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Identification of optimal strategies for energy management and reducing carbon dioxide emission at the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant (AWTP). Chalida U-tapao Steven A. Gabriel, Christopher Peot and Mark Ramirez
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Identification of optimal strategies for energy management and reducing carbon dioxide emission at the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant (AWTP) Chalida U-tapao Steven A. Gabriel, Christopher Peot and Mark Ramirez Dept. of Civil & Env. Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority, Washington DC 13 November 2009
Outline • Overview of energy, wastewater treatment • process and objective of this research • Flowchart of modeling decisions/processes • (the Blue Plains AWTP is case study) • Ongoing work
U.S. Primary Energy Overview • Imports fill the gap between U.S. energy use and production • Petroleum is the major imported fuel (Source: EIA, Energy perspective , June 2009)
U.S. Energy Consumption by Energy Source, 2008 • More renewable energy will decrease imported petroleum, coal and natural gas • Many renewable energy sources can be selected (Source: EIA, Renewable Energy Consumption and Electricity 2008 Statistics)
Wastewater Treatment Process • Contaminated substances are separated in solid form • Almost all solids are biomass (Source: DC Water and Sewer Authority)
Biosolids is a Significant Renewable Energy Source • Biosolids is biomass that is renewable energy source (Source: DC Water and Sewer Authority)
A Huge Plant Such as The Blue Plains AWTP Has Great Potential to Produce Renewable Energy (Source: DC Water and Sewer Authority)
Objectives of this research • Find optimal strategies for energy management • Use energy sources that can reduce the carbon footprint at the Blue Plains AWTP
Flowchart SEWAGE Investment $ Operations/Investments PB=% of sewage to be converted to biosolids $ $ IWASA WASA Operations PE,W=% of power from methane to be used at WASA $ Iwind Isolar Idigester PG,W=% of methane to be used at WASA 1-PB PB 1-PG,W Biosolids Methane Outside sales transp. indust. Biogas Other clean energy wind, solar, etc PG,W Use at WASA Electricity Land application natural gas grid/market 1- PE,W PE,W Outside sales carbon allowance market Use at WASA electric power grid/market
The Blue Plains AWTP operating process 330 MGD 736,087 kWH/day GHG (CO2) GHG (CO2 CH4 ,N2O) GHG (CO2) Odor Biosolids 1,163 tons/day (Source: Gabriel, S.A., et al., Statistical Modeling to Forecast Odor Levels of Biosolids Applied to Reuse Sites. Journal of Environmental Engineering, 2006).
The Anaerobic Biodegradation Production Process Active biomass + C-substance CH4 + CO2 + stabilized biomass + H2O Biogas composition Methane gas 55-65% Carbon dioxide 30-40% Water vapor, traces of H2S and H2 0-5% (Source: Appels, L., et al., Principles and potential of the anaerobic digestion of waste-activated sludge).
The Relation Between Biogas Production and Retention Time ODS : organic dry solids of the sludge (wt%) (Source: Appels, L., et al., Principles and potential of the anaerobic digestion of waste-activated sludge). Biogas is 0.4 x 239 x 1000 = 95.6 x 103 cubic meters per day Methane is 60 % = 57.3 x 103 cubic meters per day Carbon dioxide is 35% = 33.5 x 103 cubic meters per day
Historic Daily Power Consumption Data for The Blue Plains AWTP Average 2008 = 736 x 103 kilowatt hours per day
From Methane Gas to Electricity • Methane 1 ft3 = 1,028 BTU • 3,412 BTU methane = 1 kWH • Blue Plains AWTP will have almost 534 x 103kilowatt hours per day from methane gas ( Source: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/kids/goodstuff.cfm?page=about_energy_conversion_calculator-basics) • Plant needs 736 x 103 kilowatt hours per day (not enough)
Other Renewable Options are at Blue Plains • Methane from biosolids generate electricity that is not enough for the Blue Plains AWTP operations (Need 736 x 103 kilowatt hours per day but it is able to generate only 534 x 103 kilowatt hours per day ) • Other options more than methane or electricity is to invest in renewable energy source (e.g., wind, solar, hydropower and geothermal)
Prediction of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Credits • 0.8 tons CO2 credits per dry ton biosolids (Brown, S., H. Gough, and et al., Green Aspects of Biosolids Processing and Use 2009) • 0.8 x 1,163 tons biosolids per day • CO2 credits are 930 tons per day
Financial Benefit from CO2 Credits Transaction Volume and Value, Global Carbon Market, 2008 108.9/27.4 = $ 3.94 per ton CO2 Source: Ecosystem Marketplace, New Carbon Finance • The Blue Plains AWTP • $3.94 x 930 tons per day = $ 3,692 per day • = $1.3 million per year
Summary • Biosolids from the Blue Plains AWTP is a significant renewable energy source. It has a high efficiency to generate methane and electricity Methane is 57.4x103 cubic meters per day Electricity is 534.5x103kilowatt hours per day • CO2 credits is 930tons CO2 per day • Financial benefit from CO2 credits is about $ 3,692 per day • Methane for transportation grid • Selling Electricity to Grid Electric Power
Ongoing Work • Build a multiobjective optimization model in order to make best decisions to: • minimize DCWASA’s CO2 footprint • minimize energy usage • minimize costs • other considerations (as appropriate) • Will consider both investment decisions as well as operational ones