Home | Site map | Contact us | Help |

 
 

Sewage treatment

Management Activity

Sewage refers to the waste and wastewater produced by residential, commercial and industrial sources and discharged into sewers.  It can also include stormwater when that water is drained into a sewer system.  Sewage can contain dissolved and suspended mineral, animal matter and vegetable matter, as well as urine, faeces, bacteria  and intestinal parasites.  It may also contain paper, grease, cigarettes, soap, detergents, other cleaning products, pesticides, herbicides, fertilisers and a wide range of other contaminants - some of which may be derived from the sewer system itself e.g. metal from the pipes. 

Sewage treatment is a process that removes contaminants from sewage.  There are a variety of processes – physical, chemical and biological – that can be used to treat sewage.  The level of treatment determines the quality of the water at the end of the process.  Sewage treatment produces both a liquid effluent and a sludge.

The direct impacts of sewage treatment may include:
The outputs of sewage treatment may include:

| Copyright | Disclaimer | Privacy | Last updated 17 October 2007.

© The State of Queensland (Department of Natural Resources and Water) 2008.

| Queensland Government Gateway |Other languagesOther languages