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Assessment of Physical and Chemical Quality Standards for Water and Sanitation Disclosure Towards SDG 6: A Study in Wijimulyo, Nanggulan, Kulon Progo Regency Kurniawan, Muhammad Prasetya; Wibowo, Setyawan Bekti; Hidayah, Nurulia; Santoso, Probo; Octaviani, Danis Syalwa; Larasati, Errika Anggraini; Rachman, Atika Yulia; Nurramdhana, Almaira Daffa; Mahardini Gunawan, Citra Aulia
Jurnal Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat (Indonesian Journal of Community Engagement) Vol 10, No 2 (2024): June
Publisher : Direktorat Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/jpkm.90890

Abstract

Collaboration between academics, educators, students, village civil servants, and the community is needed to implement Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 6. It is related to clean water and sanitation in the context of training vocational teachers and students to provide it to the community. First, measurements were made of the water quality around the research area. Sixty-three water samples were drawn from each resident's home's water supply. A multi-parameter water quality checker was used to evaluate the samples, and then spatial data processing was used. A temperature of 24.1 C, turbidity of 0.4 NTU, conductivity of 0.4 mS/cm, pH 7.1, salinity of 0.2 ppt, DO of 5.9 mg/l, and TDS value of 267 mg/l were measured. These average results indicate that the water quality satisfies both Indonesian National Standard 3553:2015 and the water quality criteria set by the Minister of Health of the Republic of Indonesia Regulation No. 2 Year 2023. However, the results of tracking every sampling location show that several samples fall short of water quality requirements because of the high mineral content, weather, and other factors. Every school and community organization needs to run scenarios to raise awareness about water quality standards involving the government, non-governmental organizations, and the private sector to implement SDGs 6, such as stakeholder engagement, community enhancement, and policy and regulation.
Integrating LCA and Carbon Accounting for Gate-to-Gate Sustainability Improvement: Evidence from Liquid Nitrogen Injection in KBR Purifier Unit for Liquid Ammonia Production Kurniawan, Muhammad Prasetya; Wijaya, Hanung; Huda, Khoirul; Anggraini, Ananda Dian; Larasati, Errika Anggraini; Nurramdhana, Almaira Daffa
Jurnal Ilmiah Inovasi Vol 25 No 3 (2025): Desember
Publisher : Politeknik Negeri Jember

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This research combines Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and Carbon Accounting to quantify sustainability performance improvements in ammonia production. Emphasis is placed on gate-to-gate in the start-up phase of the purifier unit where energy use is high. Typically, start up in ammonia plants is a 20-25 hour long process that consumes large volumes of natural gas and steam resulting in substantial carbon emissions and inefficiency. This statement presents the technology of LIN (Liquid Nitrogen) Injection, which is used to accelerate the cooling process of purifier units at a temperature between −100 to−186 °C, reduces star-up duration by an estimation about 10.56 hours. ISO 14064-1 and SNI 7724:2011 standards were used, a gaseous mass, energy, and emission balance was carried out. Results also indicate that LIN Injection reduces natural gas consumption of 10.92 tons, steam with a factor of 899.56 tons and total energy Mech/ηµ using start-up cycle 592.89 GJ. This is equivalent to 33.3-34.2 tons of CO₂e emission reduction. This process-oriented decarbonization supports the MRV system, which enables carbon credit registration according to Indonesian’s IDX Carbon market framework.