Intro Webinar on WERF Costs Project - NEIWPCC · 2018. 2. 15. · Webinar Agenda 1:00 to 3:00 PM...

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Webinar on WERF PerformanceWebinar on WERF Performance Costs Project

Sponsored by the NEIWPCC Onsite Wastewater WorkgroupWorkgroup

August 10, 2011g

Webinar AgendaWebinar Agenda1:00 to 3:00 PM

• Welcome and Introductions  – Tom Groves, NEIWPCC

• Tools and Materials Available from WERF – Jeff Moeller, Senior Program Director

• Decentralized Systems Performance and Costs Project• Decentralized Systems Performance and Costs Project Overview – John Buchanan, P.E., Ph.D., University of Tennessee, Principal Investigator 

• Question and Answer Session

• Webinar Conclusion

Webinar SpeakersWebinar Speakers

John R. Buchanan, Ph.D., P. E.John R. Buchanan, Ph.D., P. E.Associate Professor Department of Biosystems

Engineering & Soil Science ,University of Tennessee

Jeff MoellerSenior Program Director, Water Environment 

Research Foundation (WERF)

Tom GrovesTom GrovesDirector of Wastewater and Onsite Programs, New 

England Interstate water Pollution Control Commission (NEIWPCC)(NEIWPCC)

NEIWPCC and WERF

• NEIWPCC is an annual subscriber of WERF

NEIWPCC and WERF

NEIWPCC is an annual subscriber of WERF

• NEIWPCC Deputy Director Susan Sullivan is member of the WERF Research Council

• NEIWPCC staff participate on various WERF Knowledge Areas (decentralized wastewater, climate change, stormwater nutrients biosolids etc )stormwater, nutrients, biosolids, etc.)

• NEIWPCC staff participate on WERF Project Subcommittees  (i.e., Tom Groves on Performance and Costs Project)

Performance and Costs for Decentralized Unit Processes

This project was conducted by the Consortium of Institutes for Decentralized Wastewater Treatment (CIDWT). Funding  support was provided by the US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) and 

administered by WERF as part of the Decentralizedadministered by WERF as part of the Decentralized Water Resources Collaborative.

Tools and Materials Available from WERF

Jeff MoellerJeff Moeller

Jeff Moeller, P.E.Jeff Moeller, P.E.

NEIWPCC Onsite Wastewater GroupNEIWPCC Onsite Wastewater GroupAug.10,2010WebinarAug.10,2010WebinarAug. 10, 2010 WebinarAug. 10, 2010 Webinar

• Rural communities, b b d i isuburbs, and cities are 

looking for ways to meet water wastewater andwater, wastewater, and stormwater needs

• Decentralized systems canDecentralized systems can be an affordable, sustainable solution

• They can be used with centralized systems for optimization

• $16 million in research available on decentralized systems– Decision‐making tools

– Design

– Management options

– Much more…

R h i j i ffCoalition for Alternative• Research program is a joint effort 

between the WERF and the Decentralized Water Resources

Coalition for Alternative Wastewater Treatment

Decentralized Water Resources Collaborative (DWRC) with funding from U.S. EPA

DWRC History:

Phase 1: 1997 2003– Phase 1: 1997‐2003

• Administered by Washington U. in St. Louis

• 30+ projects, $8 mill.

– Phase 2: 2003‐2010

• Administered by WERF• Administered by WERF

• 40+ projects, $8 mill.

1 Program Scope1. Program Scope

2. Research Highlightsg g

3. Outreach

1. Septic / Onsite Systems

Source: NDWRCDP

Source: US EPA

Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.

2.  Small Community and Cluster Systems

Source: Orenco Systems

Source: Premier Tech Aqua, Ecoflo ClusterSource: Loudon County

Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.

3.  Urban and Suburban Applications

S Sid ll F i d

Source: Ed Clerico, Alliance Environmental

Source: Sidwell Friends 

Source: Terence Kerns,  theEcoVillage.com.au

Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.

4. LID / Green Infrastructure for Stormwater

Source: Barr Engineering Company and the City of Burnsville, MN

Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.Photo courtesy of Orenco systems, Inc.

