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Planning for Cost Effective Waste Water Management

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Title: Planning for Cost Effective Waste Water Management


1
Planning for Cost Effective Waste Water Management
  • Alec Fleming,
  • County Manager,
  • Clare County Council

2
Approach to Recycling
  • Use of agricultural slurry as a fertiliser
    accounts for the majority of recycling.
  • Municipal sludges can be used as agricultural
    fertiliser after dewatering and an appropriate
    pasteurisation process.
  • Industrial sludges are generally not suitable for
    recycling.

3
Biological Options
  • Rotating Percolating filters are the oldest form
    of treatment unit consisting of a bed of stone,
    circular or rectangular in shape with
    intermittent or continuous addition of settled
    sewage to the surface. Biotowers are a variant of
    the Rotating Percolating filters but use plastic
    media to achieve a higher hydraulic and organic
    load.

4
Biological Options (contd.)
  • Rotating Biological Contactors comprise a
    cylinder rotating on its horizontal axis. The
    cylinder is made from high-density plastic. This
    process was generally used on small installations
    throughout the country.

5
Biological Options (contd.)
  • What are we trying to achieve?
  • (a) Reduce suspended solids.
  • (b) Reduce organic load (BOD).
  • (c) Remove phosphorous.
  • (d) Remove nitrogen.

6
Biological Options (contd.)
  • Secondary treatment together with constructed
    wetlands technology is a low running cost option
    for small rural treatment plants in sensitive
    areas. The downside is that they have a large
    land take requirement which in recent years was
    almost prohibitive due to land costs.
  • Biodegradation is the dominant mechanism of
    organic removal for municipal and most waste
    waters. Most large municipal treatment systems
    now use activated sludge systems for the purpose
    of organics removal.

7
Biological Options (contd.)
  • Nitrogen and Phosphorous removal may also be
    carried out by biological processes. In the case
    of nitrogen the process is denitrification
    followed by oxidation and nitrification.
    Phosphorous removal is a two stage biological
    process and can achieve removal rates of up
    70-80.

8
Developing Cost Effective Processes
  • Accurate forecasting of future needs is an
    essential pre-requisite to cost effective
    processes. Modular development of treatment
    systems and networks to match the demands will
    give cost effective solutions. It is easier to
    achieve cost effective solutions in periods of
    expansion, with certainty of demand requirements
    and limited scale.

9
Developing Cost Effective Processes (contd.)
  • In large public authority projects, the planning
    period from assessment of needs to delivery of
    systems, a period of ten years or more in certain
    cases, difficulties arise in development of cost
    effective solutions.

10
Developing Cost Effective Processes (contd.)
  • Cost Benefit Analysis if adapted to include
    sustainability and the principle of safe minimum
    standards plus the use of the modular approach
    can be the best method of achieving cost
    effective processes.

11
Capital Expenditure
  • Capital expenditure is the funding mechanism by
    which all public capital project are put in
    place. At the earliest possible opportunity, once
    a Feasibility Report has been prepared, project
    appraisal in the form of a Cost Benefit Analysis
    should be carried out. Sustainability and the
    principle of minimum standards should be included
    as principles in the Cost Benefit Analysis.

12
Capital Expenditure (contd.)
  • The Water Services Investment Programme is funded
    by Capital Grants provided by the DEHLG and Local
    Authority Funds. Local authority funds are
    provided from planning contributions and loans
    raised from banking institutions. Any loans
    raised are subject to approval of the elected
    members in the first instance and later by the
    DEHLG.

13
Capital Expenditure (contd.)
  • The process of loan approval by the DEHLG is a
    long process and as the local authority borrowing
    limit is set in the context of General Government
    Balance to ensure all borrowing is maintained
    within the limits of the Growth and Stability
    Pact.

14
Waste to Energy Recovery
  • It has been known for a considerable period of
    time that sludge, derived from municipal
    wastewater treatment plants, has economic
    benefits. Municipal sludge has a considerable
    calorific value and the method of abstracting
    this value remains an issue for resolution. In
    large waste water treatment plants anaerobic
    digestion resulting in the production of methane
    gas is the preferred and economic solution.

15
Waste to Energy Recovery (contd.)
  • Anaerobic Digestion has the advantage of
    producing methane gas which can be utilised as
    part of the energy requirement of the waste water
    treatment plant installation. Anaerobic Digestion
    also reduces the sludge in volume by 30-50 and
    sludge is rendered odour and pathogen free as an
    end product.
  • Stabilised sludge is also capable of utilisation
    as a fuel for power station or cement factories,
    where burning at high temperatures takes place.

