This paper proposes a scientific and economic source-control framework for improving Yamuna River water quality by intercepting major wastewater inlets. A four-stage treatment and resource-recovery process—heavy-metal removal, ammonia extraction, phosphate removal, and nitrogen polishing—is presented, using established technologies operated in parallel sidestream modules. The approach emphasizes reuse of recovered materials, reduction of nutrient and metal loads at source, and lower capital expenditure compared to downstream-only remediation strategies. Expected treatment performance, operational considerations, and ballpark cost estimates indicate that large-scale river improvement is achievable at a fraction of recent cleanup expenditures. Instead of endlessly treating pollution after it enters the river, this work argues for neutralizing it at the source—once, decisively, and at scale. Rivers are cleaned not by intention alone, but when waste itself becomes worth recovering.
Uthraa Murali (Tue,) studied this question.