Evidence of Economically Sustainable Village-Scale Microenterprises for Arsenic Remediation in Developing Countries

Although unknown 25 years ago, natural arsenic contamination of groundwater affects over 50 countries and up to 200 million people. The economic viability was analyzed and modeled of eighty-eight community-based arsenic mitigation systems existing for up to 20 years in India and Bangladesh. The perf...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2019-02, Vol.53 (3), p.1078-1086
Hauptverfasser: German, Michael S, Watkins, Todd A, Chowdhury, Minhaj, Chatterjee, Prasun, Rahman, Mizan, Seingheng, Hul, SenGupta, Arup K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although unknown 25 years ago, natural arsenic contamination of groundwater affects over 50 countries and up to 200 million people. The economic viability was analyzed and modeled of eighty-eight community-based arsenic mitigation systems existing for up to 20 years in India and Bangladesh. The performances of three community-based arsenic mitigation systems that are ethnically different and separated across two different countries were monitored closely for 24 months of self-sustainable, long-term operation at WHO standards through local, paid caretakers. Based on data from the use of hybrid ion exchange materials (HIX-Nano) and the broad set of field operations, Monte Carlo simulations were used to explore the conditions required for self-sustainable operation and job creation in low-income communities (
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.8b02523