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Showing posts from January, 2024

The Crucial Steps of Industrial Liquid Waste Management

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  We are all well aware of the environmental hazards that industries and their units have inflicted on our surroundings for decades. One significant issue is the generation of waste by various types of factories, manufacturing units, and commercial establishments.   If we start discussing the harmful effects of waste and different types of waste, then it’ll be endless. Different kinds of waste contribute to various types of pollution and health hazards differently. For example, liquid waste is popularly known for mingling with natural bodies of water and harming the lives of aquatic and marine animals. It is also responsible for groundwater contamination, which leads to reduced plant growth and ultimately crop failure. Well, if we talk about waste in gaseous form, then it is very harmful to the atmosphere and contributes significantly to air pollution.  It releases certain types of toxic fumes, which can further the spread of respiratory diseases in humans and animals. Solid waste may

Take Care of Your Septic Tank For its Healthy Functioning

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  Management of liquid waste is a point of serious concern because of the harm it poses. While we look at the core areas of liquid waste management and disposal, it is also important for us to discuss and emphasise the allied areas. One such area is septic tank cleaning and maintenance. It will be very crucial for us to know why we need to regularly keep a check on our septic tanks. But before that, we need to know what the prime functionality of a septic is. We can define a septic tank as an underground reservoir that helps treat wastewater from houses and small industries that are not connected to a central sewage system. This mostly happens in rural areas.      Let us also understand the structure of a septic tank. So, this type of tank has two types of pipes. One is known as the inlet pipe and the other is known as the outlet pipe. The inlet pipe helps the wastewater or effluent from houses to enter the septic tank and the outlet pipe helps the treated liquid to go out of the sept