Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo

In Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, nitrate concentrations above 250 mg L−1 in groundwater have been reported. This happens due to the widespread use of latrines and septic tanks that allow for constant infiltration of its content into the soil and eventually to groundwater sources, a situation th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: André Marques Arsénio, Iana Câmara Salim, Mingming Hu, Nelson Pedro Matsinhe, Ruth Scheidegger, Luuk Rietveld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/858
id doaj-97dac8b9b06c4dd2a1ebe8228feda6f4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-97dac8b9b06c4dd2a1ebe8228feda6f42020-11-24T22:50:45ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-03-0110385810.3390/su10030858su10030858Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in MaputoAndré Marques Arsénio0Iana Câmara Salim1Mingming Hu2Nelson Pedro Matsinhe3Ruth Scheidegger4Luuk Rietveld5Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Water Management, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CN, Delft, The NetherlandsLeiden University, Institute of Environmental Science (CML), 2300 RA, Leiden, The NetherlandsLeiden University, Institute of Environmental Science (CML), 2300 RA, Leiden, The NetherlandsFaculty of Engineering, Eduardo Mondlane University, 1100 Maputo, MozambiqueEawag, Department Systems Analysis, Integrated Assessment and Modelling, CH-8600 Dübendorf, SwitzerlandFaculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Water Management, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CN, Delft, The NetherlandsIn Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, nitrate concentrations above 250 mg L−1 in groundwater have been reported. This happens due to the widespread use of latrines and septic tanks that allow for constant infiltration of its content into the soil and eventually to groundwater sources, a situation that is widespread in the Global South and represents a serious threat for human health and for the environment. This is a reflection of limited access to safe and adequate sanitation services, which the local authorities have set to improve in the forthcoming decades with a recently commissioned city-wide sanitation masterplan serving as a basis for the works. In this article, we aimed at understanding whether the infrastructure projected in the masterplan would lead to a reduction of nitrogen reaching groundwater. Currently, according to our calculations, almost 500 tonnes of nitrogen reach the city’s groundwater sources each year, with the masterplan potentially resulting in a 14% reduction, a small reduction due to its reliance on maintaining and expanding fecal sludge services, without considering investments to improve domestic systems (e.g., construction of contained systems). An alternative, not presented in the Masterplan and put forward by the authors, could be the construction of simplified sewers in two of the city’s most densely populated neighborhoods, with a potential 29% reduction in nitrogen reaching groundwater.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/858on-site sanitationfecal sludgegroundwatercontaminationnitratematerial flow analysissewer infrastructuredecision support
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author André Marques Arsénio
Iana Câmara Salim
Mingming Hu
Nelson Pedro Matsinhe
Ruth Scheidegger
Luuk Rietveld
spellingShingle André Marques Arsénio
Iana Câmara Salim
Mingming Hu
Nelson Pedro Matsinhe
Ruth Scheidegger
Luuk Rietveld
Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
Sustainability
on-site sanitation
fecal sludge
groundwater
contamination
nitrate
material flow analysis
sewer infrastructure
decision support
author_facet André Marques Arsénio
Iana Câmara Salim
Mingming Hu
Nelson Pedro Matsinhe
Ruth Scheidegger
Luuk Rietveld
author_sort André Marques Arsénio
title Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
title_short Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
title_full Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
title_fullStr Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
title_full_unstemmed Mitigation Potential of Sanitation Infrastructure on Groundwater Contamination by Nitrate in Maputo
title_sort mitigation potential of sanitation infrastructure on groundwater contamination by nitrate in maputo
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-03-01
description In Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, nitrate concentrations above 250 mg L−1 in groundwater have been reported. This happens due to the widespread use of latrines and septic tanks that allow for constant infiltration of its content into the soil and eventually to groundwater sources, a situation that is widespread in the Global South and represents a serious threat for human health and for the environment. This is a reflection of limited access to safe and adequate sanitation services, which the local authorities have set to improve in the forthcoming decades with a recently commissioned city-wide sanitation masterplan serving as a basis for the works. In this article, we aimed at understanding whether the infrastructure projected in the masterplan would lead to a reduction of nitrogen reaching groundwater. Currently, according to our calculations, almost 500 tonnes of nitrogen reach the city’s groundwater sources each year, with the masterplan potentially resulting in a 14% reduction, a small reduction due to its reliance on maintaining and expanding fecal sludge services, without considering investments to improve domestic systems (e.g., construction of contained systems). An alternative, not presented in the Masterplan and put forward by the authors, could be the construction of simplified sewers in two of the city’s most densely populated neighborhoods, with a potential 29% reduction in nitrogen reaching groundwater.
topic on-site sanitation
fecal sludge
groundwater
contamination
nitrate
material flow analysis
sewer infrastructure
decision support
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/3/858
work_keys_str_mv AT andremarquesarsenio mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
AT ianacamarasalim mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
AT mingminghu mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
AT nelsonpedromatsinhe mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
AT ruthscheidegger mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
AT luukrietveld mitigationpotentialofsanitationinfrastructureongroundwatercontaminationbynitrateinmaputo
_version_ 1725671569291739136