Public Lab Wiki documentation



sandbox-wastewater

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This draft wiki page is a work in progress!


Where does water go once it flows down the sink drain? What about the water trickling down the street into storm drains? Or water discarded from industrial activities?

Wastewater is “used water” that’s created by households, cities, and industry. It ranges from sewage to surface runoff that can flow from roadways into storm drains. Because wastewater can come from many different sources, it can contain a variety of pollutants—soaps and personal care products, human waste, pesticides and fertilizers, and fuel, to name a few. Industrial processes might produce wastewater laced with heavy metals or heated so hot that it harms living things nearby.

Who’s affected by wastewater pollution?

Depending on where you live and what produces the wastewater, it might be collected and cleaned (“treated”) before being released back into the environment, or it might be piped pollution-and-all directly into the environment. If the wastewater is treated, different kinds of treatment vary in how effective and efficient they are. Damage to pipes and other infrastructure can also let wastewater leak into the environment. People living near places where wastewater is discharged or treated might encounter pollutants from wastewater.

On this page we’ll collect and organize resources on wastewater and how people can begin to investigate it. Visit the wastewater tag page to see the latest community posts about wastewater on Public Lab, and get updates on this topic by following:

Follow wastewater

Sources: + Wastewater pollution


Community stories and projects

Questions from the community

Questions tagged with question:wastewater will appear here



Research wastewater

Some places to start


Information on wastewater pollution

How people might get exposed to wastewater

Common pollutants in different kinds of wastewater

Methods to monitor wastewater

  • Photo documentation
    • From the ground
    • Aerial mapping
  • Multispectral imaging?
  • Turbidity sensing
  • Bacteria testing
  • Temperature sensing
  • Conductivity sensing
  • Bioindicators
  • Spectrometry?

Regulations, policy, and advocacy

US federal regulations

State and local regulations

International regulations

Further reading and resources

Next step challenges