Greater Vancouver Regional Districts Liquid Waste Management Plan - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Greater Vancouver Regional Districts Liquid Waste Management Plan

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Greater Vancouver Regional Districts Liquid Waste Management Plan – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Greater Vancouver Regional Districts Liquid Waste Management Plan


1
Greater Vancouver Regional DistrictsLiquid
Waste Management Plan
2
GVRD
  • 21 municipalities one electoral area
  • Delivery of cost-effective utilities such as
    water, sewerage drainage, solid waste
    management
  • Environmental stewardship livability in the
    region
  • Area size (Land Water) 329,202 hectares
  • Population 2 million
  • Annual population growth rate 1.6

3
Greater Vancouver Region
4
Historical Context
  • The Sewerage and Drainage District and the first
    sewer plan date from 1914
  • The Rawn report recommended a sewerage plan for
    the growing region in the 1950s
  • The current LWMP provides a new path for the
    future

5
Sewer System 1950
6
Sewer System 2000
7
Estimated Volume of Untreated Sewage Discharge
8
LWMP Background
  • The LWMP is a plan under the Provincial Waste
    Management Act
  • Stage 3 and Addendum approved by all
    municipalities and GVRD - March 2001
  • Provincial Minister approved LWMP April 2002
  • Federal agencies have participated in development
    of the Plan
  • BIEAP / FREMP partnership used to address Federal
    issues

9
LWMP Strategies
  • 1. Conserve Resources
  • 2. Maintain Infrastructure and Stretch Capacity
  • 3. Maximize Environmental Benefit per Dollar
    Spent

10
Strategic Context
  • 1. Conserve Resources
  • Pollution prevention
  • Water conservation
  • Stormwater as a resource

11
Strategic Context
  • 2. Maintain Infrastructure and Stretch Capacity
  • 12 billion dollars in existing wastewater assets

12
Strategic Context
  • 3. Maximize Environmental Benefit per Dollar
    Spent
  • Limited financial resources and affordability
    context

13
LWMP Management Process Based On
  • Appropriate monitoring program
  • Defensible Triggers
  • Acceptable Risk
  • Reasonable Options
  • Mutually Agreeable Timelines

14
Process Context
  • A science-based approach is needed
  • There must be an understanding of environmental
    risk
  • The cost and benefits of options must be
    considered
  • The LWMP incorporates these into a formal
    upgrading trigger process

15
LWMP Upgrading Trigger Process
Define and evaluate risk in consultation with
Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks
Environment Canada
Discharge(s) meets Water Quality Objectives and
other established criteria
Assess options, costs, and benefits
Ongoing Review by Environmental Monitoring
Committee
District Board to select appropriate responses in
consultation with Ministry of Environment, Lands,
and Parks Environment Canada
Actions
Monitoring
16
Municipal Wastewater Collection and Treatment
System
17
Treatment Plants

18
Treatment Plants
19
Treatment Plants
  • Established base level of treatment
  • Secondary to river
  • Primary to marine
  • Upgrading based on environmental need and
    triggers
  • Addendum No. 1 clarifies growth-driven upgrading
    at Iona and Lions Gate

20
Recommendations - WWTPs
  • Base expansions for
  • growth, renewal, and substantial compliance
  • Investigate and monitor high loading sources
  • Assess copper reductions via water treatment
  • Evaluate U.V. at Annacis, Lulu, Northwest Langley
  • Monitor conditions and re-examine issues

21
Source and Demand Management
22
Source Management
  • Why
  • Protect workers, infrastructure, WWTP processes
  • Improve biosolids quality
  • Stretch capacity of existing systems
  • Reduce effect on the environment
  • Sectors
  • Industrial
  • Commercial institutional
  • Residential

23
Source and Demand Management
  • Emphasis on Pollution Prevention
  • Control of Toxic Substances Discharged to Sewer
  • Consistent with Canadian Environmental Protection
    Act (CEPA 1999)

24
Reduction at the Source
Substance Prohibition
Sector Control Programs
Pollution Prevention
Local Limits Methodology
Source Control
Sewer Use By-law
Water Conservation
Public Education
Pollutant Reduction
25
Source and Demand Management
  • Promotion of water conservation
  • Eliminate stormwater discharges to sanitary
    sewers
  • GVWD program to reduce copper levels
  • Education programs targeting green buildings,
    sustainable communities, residential, commercial
    and institutional practices

26
Residuals Management
  • The beneficial reuse of biosolids

27
Recycled Biosolids by Market Sector in 2000
28
Environmental Management

29
Environmental Management
  • Designated WLAP water use protection is paramount
  • A receiving environment science-based approach
  • A formal process to determine upgrading needs
  • A standing multi-agency Environmental Monitoring
    Committee

30
GVRDs LWMP Environmental Management Program
  • Receiving environment effects monitoring
  • Discharge characterization
  • Ambient monitoring
  • Risk assessments
  • Options evaluation

31
EMP Monitoring Components
  • WWTPs (5 Plants) - monitor effluent receiving
    environment
  • CSOs (50)
  • Recreational beaches (32 beaches with 120 sites)
  • Stormwater (130 watersheds)
  • Regional monitoring
  • Municipal monitoring programs

32
Treatment Plants Receiving Environment Effects
Monitoring
  • Understanding the fate of discharges

33
GVRDs LWMP Receiving Environment Monitoring
  • water and sediment chemistry
  • benthic invertebrate community
  • acute and chronic toxicity
  • bioaccumulation biomagnification
  • habitat impairment community alteration

34
Detailed Benthic Infaunal Analysis
35
Receiving Environment Investigations
  • Reviewed by Environmental Monitoring Committee
  • Detailed environmental fate and effect studies
  • Long-term monitoring programs
  • All receiving waterways in the region

36
LWMP Summary
  • A long term commitment to sustainable wastewater
    management
  • Action plans to address all identified issues
  • Formally reviewed on a five-year basis
  • Coordinated with other agencies including using
    BIEAP/FREMP as a senior level clearing house
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