Difference between revisions of "Team:NUS Singapore-A/Description"

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<h1>Description</h1>
 
<h1>Description</h1>
  
<p>Tell us about your project, describe what moves you and why this is something important for your team.</p>
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<h3 id='Overview'> The Problem</h2>
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    <p style="margin: 0 5%">Water pollution is a key problem in the textile dyeing and dyestuff production industry. Drinking water flows out of our faucets in Singapore, which we sometimes take for granted. However, in many parts of the world, rivers and waterbodies that are sources of drinking water and livelihood are becoming heavily polluted by textile dyeing. Due to irresponsible disposal of industrial effluents, hard-to-biodegrade synthetic dyes by textiles and dyestuff producers and ineffective wastewater treatment, chemicals accumulate and make these rivers and waterbodies unsuitable for human consumption, and inhospitable for marine fauna and flora.
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Already, Citarum River in Indonesia is a clear example of this murky problem. The 30 million residents relying on the river as their only water source and livelihood are experiencing adverse skin conditions and increased exposure to infectious diseases, while the river has almost no aquatic life left. In some areas of the river, lead levels at more than 1,000 times the USEPA standard in drinking water have been found. River water rapidly changing colours from red, to green, yellow, and black due to high concentrations of dye is not an uncommon sight. However, Citarum River is not an isolated case. Similar sights can be seen in China’s Pearl River, Buriganga River in Bangladesh and Bagmati River in India. In Bangladesh, Dhaka, 719 factories and textile mills generate close to 200 metric tons of wastewater per ton of fabric per year. On the global scale, the textile dyeing and dyestuff production industry is the second most pollutive industry, coming in only after oil, and also uses the most water apart from agriculture.
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In recent years, some efforts have been put in place to revive natural dyes as a more sustainable alternative to synthetic dyes. However, this motion has not been gaining much traction, as traditional natural dye production faces many constraints. Natural dyes produced traditionally often have inconsistent quality, varying from batch to batch of plants used. Furthermore, it is land and labour intensive, and competes with food production for land use.
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<h2 id='Overview'>The Problem Statement</h2>
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    <p style="margin: 0 5%"> Our team believes that synthetic dyes are the unsustainable solution, and have taken the synthetic biology approach to natural dye bioproduction in the hopes of making natural dyes a stronger, better substitute to synthetic dyes. What this means is our dyes have to be non-toxic, have reduced use of chemicals in its production, environmentally friendly and appealing to fashion designers and consumers.
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Revision as of 12:36, 7 October 2018

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Description

The Problem

Water pollution is a key problem in the textile dyeing and dyestuff production industry. Drinking water flows out of our faucets in Singapore, which we sometimes take for granted. However, in many parts of the world, rivers and waterbodies that are sources of drinking water and livelihood are becoming heavily polluted by textile dyeing. Due to irresponsible disposal of industrial effluents, hard-to-biodegrade synthetic dyes by textiles and dyestuff producers and ineffective wastewater treatment, chemicals accumulate and make these rivers and waterbodies unsuitable for human consumption, and inhospitable for marine fauna and flora.

Already, Citarum River in Indonesia is a clear example of this murky problem. The 30 million residents relying on the river as their only water source and livelihood are experiencing adverse skin conditions and increased exposure to infectious diseases, while the river has almost no aquatic life left. In some areas of the river, lead levels at more than 1,000 times the USEPA standard in drinking water have been found. River water rapidly changing colours from red, to green, yellow, and black due to high concentrations of dye is not an uncommon sight. However, Citarum River is not an isolated case. Similar sights can be seen in China’s Pearl River, Buriganga River in Bangladesh and Bagmati River in India. In Bangladesh, Dhaka, 719 factories and textile mills generate close to 200 metric tons of wastewater per ton of fabric per year. On the global scale, the textile dyeing and dyestuff production industry is the second most pollutive industry, coming in only after oil, and also uses the most water apart from agriculture.

In recent years, some efforts have been put in place to revive natural dyes as a more sustainable alternative to synthetic dyes. However, this motion has not been gaining much traction, as traditional natural dye production faces many constraints. Natural dyes produced traditionally often have inconsistent quality, varying from batch to batch of plants used. Furthermore, it is land and labour intensive, and competes with food production for land use.




The Problem Statement

Our team believes that synthetic dyes are the unsustainable solution, and have taken the synthetic biology approach to natural dye bioproduction in the hopes of making natural dyes a stronger, better substitute to synthetic dyes. What this means is our dyes have to be non-toxic, have reduced use of chemicals in its production, environmentally friendly and appealing to fashion designers and consumers.

What should this page contain?

  • A clear and concise description of your project.
  • A detailed explanation of why your team chose to work on this particular project.
  • References and sources to document your research.
  • Use illustrations and other visual resources to explain your project.

Inspiration

See how other teams have described and presented their projects:

Advice on writing your Project Description

We encourage you to put up a lot of information and content on your wiki, but we also encourage you to include summaries as much as possible. If you think of the sections in your project description as the sections in a publication, you should try to be concise, accurate, and unambiguous in your achievements.

References

iGEM teams are encouraged to record references you use during the course of your research. They should be posted somewhere on your wiki so that judges and other visitors can see how you thought about your project and what works inspired you.