Reasons of Acceptance and Barriers of House Onsite Greywater Treatment and Reuse in Palestinian Rural Areas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. General Information
1.2. Grey Water Practices in Palestine
1.3. Description of House Onsite Grey Water Treatment Plant
2. Methodology
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. General Information on Households
3.2. General Information on Onsite GWTPs
3.3. Water and Sanitation Household Conditions
- Governorate: From the results of Table 2, it appears that the percentages of acceptance have close values between all governorates, which shows that onsite GWTPs in the West Bank are acceptable for the purpose of reuse in irrigation. However, acceptance was not at the same level in all governorates.
- Family Size: From Figure 6 it is noticeable that the acceptance of a GWTP for reuse in irrigation is influenced by the number of family members, where the percentage increases with increasing family size.
- Job: Acceptance of GWTPs was different for people with different jobs as per Table 3, where a high percentage was found for workers and farmers (who have less income), while employees or wholesalers have relatively less interest in GWTPs.
- Education Level: 87.7% of less educated people accept GWTPs for reuse in agriculture, but a lower percent (81.2%) of educated people accept GWTPs. This emphasizes that educated people have more concerns regarding the quality of treated water.
- Suffering from Water Shortage before Construction of GWTPs: 85.6% of people who were suffering from water shortages accept construction of GWTPs for reuse in irrigation, while a lower percent (75.6%) is found for people who had no problems with water shortages.
- Garden Availability: 86.1% of people who have a home garden would be willing to reuse treated grey water in irrigation, however 22% of those who do not have a home garden were not able to reuse for irrigation.
- Frequency of Cesspit’s Emptying before Providing GWTP: Acceptance of reuse in irrigation depends on discharge of cesspits per year: 76.2% of people who empty cesspits 1–3 times per year accept reuse in agriculture, while 88.3% of people who discharge their cesspits more than 4 times per year accept reuse in agriculture.
- Owner’s Satisfaction of Cesspits: 73.9% of people who are satisfied in applying cesspits accept reuse in irrigation, while a larger percent (87.4%) of people who are not satisfied accept providing onsite GWTPs for the purpose of reuse in irrigation.
3.4. Reasons for Acceptance GWTPs
3.5. The Barriers for Application of Onsite GWTPS
- Replacement of GWTPs in Case of Providing Sewerage Networks: 52.1% of GWTPs owners would not replace the treatment plant in the case of providing sewerage networks, while 37.7% of them stated that they would replace the treatment plant in the case of providing sewerage networks. The mentioned results refer to many aspects that interfere with the replacement of GWTPs in the case of providing sewerage networks, as discussed below.
- Water shortage: 56.6% of GWTP beneficiaries who accepted GWTPs because of water shortages were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing sewerage network, while 43% of GWTP beneficiaries who did not face water shortages preferred replacing the onsite GWTP in the case of providing sewerage network. This result indicates that water shortage is a significant reason to maintain the onsite GWTP.
- Availability of Fund by External Donor: 66.6% of GWTP beneficiaries who accept GWTPs because they are supported by external funds were not willing to replace the onsite GWTPs in the case of providing sewerage network, while 52.1% of GWTP beneficiaries who accept GWTPs when they are not supported by external funds were not willing to replace the onsite GWTPs in case of providing sewerage network, which means that fund availability was not a significant reason for replacing the onsite GWTPs.
- Reduction of Cesspit Discharge Frequency: 53.9% of GWTP beneficiaries who accepted a GWTP for the reduction of cesspit discharge frequency were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing a sewerage network, while 37.4% of GWTP beneficiaries who accepted a GWTP for not saving cesspit discharge were willing to replace the onsite GWTP in case of providing sewerage network. From the mentioned results it is concluded that reduction of cesspit discharge frequency is a major reason for preference of GWTPs.
- Reuse in Irrigation: 54.4% of GWTP beneficiaries who accept a GWTP for the purpose of reuse in irrigation were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing a sewerage network, while 47.4% of GWTP beneficiaries who accept a GWTP not for reuse in irrigation were willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing sewerage network. From the mentioned results it is concluded that reuse in irrigation is an important reason for preference of GWTPs.
- Saving in Water Bill: 61.5% of GWTP beneficiaries who accept GWTPs for saving on their water bill were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing a sewerage network, while 40.0% of GWTP beneficiaries who accepted a GWTP not for saving on their water bill were willing to replace the onsite GWTP. This means that saving on their water bill is a very important reason for preference of GWTPs.
- Satisfaction of Applied System: 68.1% of GWTP beneficiaries who were satisfied with the unit’s performance were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing a sewerage network, while 71.3% of GWTP beneficiaries who were not satisfied with the unit’s performance were willing to replace the onsite GWTP. This indicates that the satisfaction of the existing sanitation system is a significant issue regarding the replacement of it with another one.
