Tratamento e reúso de águas residuárias em instituição de ensino: avaliação da ETE do IFRN de Ipanguaçu

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Data
2025-10-16Autor
Nascimento, Luiz
http://lattes.cnpq.br/1744544431350302
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The lack of sewage treatment, or inadequate treatment combined with improper disposal,
can pose serious risks to the population. A decentralized sewage treatment system is
essential to reducing the burden on the municipal system; however, its efficiency requires
continuous monitoring. In this context, this study aims to monitor, characterize, and
evaluate raw and treated sewage on the IFRN-Ipanguaçu campus, identifying specific
corrections and enabling on-campus wastewater reuse, promoting sustainability and
reducing water supply costs. This research is classified as applied, quantitative,
exploratory, and descriptive. Initially, data were obtained from the facility, followed by
an assessment of the campus's sewage treatment, demonstrating the possibility of reusing
treated wastewater to promote sustainability and financial savings. As a technological
product, a management plan for the IFRN Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) was
developed to maximize process efficiency. Overall, the WWTP at the IFRN-Ipanguaçu
campus presented satisfactory organic matter and solids removal performance, with
average BOD₅ and COD efficiencies of 81% and 72%, and TSS above 80%, meeting the
limits established by CONAMA Regulation No. 430/2011. Nutrient removal was low, a
desirable characteristic for agricultural reuse, provided it is controlled in accordance with
CONAMA Resolution No. 503/2021. Disinfection promoted a 92.5% reduction in
thermotolerant coliforms; however, operational failures resulted in average
concentrations of approximately 10⁶ MPN/100 mL. According to WHO (2006)
guidelines, this value falls only within the restricted irrigation category (option H),
applicable to localized irrigation systems without occupational risk. Under these
conditions, reuse is feasible for the fertigation of less demanding crops, such as forage
grasses, provided continuous monitoring is carried out. Despite these advances, the
evaluated system still requires structural and operational corrections. This research, a
pioneer in the scientific evaluation of the IFRN – Ipanguaçu WWTP, highlights both the
potential for agricultural reuse and the need for interventions to ensure operational
sustainability, serving as a technical reference for managers and operators of similar
compact systems.