To protect the Danube River from pollution

Of the 100 percent water coverage of the Earth, according to expert estimates, only about one percent of water is available for human needs, reports Dnevnik.rs. Novi Sad needs a wastewater treatment plant.

Although the world seems to understand the seriousness of the situation, the reality is often different. The biggest enemy of drinking and human-accessible water is waste water discharged into rivers by various polluters, from households to heavy industry.

Dnevnik.rs reports that as early as the eighties, the Faculty of Science and Mathematics began research on waste water in Novi Sad. The goal was to create a cadastre of pollutants. The created cadastre showed some other alarming data, namely that more than 100,000 m3/day of waste water is poured into the Danube River, and that it represents a significant problem for the Danube itself, as a recipient and for the environment.

Dnevnik’s interlocutors point out that Novi Sad needs to build a wastewater treatment plant.

Serbia is no different from many other countries of the same level of development in terms of water and ecosystem conservation. However, significant progress in this field was made precisely through the implementation of the “Clean Serbia” project.

In October of last year, a meeting was held between ministers Goran Vesić and Irene Vujović and representatives of the CRBC company with the city management of Novi Sad, where the basic steps in the construction of a wastewater treatment plant in this city were defined.

The facility will be built through the implementation of the “Clean Serbia” project.

Crnobarac: Through project “Clean Serbia” we protect our Danube

The deputy mayor of Novi Sad, Ivan Crnobarac, particularly emphasized the importance of the “Clean Serbia” project, through which the construction of a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) will be financed.

“One of the most strategically important projects in the field of hydrotechnics, but also environmental protection, is the construction of a central wastewater treatment plant,” said the deputy mayor of Novi Sad, Igor Crnobarac.

The deputy mayor of Novi Sad pointed out that this is an expensive but equally important project.

“By implementing this project, we will contribute to environmental protection in our city in the sense that we will protect the quality of our surface and underground waters. A very expensive project, and therefore it is very important that it will also be financed through the “Clean Serbia” program, i.e. from the budget of the Republic of Serbia,” said Crnobarac.

By building a WWTP, we are protecting the Danube River and preserving the natural environment.

“In this way, we will succeed in achieving something that I think is an achievement of civilization, that we do not discharge our waste water, both industrial and fecal, directly into our Danube, but that they are collected, taken to the central system for the purification of waste water, and purified to the level of quality itself. recipient, i.e. the Danube, and as such they are discharged into it”, stated Crnobarac.