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Irrigation of vegetable crops as a means of recycling wastewater: Applied to hesbaye frost
Guillaume, Pierre; Xanthoulis, Dimitri
1996In Water Science and Technology, 33 (10-11), p. 317-326
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Keywords :
Irrigation; Market garden crops; Purification; Recycling; Wastewater; Crops; Discharge (fluid mechanics); Ecosystems; Food processing; Food products plants; Freezing; Physical properties; Wastewater treatment; Aquatic life; Hesbaye frost; Hydric stress; Vegetable crops; Water recycling
Abstract :
[en] Since 1991, a food processing plant which freezes a large quantity of locally grown market garden products, has recycled all its wastewater by irrigating 550 hectares of crops located around the factory. Previously, the 700,000 m3 of wastewater was discharged into a nearby stream apparently devoid of aquatic life. By adopting this solution, the processing plant was able to avoid paying a heavy tax introduced in 1991 to penalize the discharge of industrial effluent. The alternative of building an independent wastewater treatment plant would have required investment costs two to three times higher and would not have achieved the same degree of water purification as the soil. Irrigation guarantees a continuous supply of a vital good quality ingredient, since the short life cycle market garden crops are very susceptible to hydric stress. A 110,000 m3 capacity storage tank acts as a buffer between continuous water consumption and seasonal requirements; in addition, by mixing the wastewaters, it stabilizes their physico-chemical characteristics which vary according to the vegetables treated. This processing plant offers the regional agricultural industry hit by European restrictions, a source of diversification; it is perfectly integrated in an environment it not only respects but relies on for the auto-purifying capacity of its biological medium.Since 1991, a food processing plant which freezes a large quantity of locally grown market garden products, has recycled all its wastewater by irrigating 550 hectares of crops located around the factory. Previously, the 700,000 m3 of wastewater was discharged into a nearby stream apparently devoid of aquatic life. By adopting this solution, the processing plant was able to avoid paying a heavy tax introduced in 1991 to penalize the discharge of industrial effluent. The alternative of building an independent wastewater treatment plant would have required investment costs two to three times higher and would not have achieved the same degree of water purification as the soil. Irrigation guarantees a continuous supply of a vital good quality ingredient, since the short life cycle market garden crops are very susceptible to hydric stress. A 110,000 m3 capacity storage tank acts as a buffer between continuous water consumption and seasonal requirements; in addition, by mixing the wastewaters, it stabilizes their physico-chemical characteristics which vary according to the vegetables treated. This processing plant offers the regional agricultural industry hit by European restrictions, a source of diversification; it is perfectly integrated in an environment it not only respects but relies on for the auto-purifying capacity of its biological medium.
Disciplines :
Agriculture & agronomy
Author, co-author :
Guillaume, Pierre ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de Biologie, Ecologie et Evolution > Aquarium-Muséum
Xanthoulis, Dimitri ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département GxABT > Echanges Eau - Sol - Plantes
Language :
English
Title :
Irrigation of vegetable crops as a means of recycling wastewater: Applied to hesbaye frost
Publication date :
1996
Event name :
Proceedings of the 1995 IAWQ 2nd International Symposium on Wastewater Reclamation and Reuse
Event date :
17 October 1995 through 20 October 1995
Audience :
International
Journal title :
Water Science and Technology
ISSN :
0273-1223
eISSN :
1996-9732
Publisher :
International Water Association Publishing, United Kingdom
Volume :
33
Issue :
10-11
Pages :
317-326
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 10 September 2021

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