The growing textile industry is one of the world’s largest producers of solid waste, which requires significant levels of treatment before it can be disposed of. Establishing the final destination of ...
At a seminar held at the US-Pakistan Centre for Advanced Studies in Water (USPCAS-W) at Mehran University of Engineering and Technology (MUET) in Jamshoro, experts emphasised the importance of ...
Waste from the textiles industry could with the assistance of earthworms and some animal manure become a rich compost for agriculture, according to a report in the International Journal of Environment ...
Textile dyeing sludge, a high-volume residue from wastewater treatment in the dyeing industry, poses considerable environmental challenges due to its high moisture content, complex organic dye ...
Sludge from wastewater flowing out of textile units in Rajasthan is now being treated at effluent treatment plants and then used as fuel in cement-making units. The treated wastewater is also being ...
Cecilia Williams lives across a dusty lane from a farm that, for years, used waste sludge provided by a textile plant to fertilize crops. Then in 2019, government agencies discovered that the land ...
Updates were determined by the ZDHC’s Wastewater Council, a group of independent wastewater experts from the textile industry, academia and the water treatment industry. The revision also includes the ...
The solution was announced on Wednesday (24 April) by the Paper Manufacturers Association of South Africa (PAMSA), in collaboration with Stellenbosch University (SU), Sappi Southern Africa and Mpact.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. On a placid day three decades ago, men from a local textile factory spent hours at the O’Neal family’s farm, pitching a plan they ...
When the small plane he was riding in flew over a closed textile factory several months ago, Bill Stangler saw two slime-covered waste lagoons on the edge of the Broad River north of Columbia. The ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When the small plane he was riding in flew over a closed textile factory several months ago, Bill Stangler saw two slime-covered ...