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Water treatment plant to help reduce pollution in Lake Tuz

Pollution levels at Lake Tuz are expected to dip when a treatment plant begins operating at full capacity in the near future.
Pollution levels at Lake Tuz are expected to dip when a treatment plant begins operating at full capacity in the near future.
A wastewater treatment plant in the Central Anatolian province of Konya will soon start working at full capacity, leading to the reduction of pollution in Lake Tuz.

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Speaking to the Anatolia news agency, Hasan Küçükaydın, deputy manager of the provincial department of environment and forestry, said the Konya wastewater treatment plant constructed by the Konya Municipal Waterworks Authority (KOSKİ) was equipped with the latest technology.

The treatment plant has the capacity to clean 200,000 cubic meters per day and will help recycle domestic wastewater, reducing the amount of polluted water Lake Tuz receives through drainage channels coming from Beyşehir, Çumra and Cihanbeyli.

“Polluted water has been flowing into the lake through drainage channels due to insufficient rainfall over the last 15 years, particularly in winter. This threatens the environment for water birds such as flamingos and harms the lake's natural balance. Lake Tuz meets 64 percent of Turkey's salt needs, and the polluted water leads to the pollution of the salt we use in our homes. And this dirty water was being used for irrigation by neighborhood villages. We hope these environmental problems that threaten human life will disappear,” remarked Küçükaydın.

He also noted that the principal factor leading to pollution in Lake Tuz will be eliminated with the establishment of more wastewater treatment plants in the region. The plant is currently working at 50 percent capacity during its testing phase and will begin operating at full capacity shortly.

Industrial wastewater to be treated

The treatment plants working at present only clean domestic wastewater, but Küçükaydın said studies were under way by the Konya Organized Industrial Zone's administration to construct a plant to treat industrial waste.

The plant will start functioning in September and, along with the Konya sugar refinery that has been running for two years and the KOSKİ plant, they will contribute largely to the elimination of pollution in the lake.

New treatment plant will save water

The Konya sewage treatment plant, which is planned to come into service by September, will save 50 million cubic meters of water annually to be used in agriculture, Ahmet Sorgun, head of KOSKİ, said.

The sewage treatment plant was introduced to the press during World Environment Week. Emphasizing the importance of sewage treatment plants for residential areas, Sorgun said that the plant was necessary for the Konya basin because the region receives little rainfall. The underground water level has declined sharply, and the Konya region and its surroundings have the lowest surface water levels in Turkey. The plant has been under construction for four years, Sorgun said, and would begin to operate by the end of June. He emphasized the importance of the work the plant will do in terms of the environment as the treated water will be used for agricultural purposes. The plant, which cost $28.5 million and covers 750,000 square meters, has state of the art technology; 80 percent of the energy needed will be produced by the plant itself.

Mentioning the public's rising awareness of the necessity for water conservation, especially among primary school students, Sorgun said the amount of water used in primary schools dropped by 22 percent between 2007 and 2008. “In the Konya basin only 5 percent of water consumption is for domestic and industrial use -- 95 percent of water is used for agriculture. The primary savings should be made in agricultural irrigation.”

16 June 2009, Tuesday

TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES  KONYA

   

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