Water & Wastewater Treatment Magazine
Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/641946
Close-Up P hosphorus removal is near the top of the list of concerns for most UK wastewater utilities at the moment, thanks to the requirements of the Water Framework Directive. Reaching 'good' ecological standard in the country's watercourses, as demanded by the WFD, will require wastewater treatment works large and small to achieve stricter consent limits. Typical consents of between 0.1 mg/l (for large wastewater treatment works) and 0.5 mg/l (for small sites) are set to be imposed, posing a significant challenge across the board. Unlike some other substances controlled under the WFD, phosphorus (P) is predominantly the water industry's problem, with discharges from treated wastewater and industrial effluent streams the primary cause of rivers and waterways failing to meet standards. Furthermore, phosphorus pollution - which causes rivers to go green, in an effect known as eutrophication – is particularly noticeable by the public, giving customers a negative image of how water companies are treating the environment. Even when it is removed from wastewater as part of a modified activated sludge process, phosphorus- heavy sludge liquors can cause rock-like struvite to form, leading to a particular maintenance headache at larger treatment plants with anaerobic digesters (see box). It's no wonder therefore that water and sewerage companies are making P removal a priority, with most planning to invest significant sums in it in AMP6. Severn Trent, for example, is spending £120M on additional P removal in AMP6. The WFD will mean that utilities are typically facing consents at a host of smaller works where phosphorus has not been considered an issue before: Scottish Water, for example, is in line to have phosphorus consents at 120 sites under the WFD. Currently, it has consents at 92 sites and only 47 of these have required a permanent solution to be in place (in the form of chemical dosing) to meet that consent. The problem for the industry is that the current standard response of chemical dosing, typically using ferric sulphate, is both inadequate - in that it cannot achieve the low levels of P required – and too expensive and resource-intensive to roll out to large numbers of smaller treatment sites, many of which are unmanned. Water companies have various tools at their disposal for improving dosing performance, such as using more efficient dosing pumps or using alternative chemicals like aluminium sulphate, but there is little confidence that these can achieve the step change required. "The regulation as it stands would really present a huge challenge to the industry as a whole and needs to be looked at," Stuart Ainsworth, Advanced Process Control specialist at Hach, said at WWT's Wastewater conference last month. "Conventional dosing still has its place and there is a lot that can be done with it. But it will not be fit for purpose in terms of reaching these very low consents." Many would like to see the Environment Agency and the UK's other environmental regulators rethink the way they implement the WFD, to take the onus off smaller treatment sites and allow a more creative, catchment-wide approach. The trading of permits for P pollution is a possibility, as is the prospect of water companies working with farmers to reduce the amount of phosphate they put into watercourses, offsetting water company discharges. Seasonal variations in permits are also an option, since eutrophication is largely a summer problem. With this in mind, Wessex Water has been working with the Environment Agency for the last 18 months on a pilot catchment permitting programme in the Bristol Avon catchment. The programme has studied the phosphorus discharges from the 66 sewage treatment works in the catchment and sought to understand the proportion of P that comes from each works; the hope is that it will allow Wessex to prioritise investments and find ways to get overall P levels down without having to make uneconomic interventions at smaller works. Of the 66 works, the programme has identified 24 which require a removal solution, according to Ruth Barden Wastewater treatment Putting the focus on phosphorus 22 | MARCH 2016 | WWT | www.wwtonline.co.uk ● Industry set for lower P consents under Water Framework Directive ● New tertiary technologies and catchment solutions investigated ● Resource recovery opportunities explored by James Brockett