Overview
ROWP SC ACET SA SUCEAVA AG GURA HUMORULUI is a wastewater treatment plant serving Gura Humorului, Romania. It treats wastewater from a population of approximately 5,786 people.
ROWP SC ACET SA SUCEAVA AG GURA HUMORULUI is a wastewater treatment plant located on Strada Viitorului in Gura Humorului, Suceava County, Romania. The plant serves a population of about 5,786 residents, placing it in the small agglomeration category under Romanian and EU regulations. As a small-scale municipal plant in Romania, it operates under the EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive 91/271/EEC, which requires secondary treatment for agglomerations of this size. The plant's treatment processes and capacity are managed to meet national discharge standards aligned with EU directives. The plant discharges treated effluent into local watercourses that eventually drain into the Siret River, a major tributary of the Danube. The Danube then flows into the Black Sea. The plant plays a key role in protecting the Suceava region's water quality and downstream ecosystems.
Environmental context
The plant's treated effluent enters local streams that flow into the Suceava River, a tributary of the Siret River. The Siret joins the Danube, which ultimately reaches the Black Sea. This watershed supports diverse aquatic life and is an important ecological corridor in northeastern Romania. The plant's operations help maintain water quality in this sensitive riverine environment.
Frequently asked questions
The plant is located on Strada Viitorului in Gura Humorului, Suceava County, Romania.
The plant serves approximately 5,786 people in the Gura Humorului area.
The plant discharges treated effluent into local streams that flow into the Suceava River, part of the Siret River basin.
As a Romanian plant serving a small agglomeration, it operates under the EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive 91/271/EEC, which mandates secondary treatment for populations of this size.
Under EU directives, plants serving between 2,000 and 10,000 population equivalents are required to have secondary treatment, which typically involves biological processes to reduce organic matter and suspended solids.
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