Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
Inicio  /  Hydrology  /  Vol: 10 Par: 5 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Infiltrated Pits: Using Regional Groundwater Data to Estimate Methane Emissions from Pit Latrines

Olivia Reddy    
Mostaquimur Rahman    
Anisha Nijhawan    
Maria Pregnolato and Guy Howard    

Resumen

On-site sanitation systems (OSS), such as pit latrines, are an important source of methane (CH4), with emissions increasing when they are wet, and this occurs when anaerobic conditions dominate. This paper presents the development of a model, which uses seasonal changes in groundwater to account for the fluctuating inundation of pit latrines, and, therefore, the associated CH4 emissions from varying degrees of anerobic conditions are examined. Given that observed timeseries of groundwater table depth at high enough spatial and temporal resolutions are often difficult to obtain in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), inverse distance weighted (IDW) interpolation is used to generate values for a whole region, which is then used, alongside average pit latrine depth, to determine areas of pit latrine inundation. Outcomes are further informed with open-source contextual data, covering population, urban/rural split, and sanitation facility data, before using methodologies from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to generate CH4 emissions data. As a case study, we use data from Senegal to illustrate how this model works. Results show total CH4 emissions for the month of January to be ~1.69 kt CH4. We have also discussed the potential use of satellite remote sensing data in regions where access to historical groundwater data is limited. Understanding when the pit conditions are most likely to change could lead to incentives for better management strategies, as well as a reduction in CH4 production.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Esteban Caligaris, Margherita Agostini and Rudy Rossetto    
Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR), the intentional recharge of aquifers, has surged worldwide in the last 60 years as one of the options to preserve and increase water resources availability. However, estimating the extent of the area impacted by the rechar... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Yoganand Korgaonkar, David Phillip Guertin, Thomas Meixner and David C Goodrich    
Green Infrastructure (GI) practices are being implemented in numerous cities to tackle stormwater management issues and achieve co-benefits such as mitigating heat island effects and air pollution, as well as water augmentation, health, and economic bene... ver más

 
Enedir Ghisi, Thiago Belotto and Liseane Padilha Thives    
A reduction in potable water demand in buildings could be made by using non-potable water for certain uses, such as flushing toilets. This represents a sustainable strategy that results in potable water savings while also using an underutilised resource.... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Pieter J. Stuyfzand, Ebel Smidt, Koen G. Zuurbier, Niels Hartog, Mohamed A. Dawoud     Pág. 1 - 25
To be able to overcome water shortages, Abu Dhabi Emirate started an Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) project with desalinated seawater (DSW) as source water near Liwa. It is the largest DSW-ASR project in the world (stored volume ~10 Mm3/year), and sh... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Wenpu Li, Dongming Zhang and Minghui Li    
Pore gas has a significant influence on rock strength. This study performed triaxial compression tests of gas-infiltrated sandy shale samples to investigate the strength characteristics under gas pressures of 0 and 2 MPa. The effective stress coefficient... ver más
Revista: Energies