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General Water Treatment FAQs
A water treatment plant is a system designed to remove contaminants from water to make it suitable for drinking, industrial use, irrigation, or discharge according to environmental standards.
RO (Reverse Osmosis): Removes dissolved salts (TDS), heavy metals, and impurities. UF (Ultrafiltration): Removes suspended solids, bacteria, and viruses. STP (Sewage Treatment Plant): Treats wastewater from buildings and industries for reuse or safe discharge.
Selection depends on: Feed water analysis (TDS, turbidity, oil, bacteria, etc.) Required output water quality Application (drinking, process, irrigation, discharge) Available space and budget
RO membranes: 2–3 years (with proper pre-treatment) UF membranes: 3–5 years Pumps & mechanical parts: 5–10 years Structure & tanks: 10–20 years
A water treatment plant is a system designed to remove contaminants from water to make it suitable for drinking, industrial use, irrigation, or discharge according to environmental standards.
Operating cost depends on: Electricity consumption Chemical dosing Membrane replacement Labor & maintenance RO systems generally have higher energy cost compared to UF or STP systems
Yes. Treated wastewater (TSE) can be reused for: Irrigation Cooling towers Flushing systems Landscaping
High turbidity Oil & grease Scaling (high hardness) Biological growth Proper pre-treatment (UF, multimedia filter, softener, OCU) prevents fouling.
Small systems: 2–4 weeks Medium plants: 4–8 weeks Large industrial plants: 2–4 months
Depending on application: Local Municipality / Environmental Authority standards WHO drinking water guidelines Industrial discharge limits