RMIT Turns to Nature to Enhance Vital Water Treatment Methods
Escalating industrialisation, urbanisation and climate change in Asia present a significant challenge to maintaining water quality.
In an effort to improve water treatment, RMIT has collaborated in an international team supporting pilot projects in Vietnam, Sri Lanka and the Philippines through an Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research project.
Led by RMIT’s Professor Jega Jegatheesan, the pilots included the construction of floating wetlands in Can Tho, Vietnam and Kandy, Sri Lanka, green roofs in Ho Chi Minh City and constructed wetland in the Philippines.
This saw 40 students at Can Tho University trained to build and install the structures in two canals, with another 32 early career researchers engaged through hands-on learning across the other sites.
The project also included scientific and methodological guidance for the establishment and replication of a green roof in Ho Chi Minh City for domestic wastewater treatment.
The system using rock, oyster shells and charcoal was set up on the roof of a research centre at Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology in Vietnam, another project partner.
Jegatheesan said the project’s overall aim was to effectively remove pollutants from water bodies, delivering environmental and communal benefits.
“We developed guidelines to replicate and scale nature-based water treatment solutions,” said Jegatheesan.
“Our overall aim was to explore the role nature-based solutions could play in making Southeast Asian cities more liveable and resilient.
“We worked with teams in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Australia and Spain to make this happen – there was a lot of support all round, which was critical to our success.”
RMIT Europe’s Nevelina Pachova worked on developing the project’s concept and supported its implementation through a series of online and in-person meetings.
“In Europe, nature-based solutions are becoming increasingly popular for making cities greener and the use of urban resources more sustainable and circular,” she said.
“Many traditional resource management practices in Southeast Asia are de facto nature-based solutions but many have disappeared or remain limited to rural areas.
“So the idea was to discover if and how existing and new nature-based practices and solutions can be developed or adapted and integrated in cities.”
The main goal was to develop solutions suited to local conditions, which Pachova said required the consultation of diverse stakeholders.
Pachova drew on her past experience in European Union-funded projects involving RMIT Europe, particularly the Edible Cities Network.
The team has now applied for a follow-up project focused on building capacities and engaging people in the design and use of nature-based solutions across the broader range of sites in the region.