Overview
Rooiberg WWTW is a secondary treatment plant serving a small population in Thabazimbi Local Municipality, Limpopo, South Africa. It discharges 1.00 megaliters of treated wastewater daily.
Rooiberg WWTW is a municipal wastewater treatment facility located in the Rooiberg area of Thabazimbi Local Municipality, within the Waterberg District Municipality of Limpopo, South Africa. The plant provides secondary treatment for a very small population of 7 people, reflecting its role in a rural or remote community. As a secondary treatment plant, Rooiberg WWTW employs biological processes to reduce organic matter and suspended solids, meeting the basic standards expected under South Africa's water quality regulations. South African wastewater plants are regulated under the National Water Act and Water Services Act, with discharge permits issued by the Department of Water and Sanitation. The treated effluent from Rooiberg WWTW likely enters a local watercourse that drains into the Limpopo River basin, eventually flowing into the Indian Ocean. The plant's operations help protect local water quality in a region characterized by savanna and mining activities, supporting downstream ecosystems and community water supplies.
Environmental context
The plant's discharge likely enters a tributary of the Limpopo River, which flows through South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique before reaching the Indian Ocean. The Limpopo basin supports diverse aquatic life and is an important water source for agriculture and communities. The plant's secondary treatment helps reduce nutrient and organic pollution, protecting downstream water quality in this semi-arid region.
Frequently asked questions
Rooiberg WWTW is located in Rooiberg, Thabazimbi Local Municipality, Waterberg District Municipality, Limpopo, South Africa.
The plant serves a very small population of 7 people, indicating it is a rural or community-scale facility.
The plant discharges 1.00 megaliters per day of secondary-treated effluent, likely into a local watercourse that drains into the Limpopo River basin.
South African wastewater treatment plants operate under the National Water Act and Water Services Act, with discharge permits issued by the Department of Water and Sanitation.
For very small populations, secondary treatment is common and sufficient to meet basic environmental standards, reducing organic matter and suspended solids before discharge.
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