Overview
Shanghai wastewater treatment plant serves Qingpu District, Shanghai, China, with a designed capacity of 1.00 and a population served of 279,000. It operates under China's national wastewater regulations.
The Shanghai wastewater treatment plant is located in Qingpu District, Shanghai, China, serving a population of approximately 279,000. The facility is situated in the western part of Shanghai, an area characterized by a mix of urban and suburban development, and plays a key role in managing municipal wastewater for this densely populated region. The plant operates under China's national wastewater discharge standards, which require secondary treatment for urban wastewater. For a facility serving nearly 280,000 people, advanced treatment may be expected to meet stringent effluent quality requirements, particularly given Shanghai's environmental sensitivity as a major coastal city. The treated effluent likely discharges into local waterways that flow into the Huangpu River, which ultimately reaches the East China Sea. This downstream connection underscores the plant's importance in protecting both freshwater resources and the marine environment from nutrient pollution and other contaminants.
Environmental context
The plant's discharge likely enters local canals and rivers that feed into the Huangpu River, a major tributary of the Yangtze River estuary. The Yangtze estuary and the East China Sea support diverse aquatic life, including fisheries and migratory species. Effective wastewater treatment is critical to prevent eutrophication and protect downstream ecosystems.
Frequently asked questions
The plant is located in Qingpu District, Shanghai, China, near the G50 expressway in the Xia Yang subdistrict.
The plant serves approximately 279,000 people in the Qingpu District area.
Treated effluent is likely discharged into local waterways that flow into the Huangpu River, which eventually reaches the East China Sea.
The plant operates under China's national wastewater discharge standards (GB 18918-2002) and local Shanghai environmental regulations, which mandate secondary treatment and increasingly require advanced treatment for sensitive areas.
For agglomerations of this size, Chinese regulations typically require at least secondary biological treatment, and many facilities employ advanced treatment (tertiary) to meet stricter effluent limits, especially in environmentally sensitive regions like the Yangtze River Delta.
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