Polluted Lakes Are Being Cleansed Using Floating Wetlands Made of Trash

Tue, 27 Aug 2024 18:46:07 +1000

Andrew Pam <xanni [at] glasswings.com.au>

Andrew Pam
<https://www.wired.com/story/planet-pioneers-nagdaha-small-earth-nepal-soni-pradhanang-ftws-floating-treatment-wetland-systems-water-cleaning-pollution/>

"On the banks of Nagdaha, a polluted and lotus-infested lake in Nepal, Soni
Pradhanang is putting trash back into the water—on purpose.

She carefully assembles a platform of styrofoam and bamboo mats, then weaves it
together with zip ties and coconut fiber, refuse from nearby tech stores. Then,
she pokes 55 plants lush with red flowers through 2-inch holes in the platform,
each plant set 6 inches apart. Though Pradhanang’s creation isn’t high-tech, it
is effective, and one of the most affordable water-filtration systems
available. “I’m cheap,” she says, laughing.

Pradhanang, a hydrologist at the University of Rhode Island who studies
water-quality monitoring and modeling, has spent the past seven years working
on her trash-based contraptions. Called floating treatment wetland systems
(FTWS), these are 4-foot by 6-foot buoyant platforms topped with plants. When
their roots are submerged in contaminated water, the plants suck pollutants
into their stems and leaves as they grow. In turn, they leave behind dissolved
oxygen captured during photosynthesis, which supports life beneath the surface.

The hope with these devices is two-fold: that they will cleanse waters and
recycle rubbish in parts of the world where budgets for either are incredibly
tight.

Pradhanang is also the chief scientific technical adviser to The Small Earth
Nepal, a Kathmandu Valley–based research and community engagement group. It has
spent around five years building, testing, and implementing the first known
trash-based wetland water-cleaning systems here in Nagdaha’s polluted waters,
which contain high concentrations of nitrates and phosphates due to
agricultural and urban runoff. Pradhananag and The Small Earth Nepal also
operate sites with collaborators in Ajmer, India, and Dhaka, Bangladesh.

These floating treatment systems aren’t huge—each mat is around the dimensions
of a full-size mattress—but they can connect to form clusters that treat larger
areas of water. In Nagdaha, where FTWS have been bobbing lazily for nearly two
years, there are five clusters, each with eight platforms. Results from The
Small Earth Nepal show that the systems significantly reduce concentrations of
nitrates, heavy metals, and phosphorus in the lake."

Via Positive.News

Cheers,
       *** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net               Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/                 Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/            Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/               Manager, Serious Cybernetics

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