- Contribution of GWTPs to Solve the Water Shortage: 60.3% of GWTP beneficiaries who benefited from the treatment units by their contribution in solving water shortages were not willing to replace the onsite GWTP in the case of providing sewerage network, while 72.0% of GWTP beneficiaries who did not get benefits from the treatment units regarding their water shortages were willing to replace the onsite GWTP.
- Monitoring, Operation and Maintenance of the GWTPs: GWTPs are basically managed by women: the GWTPs are operated by men (fathers) and women (mothers) side-by-side (68.9%), while 24% are operated solely by women. Therefore, more focus should be placed on o women in terms of training and managing onsite sanitation systems, since they are more involved in household water management. The majority of the interviewees (73.1%) completed high school only or less, 20.4% had a university degree and higher education. Little effort is required for running the GWTPs, since the average yearly working time is 19.7 hours, corresponding to 0.4 hours per week. Operation and maintenance work include cleaning and checking the inlet manhole, removing scum from the first compartment (septic tank), pipe cleaning and cleaning of the whole treatment plant.
4. Conclusions and Recommendations
4.1. Conclusions
4.2. Recommendations
- There is an essential need to improve the performance of the treatment plants, to increase treatment efficiency and to introduce well-operated wastewater treatment facilities.
- Ensure treated water quality complies with applied local and international standards and its suitability for reuse purposes.
- At the policy level, the government should encourage and be more aware of the potential application of onsite GWTPs in rural communities, so the government should be more involved in wastewater management in rural areas to replace cesspits.
- The government should encourage the use of non-conventional water resources in agriculture, especially treated grey water.
- Implementing agencies should implement regular monitoring and maintenance of the onsite GWTPs, especially after the end of implementation and consider this phase as a part of the project implementation.
- Implementation of GWTPs should be applied according to social and technical feasibility studies, including involvement of people in the planning and implementation process to ensure understanding of the whole system.
- GWTP beneficiaries require the necessary training in operation and maintenance of the system management to maintain sustainability and to handle the system successfully.
- Development of public awareness programs, to better understand and improve public knowledge of wastewater systems and perception toward reuse schemes, in parallel with field visits of local people to other wastewater treatment and reuse facilities for sharing of knowledge and ideas.
- A more proper system is required to handle the wastewater to replace cesspits and their implications on the environment, ground water and health in rural communities.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Independent Value | Acceptance of GWTPs Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Value * | Status |
---|---|---|
Age | 0.526 | Not significant |
Governorate | 0.002 | Significant |
Number of households | 0.433 | Not significant |
Family size | 0.0135 | Significant |
Job | 0.00 | Significant |
Age of responsible person for managing GWTP | 0.501 | Not significant |
Education level of those responsible of GWTP | 0.00 | Significant |
Suffering of water shortage before construction of GWTPs | 0.003 | Significant |
frequency of cesspit’s emptying before providing GWTP | 0.002 | Significant |
Level of noise | 0.32 | Not significant |
Garden availability | 0.00 | Significant |
Owner’s satisfaction of cesspit’s | 0.001 | Significant |
Governorate | Number of Respondents | Acceptance of GWTPs (%) |
---|---|---|
Bethlehem | 4 | 83.3 |
Ramallah | 55 | 68.1 |
Jerusalem | 7 | 100 |
Hebron | 38 | 85.7 |
Nablus | 6 | 100 |
Tulkarem | 7 | 85.7 |
Jenin | 39 | 82.1 |
Tubas | 10 | 100 |
Job | Acceptance of GWTPs (%) |
---|---|
Worker | 85 |
Employee | 78.6 |
Farmer | 90 |
Wholesaler | 80% |
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Thaher, R.A.; Mahmoud, N.; Al-Khatib, I.A.; Hung, Y.-T. Reasons of Acceptance and Barriers of House Onsite Greywater Treatment and Reuse in Palestinian Rural Areas. Water 2020, 12, 1679. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12061679
Thaher RA, Mahmoud N, Al-Khatib IA, Hung Y-T. Reasons of Acceptance and Barriers of House Onsite Greywater Treatment and Reuse in Palestinian Rural Areas. Water. 2020; 12(6):1679. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12061679
Chicago/Turabian StyleThaher, Rehab A., Nidal Mahmoud, Issam A. Al-Khatib, and Yung-Tse Hung. 2020. "Reasons of Acceptance and Barriers of House Onsite Greywater Treatment and Reuse in Palestinian Rural Areas" Water 12, no. 6: 1679. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12061679
APA StyleThaher, R. A., Mahmoud, N., Al-Khatib, I. A., & Hung, Y.-T. (2020). Reasons of Acceptance and Barriers of House Onsite Greywater Treatment and Reuse in Palestinian Rural Areas. Water, 12(6), 1679. https://doi.org/10.3390/w12061679