Risk: Low Under Construction Not Reported treatment

Village Gujarpur Wastewater Treatment Plant, Nawanshahr, Punjab

Nawanshahr, Punjab, India

Overview

Village Gujarpur wastewater treatment plant under construction in Nawanshahr, Punjab, India. Designed to serve approximately 40,000 people, it will support sanitation in the region.

Village Gujarpur wastewater treatment plant is located in Nawanshahr, a town in the Shaheed Bhagat Singh Nagar district of Punjab, India. The plant is currently under construction and is designed to serve a population of about 40,087, addressing the wastewater needs of the local community. As a plant under construction, its treatment process and capacity details are not yet finalized. In India, wastewater treatment plants of this scale typically operate under the regulatory framework of the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and state pollution control boards, which mandate secondary treatment standards for municipal wastewater. The plant is expected to comply with these standards once operational. The treated effluent will likely be discharged into local water bodies that drain into the Sutlej River, a major tributary of the Indus River system. The Sutlej River flows through Punjab and eventually joins the Indus in Pakistan, supporting irrigation and aquatic ecosystems. The plant's operation will help reduce pollution in these downstream waters.

Environmental context

The plant is located inland in Punjab, India, within the Indus River basin. Treated wastewater will likely discharge into local streams that feed the Sutlej River, which flows into the Indus River and ultimately the Arabian Sea. The region supports agricultural activities and diverse aquatic life, making proper wastewater treatment essential for maintaining water quality and ecosystem health.

Frequently asked questions

The plant is located in Nawanshahr, in the Shaheed Bhagat Singh Nagar district of Punjab, India.

The plant is designed to serve approximately 40,087 people.

The plant is currently under construction.

In India, municipal wastewater treatment plants are regulated by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) and state pollution control boards, which set effluent standards under the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974. Plants serving populations over 20,000 typically require secondary treatment.

For agglomerations of this size, Indian regulations generally mandate secondary treatment, such as activated sludge or sequencing batch reactors, to meet BOD and TSS standards before discharge.

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