There are many moving parts when it comes to operating a business. Not only do you need to ensure that you’re making a quality product and saving costs - you also should be making decisions that are beneficial to your community and the world at large.
Sustainable wastewater treatment is not necessarily the first area most companies turn to for new ideas. However, it’s a process that can improve business operations while helping your business address climate issues and become a better steward of water. New wastewater treatment technologies offer solutions that reduce energy consumption and increase the quality of water you are discharging.
The main reason companies like yours invest in onsite treatment is because they are facing high costs from the utility or trucking, or have permit levels that require industrial pretreatment before discharging. Typically, sustainability doesn’t make the list of reasons, and there are many reasons why companies don’t want to install onsite treatment, namely it is not their core business and it takes time, money and specialized knowledge to operate it.
But just how can you improve wastewater treatment processes and increase sustainability? Let's look at the current technologies for treatment and some of the sustainable solutions available.
Wastewater treatment hasn’t changed much in the past 50 years. For biological based treatment, there are variants, but they are all based on aerobic and anaerobic processes.
Biologically treating wastewater requires oxygen to fuel decomposition. The bigger your facility and the more wastewater streams you create, the more oxygen the on-site treatment facility will need; otherwise, treatment will either slow down or require an increase of power and overall time to process said waste. Both of these result in the overall system decreasing its efficiency, thereby increasing costs.
Anaerobic digestion uses microbial communities to remove organic matter without oxygen. Fun fact: while there have been many advances since then, the first anaerobic digester was actually installed in India in 1859 in a leper colony.
Many modern on-site wastewater treatment facilities use anaerobic digestion in some form. A low-cost form of anaerobic digestion is the use of anaerobic ponds in which wastewater is dumped into a hole as it would be in a landfill and left fully to biological processes to solve. However, agricultural industries and large industrial plants have more commonly incorporated anaerobic digestion because of the significant side-benefit of generating a type of methane known as biogas which can be captured during the treatment process and used as an energy process.
Because the system itself creates and captures energy, anaerobic digestion systems offer sustainability benefits to companies, as the biogas can offset power demand for the facility and help meet greenhouse gas commitments.
As you start to consider your alternatives, let's take a quick look at the steps every business can and should take if they are considering investing in onsite treatment.
Our team at Aquacycl believes we have built what is now the most sustainable wastewater solution available. If you are ready for something different, then consider Aquacycl's BioElectrochemcial Treatment Technology (BETT) and this technology treats high concentrations of organic carbon with a smaller footprint, hands off operation and 90% lower GHG emissions.
Our BETT system is based on microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology that generates (small quantities of) direct electricity as the microorganisms digest biological waste matter. The generated electricity could be used to offset the power consumption of the system. Because the BETT system does not produce biogas, it does not add methane into the environment.
If there is an existing anaerobic system onsite, the BETT system can be used as pretreatment to increase methane production by normalizing the feedstock before it goes into the digester. To learn more about this, check out the recent peer-reviewed paper that breaks down how our solution can increase biogas production by 20 to 30%.
The biggest benefit is when compared with traditional aerobic processes, the BETT system can remove the same amount of organic carbon with only 10% of the energy required. We are removing the toughest part of wastewater treatment, allowing downstream treatment to operate more efficiently, with lower energy or chemicals.
Are you ready to start a conversation? Our technological solutions can increase sustainability and decrease costs for businesses within just about every industry. Contact our team today for a consultation with one of our wastewater experts to learn exactly how our system can improve your plant's wastewater process.