoor plants,
Umbrella Papyrus (Cyperus alternifolius), rush (Juncus spec.) - additional equipment (scissors, pen, sponge, towel, paper, etc.)