Sludge Watch ==> New Zealand Story:Drying Sewage Material "Becomes Very Explosive"
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Mon Sep 11 18:04:46 EDT 2006
Safer, cheaper way to treat solid waste
Monday September 11, 2006
By Owen Hembry
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=614&objectid=10400665
Auckland-based Flo-Dry Engineering has developed a safer and cheaper way to
treat human sewage to target a global market the company says is worth
millions of dollars.
Flo-Dry project manager Tissa Fernando said the worldwide demand for the
technology used to dry out sewage sludge for disposal or recycling was worth
300 million ($597 million) a year and growing.
"The concept is changing," Fernando said. "There's a lot more pressure on
treatment works to get rid of their sludge in a safe and beneficial manner."
A city roughly the the size of Auckland with one million people pumps out
250 tonnes of wet sludge every day, which once dried could be reduced to
about 100 tonnes.
Many countries no longer allow the dumping of solid waste at sea, meaning it
must be treated for safe use or disposal on land.
Once the sludge has been dried it can be used as a fertiliser or as a fuel
with half the heating value of coal.
Flo-Dry already made sludge-drying equipment and had built plants here and
in Australia but the international market was dominated by a competitor,
Fernando said.
Despite the technological and price competitiveness of Flo-Dry's current
offering, many customers simply opted for the better-known brand, he said.
In order to gain a competitive advantage Flo-Dry has spent two years and
about $1.8 million - including investment of $534,000 from the Foundation
for Research, Science and Technology - on a project to dry sludge in a
cheaper and safer way.
Every tonne of sludge dried using traditional technology needs to be mixed
with between three and five tonnes of already dried material for the process
to work.
Traditional equipment ran at temperatures of up to 400C, putting the
material at risk of igniting, Fernando said.
"Sewage material once you start drying it because of the carbon content, it
becomes very explosive."
It was a risk that had caused some systems overseas to explode, he added.
Flo-Dry has developed a two-stage thermal drying method that doesn't require
the reintroduction of already dried and combustible material and can run at
up to 700C before later drying at the much lower temperature of about 90C.
WaterCare project manager Graham Barker said biosolids now being disposed of
in landfills by the company were about 23 per cent solid, with the rest
water.
Drying it out would increase the solid content to up to 95 per cent.
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