08 5月, 2008

Green Tips to Save the Earth

SAVE ON WATER BILLS

  • Replace or repair loose seals on your toilet and taps promptly. Ten drips per minute wastes about 3,000 litres of water a year.
Water
  • Remember to turn off all taps after use.
  • Use a container for washing, brushing your teeth or shavingImage than rinsing in running water. You can save up to fiver litres of water each time.
  • Don't wash clothes or vegetables under running taps.
  • Do not use an excessive quantity of detergent when washing clothes or household utilities as more water is needed for rinsing them off.
  • Water your plants Imageonly when necessary.
  • Change fish tank water only when necessary. Use a better filtering system to maintain water quality.
  • Water can be used again. Save your bath slops to wash the floor.
  • Be economical with your washing machine and dishwasher. Save for a bigger wash and cut down the rinse cycle.
  • Teach your children that water is not for games.
  • Install low-flow tap.
  • Install flow restrictors, self-closing taps, sensors, etc.
  • By taking a shower instead of a bath, you use only one fifth of the water.
Toilet
  • Do not flush unnecessarily. Eleven litres of water are used every time you flush the toilet. A large family may waste up to 100 litres every day.
  • Adjust the flushing water of your cistern to a minimum required level.
  • Use waste water instead of drinking water to flush the toilet if there is no supply of sea water for flushing.
  • Install two-flow flushing system to your cistern to reduce water use.

Water pollution

Improvements Made 
PhotoThe EPD has an extensive programme for cleaning up Hong Kong's waters which has had good results. The number of beaches meeting the Water Quality Objective for bathing water increased to 34 in 2007, compared with 26 in 1997. The number of river monitoring stations with bad or very bad water quality dropped, from 52 per cent in 1988, to less than 15 per cent in recent years.

Toxic metal discharges have been reduced from 7,000 kilogrammes per day in 1993 to 2,000 kilogrammes per day in 2000. In Victoria Harbour, the first stage of the Harbour Area Treatment Scheme (HATS) to collect and to treat the sewage generated around the harbour was completed at the end of 2001. Now, 75 per cent of sewage around the Victoria Harbour receives chemical treatment. As a result, the dissolved oxygen in the harbour waters has increased by about 10% and the levels of key pollutants in the harbour area waters have generally decreased. 

CONTROLLING WATER POLLUTION
Water quality improves only when we stop dumping untreated or inadequately treated sewage into the sea and the local rivers, streams and bays. The government has a three-pronged approach for dealing with the problem: controlling pollution at source, providing sewers, and collecting and treating sewage.

Controlling At Source
The EPD controls waste water discharges through the Water Pollution Control Ordinance. Operators are required to ensure their discharges meet standards specified by the EPD, and these specifications are contained in licences allowing them to discharge their waste water into receiving water bodies. The EPD regularly inspects operators, responds to complaints and will prosecute offenders.


Providing Sewers 
All sewage should be discharged into sewers, not stormwater drains which are only meant to carry rainwater into the sea. The EPD is trying to extend the public sewer networks in the NT and new development areas. The department prepares sewerage masterplans and the works are carried out by the Drainage Services Department. The plans are revised to take into account a projected population increase of about two million by 2016

Collecting and Treating Sewage 
The Harbour Area Treatment Scheme (HATS) is a strategy for collecting and treating sewage from both sides of Victoria Harbour. Stage 1 of HATS, which intercepts sewage from Kowloon and part of Hong Kong Island and delivers it to Stonecutters Island Sewage Treatment Works for chemical treatment, was brought into operation in late 2001. Following studies, trials and a public consultation exercise, the Government developed a two-phase, HK$19 billion, programme (Stage 2A and 2B) which will provide additional facilities to convey all sewage from the northern and south-western areas of Hong Kong Island to Stonecutters Island Sewage Treatment Works for chemical treatment and disinfection in Stage 2A, and in Stage 2B, biological treatment.

Elsewhere, a collection and treatment system in Tolo Harbour has resulted in a drop in red tides from 43 in 1988 to less than 20 in recent years.

What You Can Do
Individual operators, such as restaurants and factories, can help to make a difference by ensuring they follow anti-pollution laws. Please refer to Guidelines & References for a full account of compliance guides and good practices.

Residents should co-operate with efforts to connect their buildings to sewers. They can also try to reduce their consumption of water, thereby reducing the amount of sewage that needs treatment. For more advice on reducing water pollution, please refer to Tips to Save the Earth.

WATER QUALITY IN HONG KONG - AN OVERVIEW

The State of Our Waters 
Water pollution can be invisible to the naked eye, but its impacts are for the most part clear enough. Bacteria, nutrients and other pollutants can make swimmers sick, contaminate or kill marine life, and give off bad smells. Like other major cities in the world, Hong Kong is working diligently to improve its water quality. Our pollutants come from human and industrial sources and livestock farms, and programmes are underway to reduce pollution loads. At the same time, we are working hard to retain the unspoiled clean water in remote areas.

Investing in a Cleaner Harbor

Victoria Harbour's water quality problems stem from a past when Hong Kong's population and sewage flows were much lighter. For years sewage was dumped untreated into the harbour and flushed away by tidal currents. This approach more or less worked until the early 1980s, when the growth in Hong Kong's population and economic activity created sewage loads that were well beyond the harbour's capacity to absorb. In 1989 the Environmental Protection Department (EPD) unveiled a strategic sewage scheme to address the problem. In 2001 this scheme became known as HATS.

