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Wastewater Management. Wastewater. Wastewater (or sewage) refers to any water that has been used by people in some way Includes water from showers, sinks, washing machines and dishwashers (anything with a drain!)
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Wastewater • Wastewater (or sewage) refers to any water that has been used by people in some way • Includes water from showers, sinks, washing machines and dishwashers (anything with a drain!) • All drains converge to a single pipe underground leading to the outside of the building
Septic Systems (20% of Canadians) • Rural areas (usually) • Wastewater runs to an underground septic tank • Inside the tank, solids and oils separate from the water (solids sink / oils and fats float)
Lighter than water (oils/fats) Heavier than water (solids)
Septic Systems (continued) • Water called effluent (or gray water) runs downhill to a drain field of perforated pipes which are laid in gravel-filled trenches. • Bacteria decompose organics in the wastewater • The purified water percolates (seeps) downwards into the soil
Septic Systems (continued) • Periodically – usually every 1-3 years, the septic tank needs to be pumped out. • The material pumped out is called septage. • Septage is disposed of in a) landfillsb) incineratorsc) fieldsd) large lakes / oceans
Sewer Systems (80% of Canadians) • All wastewater (and sometimes storm water entering storm sewers) goes to a central treatment facility
Sewage Treatment Process • Primary Treatment - screens and settling tanks (or clarifiers) - physical trapping of or sinking of solids
Secondary Treatment - biotechnology - bacterial populations – decompose organic matter - mixing of air with the water - stirring • Production of sewage sludge Activated Sludge = bacterial action (decomposers)
The water that has been flowing through the system – effluent – is treated with chlorine and sometimes UV light or ozone to kill any remaining bacteria
Tertiary Treatment (sometimes) - removal of nutrients - such as phosphorus - done by reacting nutrient with a metal - precipitate (solid powder) forms
What can be done with the sludge (also called biosolids)? • Dump it in lakes / oceans • Dump it into landfills • Incinerate it (possibly produce electricity) • Spread it on fields (cheap fertilizer) Advantages / Disadvantages of each?
Large-Scale Sewage Treatment Advantages Disadvantages • Can treat large amounts of sewage quickly • Uses a fairly small area of land • The facility is expensive to build and maintain • Effluent may still contain pathogens and some chemicals (e.g. pharmaceuticals and medicines) • Requires water!
Peel Region (Mississauga, Brampton and Caledon) • Two wastewater facilities on the shores of Lake Ontario (Lakeview and Clarkson) • Other small ones (e.g. Inglewood discharges effluent into the Credit River) • http://www.peelregion.ca/pw/water/sewage-trtmt/