Partner Focus Areas:

• WERFEnvironmental Science &• WERF Science & Engineering

• CAWT

• EPRIManagement, Economics &• EPRI

• NRECA

Economics, & Policy

• CIDWTNOWRA

Training and Ed ti• NOWRA Education

• Environmental Science and Engineering– Quantitative Tools to Determine 

the Expected Performance ofthe Expected Performance of Wastewater Soil Treatment Units

– Evaluation of Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Septic Systems

– Influent Constituent fCharacteristics of the Modern Waste Stream from Single Sources

• Management, E i d P liEconomics, and Policy– Business Attributes of Successful 

Responsible Management Entitiesp g

– International Issues and Innovations in Integrated and Decentralized Water Resource Infrastructure

– Overcoming Barriers to Evaluation and Use of Decentralized fWastewater Technologies and Management

• Training and Education– Educational Curriculum for Onsite/Decentralized Wastewater TreatmentWastewater Treatment

• University Curriculum

• Practitioner Curriculum

Installer Training Program– Installer Training Program

– Decentralized Wastewater Treatment O&M Service Provider Training Program

– Decentralized Wastewater GlossaryGlossary

When to Consider Distributed Systems in an Urban and Suburban Context• Analyzed 20 case studiesAnalyzed 20 case studies• Locations in U.S. and Australia 

where decentralized systems b d fare being used for wastewater 

service• Decentralized WastewaterDecentralized Wastewater 

Stakeholder Model (Excel)• www.werf.org/distributedwater

Guidance for Establishing Successful Responsible f pManagement Entities• Professional management 

ensures performance andensures performance and reliability of decentralized systems

• Responsible managementResponsible management entities (RMEs) are a successful management model

• A website was created to provide all the resources needed to establish an RME

www.werf.org/RME

Case Studies on New Water Paradigmg

• Creates a platform for communities to overcomecommunities to overcome challenges through operating under key sustainability principles and practices.principles and practices. 

• Uses examples from 2 case study communities (Tucson/Pima County, Arizona(Tucson/Pima County, Arizona and Northern Kentucky) to offer real world context.

Award Winning Website:Award Winning Website:www.decentralizedwater.org

Quick Quick QQGuideGuide

The quick guide provides a snapshot of every product availableThe quick guide provides a snapshot of every product available from the DWRC, including links to tools and reports.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) GuideFrequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Guide

The FAQ serves as a guide to the Research and Products from the DWRC, including links.

Federal Agency and NGO BriefingsNGO Briefings

• Smart, Clean & Green:21st Century Sustainable Water Infrastructure

• Integration: A New Framework and Strategy f W M ifor Water Management in Cities and Towns

Additional Outreach Efforts

• Educational Video• Educational Video• Promotional Brochures, 

Flyers• PowerPoint Presentation• PowerPoint Presentation 

Templates• Brochure for Centralized 

Agenciesg• Dedicated Outreach 

Web Page• Journal, Magazine 

Articles• Workshops, 

Presentations, and W biWebinars

www.werf.org/decentralizedoutreach

Thank you!

Contact:   Jeff Moeller, P.E.jmoeller@werf.org(571) 384‐2104

Performance and Costs for Decentralized Unit Processes

John R. Buchanan, Ph.D., P. E.A i t P fAssociate Professor

Department of Biosystems Engineering & Soil ScienceUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of Tennessee

Contributors

• Principle Investigator:– John R. Buchanan, University of Tennessee

• Cooperators:– Nancy E. Deal, North Carolina State University y , y– David L. Lindbo, North Carolina State University– Adrian T. Hanson, New Mexico State University– David Gustafson, University of Minnesota– Randall J. Miles, University of Missouri

Project Subcommittee (PSC) Membersj ( )– Tom Groves, New England Interstate Water

Pollution Control CommissionPollution Control Commission – Mike Hines, Southeast Environmental Engineering– Jim Kreissl, Environmental Consultant– Jack Miniclier, Charles City County– Barbara Rich, Deschutes County Environmental

H lthHealth– Eberhard Roeder, Florida Department of Health (for

Elke Ursin))– Larry Stephens, Stephens Consulting Services

• WERF Staff• WERF Staff– Jeff Moeller, Senior Program Director

Performance and Costs forPerformance and Costs for Decentralized Unit Processes

• Objective– To provide basic wastewater management p g

information to planners and decision-makers in very small communitiesM S i h– Mayor Smith

• Mission– Demonstrate the appropriateness of

decentralized wastewater collection, treatment and dispersal methodsand dispersal methods

End Products

• Factbook– Wastewater Basics for Small Communities

• Factsheets– Four collection systems factsheetsy– Eight treatment systems factsheets– Seven dispersal/disposal systems factsheetsp p y

• Spreadsheet– Economic model of wastewater optionsEconomic model of wastewater options