Stage 1 of HATS involves collecting sewage from Kowloon and northeast Hong Kong Island and transporting it to a sewage treatment works on Stonecutters Island for chemically enhanced primary treatment. It was commissioned in late 2001, with immediate positive results. Substantial decreases have been recorded in ammonia, E.coli, total inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus. Dissolved oxygen, which is essential to marine life, has increased ten per cent overall. Compliance with the harbour's Water Quality Objectives was 90 per cent in 2006 as against 50 per cent in 2001. However, some problems remain or have worsened.

Beach Pollution Response Plan

Pollution incidents such as breakdown of sewage pumping or treatment facilities, overflow of sewage, outfall damage, or illegal discharge of high-strength commercial or industrial wastewater, etc., may result in a sudden discharge of a large quantity of raw or partially treated sewage in the catchment area of a beach. Depending on the circumstances, the discharged sewage may cause serious pollution to the receiving beach water body, rendering it unsuitable for swimming.

A Beach Pollution Response Plan has been formulated by the government in summer 1997 to tackle this sort of beach pollution incident effectively. The plan sets out the required emergency responses and actions to be followed by concerned departments and parties.

In the event of a pollution incident which may render a bathing beach to become unsuitable for swimming, the government will coordinate immediate actions from concerned departments (Environmental Protection Department, Drainage Services DepartmentLeisure and Cultural Services Department, etc.) to tackle the pollution incident and to make a quick decision on whether the beach should be closed temporarily to protect public health.

Sewerage Master Plan Reviews


Harbour Area Treatment Scheme

The Harbour Area Treatment Scheme (HATS) is an overall sewage collection, treatment and disposal scheme for areas on both sides of Victoria Harbour.

Stage One of HATS was brought into operation in late 2001. It comprises the collection of sewage from the whole of Kowloon peninsula, Kwun Tong, Tseung Kwan O, Tsing Yi, Kwai Chung, Tsuen Wan, the Shau Kei Wan and Chai Wan areas of Hong Kong Island which is then transferred to Stonecutters Island Sewage Treatment Works for chemically-enhanced primary treatment. This accounts for 75% of the total flow from the whole HATS catchment.

In 2001 and 2002, the Government commissioned a number of studies and trials to investigate in detail four options for the further development of this sewerage system to collect sewage from the remaining parts of the Hong Kong Island, that is, HATS Stage Two. The studies and trials were completed in 2004 and a major public consultation exercise on the way forward for the scheme was conducted between June and November 2004. About 80% of the people that returned comments indicated their preference for implementation of the Stage Two as soon as possible.

In both Policy Addresses in 2005, it was announced that the Government would pursue the phased implementation of Stage Two with the aim of completing Stage 2A by 2013-14, and advancing the provision of disinfection at the Stonecutters Island Sewage Treatment Works, subject to the acceptance by the community of the need for the full operating costs to be recovered through the sewage services charging scheme. Stage 2A will expand the existing Stonecutters Island Sewage Treatment Works to cater for the additional flows from the remaining areas of Hong Kong Island and Stage 2B will further expand the plant by adding biological treatment units. The timing for Stage 2B will be subject to further review at a later date.



Sewerage Master Plans (SMPs)

SMPs provide a blueprint of the sewage infrastructure required to collect sewage on a catchment-by-catchment basis and direct it to treatment facilities. The entire territory has been divided into 16 areas, and SMPs have been produced for all of them. The recommendations of these SMPs are being implemented progressively to cater for the present and future development needs of Hong Kong. In light of revised population forecasts and associated projected development proposed for the HKSAR, these SMPs have been reviewed and proposals for upgrading works are being pursued on a priority basis.


Marine Water Quality Monitoring

EPD's marine monitoring programme covers about 90 water and 60 sediment sampling stations in the open sea, semi-enclosed bays and typhoon shelters.



Marine Water- Our Valuable Resource

Hong Kong is a thriving port with a population of nearly 7 million people. It relies heavily on the sea for navigation, recreation, seafood production, and supply of flushing and cooling water. The sea surrounding us is also the home of diverse forms of marine life ranging from microscopic algae to dolphins. Hong Kong is fully committed to protecting its marine environment.

The Environmental Protection Department (EPD) of the Hong Kong SAR Government monitors the water quality of some 1,700 sq km of the territory's marine waters. The monitoring programme serves the following purposes:

  • indicate the state of health of marine waters;
  • assess compliance with the statutory Water Quality Objectives (WQOs);
  • reveal long-term changes in water quality;
  • provide a basis for the planning of pollution control strategies.

29 4月, 2008

Idea

We are having a idea about making a super 3-D model.   

28 4月, 2008

Useful Website

  1. www.umich.edu/~gs265/society/waterpollution.htm
  2. www.water-pollution.org.uk/
  3. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_pollution
  4. www.CircleOfBlue.org
  5.  www.epd.gov.hk/epd/english/environmentinhk/ water/water_maincontent.html
  6. members.tripod.com/water_pollution_hk/default.htm
  7. www.gov.hk/en/residents/ environment/water/introtowater.htm 

Hong Kong Water Pollution Graph


From our survey, you can see that Hong Kong's water pollution is quite high.
From this information our group decided that Hong Kong's citizens think the main polluter of Hong Kong's water is sewage.  

24 4月, 2008

Line of Inquiry

1. How water pollution affects our environment?

2. Why water pollution in Hong Kong is so serious?

3. How can we reduce water pollution in Hong Kong? 


Central Idea

My actions affect the environment here and around the world, now and in the future.
我的行動會影響全球當今與未來的環境。

23 4月, 2008

About Us

This web is for our exhibition.In my group there are Kelvin Lau, Winky Cheng and Elaine Leung. In this exhibition our topic was about the water pollution in Hong Kong.