Top Banner
Towards Cleaner India: Providing clean drinking water and proper sanitation facility to all Team Details : Sandeep Roshan Dempta [Y10 MSE IITK] Sanjay Kumar Meena [Y10 ChE IITK] Anil Kumar Meena [Y10 ChE IITK] Diyvanshu [Y10 CHM IITK] Akansha Nimesh [Y10 CHM IITK]
9
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: SulabYojana

Towards Cleaner India: Providing clean drinking water

and proper sanitation facility to all

Team Details :Sandeep Roshan Dempta [Y10 MSE IITK]Sanjay Kumar Meena [Y10 ChE IITK]Anil Kumar Meena [Y10 ChE IITK]Diyvanshu [Y10 CHM IITK]Akansha Nimesh [Y10 CHM IITK]

Page 2: SulabYojana

Why Water, Sanitation, Hygiene?

-1.7 million (22% of world total) of the Under-5 children that died in 2010 were Indian

-Diarrhea in one among the largest killer diseases (13% deaths)

-Worldwide over 80% of diarrheal deaths are due to unsafe water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene

Page 3: SulabYojana

“Around 1,000 children below the age of five die every day in India from diarrhoea, hepatitis-causing pathogens and other sanitation-related diseases, according to the report of UnitedNations Children’s Fund.”

Major Challenges Faced

● 63.8 crore Indians still defecate in the open and less than a quarter have access to drinking water in their premises.

● To increase the coverage of different sanitation facilities in rural areas.Only a third of India’s Nation has access to proper sanitation, resulting in human excrement seeping into water pools.

● To change the mindset of rural population and to encourage wide use of sanitation facilities and proper hygienic behaviour among all communities.

● Conversion of the �Kutchha Latrines� into Sanitary Latrine.● To apprise the rural population about the desired benefits from proper

sanitation facilities like, prevention of water & sanitation related diseases and loss of working mandays and ensuring secured sanitation facilities especially for the privacy for the womenfolk etc

● Creating sanitation infrastructure and public services that work for everyone, including poor people, and that keep waste out of the environment is a major challenge

Page 4: SulabYojana

Feasible Solutions

SUSTAINABLE SANITATION SOLUTION FOR URBAN SLUMS

● The Swedish-designed biodegradable plastic bag which, in an effort to tackle sanitation issues in developing countries, turns human waste into fertilizer.

INCINERATOR FOR SCHOOL TOILET WASTE

● The incinerator burns/incinerates wastes loke soiled cloth, cotton waste, sanitary napkins,paper towels etc., The waste gets converted into ash and other non-hazardous residues. The incinerator is user friendly and manually operated. The cost of this technology is not very high which is around Rs.1200-1500/- .

LOW COST EXCRETA DISPOSAL FOR HOUSEHOLD

● Conventional pit latrine, Pour flush latrine, offset pit latrine

Page 5: SulabYojana

Rural● Quality of water not guaranteed● Sanitation near Handpumps.

Urban● No guarantee that tomorrow

water service , thus encoureges water mafia tankers, culture of submersible pumps (10-15 k).

● Open Sewers !!!● Draining Systems.● Strategic Location og Garbage

bin

DIFFERENCES IN URBAN AND RURAL SITUATION

Page 6: SulabYojana

STRATEGY

● Investments must be customized and targeted to those most in need.:-With more than 450 million Indians living below the poverty line, only a few of the poor who have inadequate sanitation can be assisted right away. Due to limited resources, programs should target groups or locations lagging behind the furthest.

● Community-based solutions must be adopted where possible:- An approach known as Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) has been found to be effective in promoting change at the community level. Efforts must address sociocultural attitudes toward sanitation and involve women as agents of change. Another innovation is the socialized community-fund raising, which has met great success among the rural poor.

● Use of children as agents of change:-School children are thought to follow sanitation and hygiene in their lives. These children take the messages home to their family.

● Innovative partnerships must be forged to stimulate investments:- The key is to stimulate investments from as wide a range of sources as possible, including the private sector, nongovernment organizations (NGOs), and consumers themselves. This may require working with a wide range of partners through innovative public–private partnerships.

Page 7: SulabYojana

SOLUTIONS

PORTABLE TOILETS :- The sevice must be provided by the nagarpalika ensuring proper charges and cleaner and greener practices.COMMUNITY TOILETS:- Various toilets at community level should be build keeping in mind the low operating cost and accessibility to the people.DISPOSAL OF HUMAN EXCRETA:- It should be ensured that the compost and human excreta is disposed carefully either by incinerating it or dumping it in areas far from agricultural land and human settlement.Motivate communities and Panchayati Raj Institutions promoting sustainable sanitation facilities through awareness creation and health education.

Page 8: SulabYojana

•A school sanitation and health work book for students from grade V to IX in association with SSA. The book should be in hand book in simple language with topical illustrations.

Page 9: SulabYojana

RURAL DRINKING WATER

Primary Target-To explore any uncovered habitation and ensure that the population gets atleast 55lpcd of potable water from sources lying within the village or nearby.-85% of the drinking water in rural areas are ground based and contain contaminants primarily of arsenic,flouride ,iron and nitrate .Hence the main focus is to priritize addressing the problems of arsenic and fluoride in drinking water throughalternative surface water sourcers.-Focus on piped water supply instead of hand-pumps.-Conjoint approach of rural drinking water supply with rural sanitation – to provide piped water supply to open defecation free GP’s on priority.-Allocation of funds for Operation and Maintenance should be increased .-Project approved under NRDWP and National Clean Energy Fund for Solar Powered Dual pump based piped water supply schemes should be expanded.-Incentives for asha workers for motivating people for building hand pumps.