16
SUDS
  • Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SUDS) has
    developed as a system to attenuate rainfall
    discharge, especially in times of persistent or
    heavy rainfall, to receiving pipe systems,
    streams, rivers lakes or aquifer recharge. SUDS
    is a system that focuses decisions about drainage
    on the environment and people.

17
SUDS (contd.)
  • In SUD systems decisions will take account of
    drainage and the effect of such drainage on water
    quality, water quantity, amenity and people.
    Properly designed SUD systems will incorporate
    swales, storage facilities either in tanks,
    ponds, lakes, pipes or proprietary storage
    systems with high voids ratios plus filtering
    systems using natural vegetation/soil/ gravel/
    geotextile combinations to reduce the amount of
    pollutants being discharged to receiving waters.

18
SUDS (contd.)
  • Local authorities across the country incorporate
    conditions relating to SUDS in planning
    permissions issued, depending on the local
    conditions relating to the application. Such
    conditions may restrict discharge flows at
    certain times.

19
Treatment
  • Effective sewage treatment comprises screening,
    grit removal, primary settlement, oxidation ,
    secondary clarification, sludge treatment and
    disposal and discharge of treated effluent to the
    receiving water in accordance with the licence
    issued by the EPA under the Waste Water Discharge
    (Authorisation) Regulations 2007.

20
Treatment (contd.)
  • The number and combination of processes required
    to meet the final treatment standards processes
    depend on the condition of the effluent
    generated, the availability, quality, type and
    volume of the receiving water, the availability
    of suitable land and the Licence conditions
    imposed by the EPA under their new powers.

21
Monitoring
  • Recent Waste Water Discharge Licence issued by
    the EPA requires the following parameters to be
    monitored on the primary secondary discharge
  • pH, BOD, COD, Suspended Solids, Total
    Nitrogen, Total Phosphorus, Ammonia,
  • Oils, Fats Grease, Temperature, Toxicity,
    Metals Organic compounds.

22
Implementation of Standards
  • Treatment standards for waste water treatment
    plants are set by EU directives transposed into
    Irish law. The Urban Waste Water Regulations
    gives standards for Biological Oxygen Demand
    (BOD), Suspended Solids (SS), Chemical Oxygen
    Demand (COD), Phosphorous and Nitrogen .

23
Implementation of Standards (contd.)
  • However depending on the receiving waters type
    and the presence of European designated sites,
    e.g. (SPA, NHA, SAC), other regulations apply to
    treatment standards also, such as Dangerous
    Substances Regulations, Water Frame Regulations
    (relevant pollutants), Bathing Water Regulations,
    Birds Directive, Habitats Directive, Live
    Molluscs (Production Areas) Designation 2006,
    etc.

24
Implementation of Standards (contd.)
  • The Waste Water Discharge (Authorisation)
    Regulations 2007, which require local authorities
    to apply to the EPA to licence waste water
    discharges to receiving waters over the period up
    to June 2009 and compliance with these licence
    conditions will ensure implementation of these
    standards.

25
Climate Change
  • Climate change in Ireland is the subject of
    ongoing research being carried out by Met Eireann
    under a project called Community Climate Change
    Ireland. This project is examining climate change
    under a number of headings, Influence of the
    Atlantic Ocean, Storms, Uncertainty, River
    Flooding, Health, Agriculture and Economics.

26
Climate Change (contd.)
  • Since 1993 observed increases in sea level rises
    vary from 2.3 to 4.7 mm per year. Rising and
    warming seas will increase the frequency and
    severity of storms and cyclones with very high
    wind speeds.

27
Climate Change (contd.)
  • It must be acknowledged that climate modelling is
    an inexact science and computer models are not
    perfect but increasingly are embracing the many
    interlocking factors contributing to climate
    change.

28
Climate Change (contd.)
  • River flooding, in August this year, has reminded
    people of the devastation caused to crops,
    property and life by unexpected and usual levels
    of summer rainfall. Overall the expectation is
    that Ireland will experience increased winter
    precipitation with a rise of winter river flows
    while in summer increased temperatures and
    decreased precipitation will cause a reduction in
    summer river flows.

29
Climate Change (contd.)
  • Water supply management and design plus drainage
    solutions must be re-assessed with the changing
    weather patterns.

30
Climate Change (contd.)
  • Health is affected by the depletion of the ozone
    layer while agriculture may be further affected
    by pests and disease currently not present in
    Ireland. The major benefit to Ireland from
    climate change is decreasing fuel bills for
    domestic heating in winter and spring time.
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