Utility Week

Utility Week 22nd March 2019

Utility Week - authoritative, impartial and essential reading for senior people within utilities, regulators and government

Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/1094485

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 16 of 31

UTILITY WEEK | 22ND - 28TH MARCH 2019 | 17 Operations & Assets Operations & Assets Biogas dressed up in red swimsuits and allowed people to pelt them with digestate, the harmless goo leover in an anaerobic digestion tank aer crops and waste have been fermented to create green energy, in return for a donation to Comic Relief. Philipp Lukas, founder and managing director of Future Biogas said the "fun, family event" was an opportunity "to welcome our neighbours in Spridlington on to our site". Various events on the site ran from 5:30 to 7:30 and raised £36,000 for Comic Relief. If you have an asset or project you would like to see featured in this slot, please send pictures and details to: paulnewton@fav-house.com Market view Resilience modelling Neil Wragg says water companies can more effectively allocate resources by not over-engineering their technical solutions. W ith agreement from the regulator, water com- panies can plan investments appropriately for the provision of services. Outside invest- ment allows the replacement of deteriorated assets and improvements to the quality of drinking water and water courses. Ofwat recently reported on how water and wastewater companies have approached asset health and how this contributes to resilience. Key challenges include driving innovation, adopting a long-term mindset and understanding how asset health affects service. Ofwat describes resilience as "the ability to cope with, and recover from, disruption, and anticipate trends and variability in order to maintain services for people and protect the natural environment, now and in the future". Water companies recognise these parameters and know their treatment facilities must comply. The evaluation of the resilience of a treatment facility should be an important part of its design and operation. Resilience modelling allows the effective selection of processes and treatment schemes. It also provides a critical means of influencing and assessing investment decisions and operational and maintenance planning in order to minimise the overall cost of compliance. Without proper resilience assessment, there will always be a tendency to default to a "belt and braces" approach as a means of managing the compliance risk, leading to "gold-plated" engineering, with specifications much higher than the business need. This in turn leads to higher total cost over the life of a treatment asset. Resilience can be assessed across the full water cycle, encompassing drinking water treatment, sewage and trade effluent treatment, and sludge treatment and disposal. Typical uses of resilience modelling have included the following: • comparison of proposed schemes and alternative technologies in design phase; • identification of critical and non-critical equipment; • risk-ranking of treatment works; • development of investment, operational, mainte- nance and spares holding strategies; • operational troubleshooting and identification of capacity bottlenecks. Using resilience modelling in this way, key factors can be brought together and assessed, including equipment reliability, system capacity and criticality, operations and maintenance strategy, flowrates and discharge consents – and maintenance resources and spares holding. Neil Wragg, head of DNV GL's Performance Forecasting team

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Utility Week - Utility Week 22nd March 2019