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The book brings out several unique perspectives of impacts of COVID-19 on the environment with special emphasis on the risk and remediation of emerging contaminants. Idea is to work out under the one health framework and comprehend not only scientific and technical aspects but also environmental, legal and policy aspects for water resources management. The obvious stress is given to the occurrence, fate and transport of geogenic, microbial and anthropogenic contaminants of emerging concern under the preview of the fact that antibiotic and antiviral use has been unprecedented during the global pandemic of COVID-19. At the same time, this edited volume touches upon the broader framework of integrated water resource management, as well as mitigation and removal strategies to put forward a holistic picture to the readers and policymakers. These contents are divided into three sections: a) monitoring, occurrence, distribution and fate of emerging contaminants; b) source and effects ofthese contaminants on the total environment; and c) treatment strategies, natural attenuation and mitigation.
Auteur
Dr. Manish Kumar is a Professor and Head of the Sustainability Cluster at School of Engineering, University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India. He is Ph.D in Urban Engineering from the University of Tokyo, Japan, and has received several prestigious recognitions/fellowship, such as Water Advanced Research and Innovation (WARI) Fellowship, Japan Society for the promotion of Science (JSPS) foreign research fellowship, Brain Korea (BK)-21 post-doctoral fellowship, Monbukagakusho scholarship, Linnaeus-Palme stipend from SIDA, Sweden, Research Fellowship from CSIR, India and others. Prof. Kumar is active in the fields of contaminant transport and modeling, heavy metal speciation and toxicity, wastewater surveillance, emerging contaminants and water supply. He has over 200 publications to his credit. He is a Fellow of Royal Society for Chemistry (FRSC), London, UK. He is among the top 2% of researchers as per the list of Stanford University, USA. His ResearchGate score is above 97.5 percentile of the researchers in the world. Dr. Sanjeeb Mohapatra after finishing his Ph.D. degree at Environmental Science and Engineering Department, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay, India, joined the National University of Singapore (NUS), Singapore, to pursue his postdoctoral degree. His research interest broadly covers the monitoring of emerging contaminants (ECs), photo-degradation and enzymatic degradation of ECs, and the role of dissolved organic matter in deciding the fate of such contaminants. He is a recipient of the Water Advanced Research Innovation (WARI) Fellowship awarded by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), India, University of Nebraska Lincoln, USA, Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute (DWFI), USA and Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum (IUSSTF). He is a recipient Newton-Bhabha Fellowship jointly awarded by Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India, and British Council, U.K and DST-INSPIRE fellowship offered by DST, India. Dr. Mohapatra also won several international and local awards for his research work for the last couple of years and has many publications in reputed journals, book chapters, and refereed conferences to his credit.
Contenu
Author name
Affiliation
Title
Ryo Honda
Kanazawa University, Japan
COVID-19 and antimicrobial resistance: A coincidental correlation
Prosun Bhattacharya
KTH, Sweden
WBE role in COVID-19 management: An perspective of European Union perspective
Manish Kumar
IIT Gandhinagar, India
Temporal variation of WBE: How can it be meaning fully used?
Keisuke Kuroda
Toyama University, Japan
Pathways of antiviral resistance in post-covid anthropocene
Lata Ramrakhiani
CSIR- Central Glass and Ceramic Research Institute, India
Emerging Contaminants in Water and Wastewater: Remediation perspectives and Innovations in Treatment Technologies
Sushanta Kumar Naik Department of Soil Science, Ministry of Agriculture, Ranchi-834010, Jharkhand, India
Occurrence and fate of emerging contaminants in groundwater
Sneha Nayak Rao Manipal Institute of Technology, Karnataka, India
An emerging treatment technology: Exploring Deep Learning and Computer Vision Approach in Revealing Biosynthesized Nanoparticle Size for Optimization Studies
Dr. Parasuraman AS
Vemana University, Centre for Fish Immunology, VELS University, India
Remediation Strategy of the treatment of wastewater carrying emerging contaminants at Aquaculture facilities
D.N. Magana-Arachchi
National Institute of Fundamental Studies, Sri Lanka
Co-occurrence of Geogenic, Microbial and Anthropogenic Emerging Contaminants: Ecotoxicity and Relative environmental risks
Anurag Roy Environment and Sustainability Institute, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus, Cornwall TR10 9FE, UK
Concern for Heavy Metal-ion Water Pollution : Their Strategic Detection and Removal Opportunities
Sanjeeb Mohapatra
National University of Singapore, Singapore
Microbial source tracking in groundwater
Mehufuz Rahman
Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, India
Strategies to Provide Drinking Water in HRIDAY Cities using Indian Traditional Knowledge, Learnings from AMRUT Scheme and IoT
Debananda Mohapatra
Yeungnam University, South Korea
Sources, Consequences, and Control of Eutrophied Water: A significant concern for emerging contaminants in a developed and developing nation
Arpita Dasgupta
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India
Management of emerging solid waste during Covd-19 Pandemic
Vinay Tyagi
IIT Roorkee, India
Microplastic and its management perspectives in India