Cornerstone FactbookCornerstone Factbook• Wastewater Basics for

Small Community Leaders and Planners– What’s in wastewater– From wastewater to

twater– Options for

C ll ti• Collection• Treatment• Dispersal/disposal• Dispersal/disposal• Management

Provides Generalized InformationL k t th bi i t• Looks at the bigger picture– How wastes are removed from wastewater

I f ti M d h ki ith– Information a Mayor needs when working with an engineer

– Scale– Scale• Onsite treatment• DecentralizedDecentralized• Centralized

– Commitment to O&MCommitment to O&M

Example InformationExample Information

• A quick means of determining which style is appropriate by daily wastewater volume

Second ExampleSecond Example

• Appropriateness by– Population densityp y– Soil depth– Rocky– Steep terrain– Arctic or Arid– Nutrient limits– Pathogen limits

Factsheets are more Specific

• Divided into – Collection– Treatment– Dispersal/disposal– Management

• Allows readers to focus on technologies gthat are pertinent to their community

Factsheet Content

• For each technology, these issues are discussed– What is the technology– Will it match the community’s vision– How much land is required– Issues with construction/installation– What is needed for O&M– And what will it cost

Wastewater Collection SystemsWastewater Collection Systems

• Gravity sewers• Pressurized sewersPressurized sewers

– Sewage pumps– Grinder pumpsp p

• Effluent sewers– STEPSTEP– STEG

• Vacuum sewersVacuum sewers

Wastewater Treatment SystemsWastewater Treatment Systems

Li id/ lid ti• Liquid/solid separation• Suspended growth• Attached growth• Wetlands• Lagoons• Nutrient reduction• Disinfection• Residuals

Wastewater Dispersal/DisposalWastewater Dispersal/Disposal

• Gravity trench/beds• Low pressure

distribution• Drip• Spray• ETET• Surface discharge• Reuse• Reuse

Overall Emphasis

• How will management be organized?– Existing utility or part-time dog catcher

• Where treated effluent be received?– Surface discharge, land application, etc…

• Treatment required– How clean does the water need to be

• Collection– Which collection compliments treatment and

management

Comprehensive Spreadsheet for p pSystem Costing

B i• Basic user – Inputs

• Location by zip code• Daily wastewater volume and number of

connectionsconnections• Basic soils information

Output– Output• Cost estimates (±20%)• 18 collection treatment dispersal options• 18 collection, treatment, dispersal options

Comprehensive Spreadsheet forComprehensive Spreadsheet for System Costing

• Advanced user– More inputs (in addition to basic input)p ( p )

• Actual cost of –Labor, equipment, components–Electricity, maintenance, sales tax–Engineering, permits, surveyors

• Estimates life cycle cost–With inflation and discount rate

Introductory Input Page

Estimation of Wastewater Volume

Estimation of Dispersal Areap

On-Lot and Network CostsOn Lot and Network Costs

Advanced Input forAdvanced Input for Low Pressure Sewer

Example Output - CollectionExample Output Collection

Example Output - TreatmentExample Output Treatment

Example Output - DispersalExample Output Dispersal

User’s ManualUser s Manual• Like all models

– The better the input, the better the output– Model makes assumptions about road

frontage, ground slopes, distribution of pipe diameters• Such specific items are not realistic to• Such specific items are not realistic to

program into a spreadsheet model– Not a substitute for the engineer and soilNot a substitute for the engineer and soil

scientist• Provides community leaders with options

Availability of Materials

Water Environment Research FoundationWebsiteWebsite

www werf org/decentralizedcostwww.werf.org/decentralizedcost

Documents in pdf formatDocuments in .pdf formatSpreadsheets are in Excel format

Thanks for yourThanks for your Attendance

Contact Information:John R BuchananJohn R. Buchananjbuchan7@utk.edu

www.onsiteconsortium.org

Webinar ResourcesWebinar Resources

Consortium of Institutes for Decentralized Wastewater Treatment (CIDWT)

www.onsiteconsortium.org

Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF)www.werf.org/decentralized

Decentralized Water Resources Collaborativewww.decentralizedwater.org

Performance Costs Project Web Sitewww.werf.org/decentralizedcostwww.werf.org/decentralizedcost

Question and Answer Session

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Webinar on WERF Performance Costs Project

August 10, 2011

Thank You for Attending!Thank You for Attending!

bi f jWebinar on WERF Performance Costs Project

W t h f i f ti th 4th N th t O itWatch for information on the 4th Northeast Onsite Wastewater Short Course/2012 Annual NOWRA 

Conference coming to Providence RI in March 2012Conference coming to Providence, RI in March 2012