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Centralized treatment

397 bytes added, 18:26, 18 May 2012
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[[Image:water treatment plant.gif|thumb|right|350px|In 2001 CESO Adviser Jake Dick travelled to Santa Rosa de Copan, a city nestled in the western mountains of Honduras, to restore an abandoned water-treatment plant to functionality. Photo: [http://www.ceso-saco.com/About/News/2010/Water-Story-Title.aspx Ceso/Saco.]]]
 
 
[[Image:plant Iraq.gif|thumb|right|350px|In 2007, over 3,000,000 people benefited directly from the [http://www.icrc.org/eng/index.jsp ICRC]’s repairs, renovations and upgrades of water storage and delivery systems in Iraq. Iraq, Basra. Renovating a water-treatment plant. Photo: [http://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/photo-gallery/photos-water-habitat-170308.htm © ICRC / irak.]
 
In this strategy, the population is supplied with drinking water from large, centralised water treatment plants. The treated water is piped to all the communities in the geographical area served by the treatment plant, thus requiring an extensive pipe network, so as to reach even the most remote communities. The treatment plants could be managed and operated by the larger municipalities or, more likely, by the Water Boards in that region. Generally, these plants should be well managed and operated effectively due to availability of sufficient O&M funds and qualified human resources.
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