Sunday, May 1, 2011

Flood Rain Water Treatment System



The Ultra Purification makes Dirty (Flood-River) Water Clean Drinkable.

Ultra Filtration (U F) removes viruses as well as Bacteria from Dirty Surface water that may have come from rivers, lakes, rainwater collection barrels or puddles.



By using the Portable Purification unit, the risk of contracting gastrointestinal illnesses from Dirty Water is Reduced Drastically.

The Ultra Purification Products can be quickly and easily distributed during Natural Disasters.

The primary advantages of low-pressure Ultra Filtration Membrane Processes compared with conventional clarification and disinfection (Post Dutrion Chlorine Dioxide) processes are:



No need for chemicals (coagulants, flocculates, disinfectants, pH adjustment);

• Size-exclusion filtration as opposed to media depth filtration;

• Good and constant quality of the treated water in terms of particle and microbial removal.


Waterborne diseases continue to pose great risk to millions of people affected by the devastating floods in Pakistan, the United Nations warned today, a day after Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, on a visit to the country, described the “heart-wrenching” suffering he witnessed among flood survivors.


The UN World Health Organization (WHO) said that in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, one of the hardest-hit provinces, acute diarrhoea is the leading cause of illness and accounted for nearly one in five patient visits since the floods began. The problem has also been reported in Balochistan, Punjab and Sindh, the agency reported.





The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimated that as many as 3.5 million children in affected areas may now be at risk of diseases carried through contaminated water and insects. UNICEF plans to provide clean water to 6 million people.





“The lack of clean water and the unavailability of medication, in the aftermath of these floods, is a deadly combination. When added to the poor living conditions and the lack of food, which contribute to vulnerability, the picture is gruesome,” said Guido Sabatinelli, WHO’s representative in Pakistan.




Acute respiratory tract infections and skin diseases are the other health problems among those affected, according to WHO. Malaria could also pose a major threat as mosquitoes breed in the stagnant flood water.













Pakwater Care Services Pakistan.

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