MidAtlantic Biosolids Association

Biosolids NewsClips - April 4, 2024

NewsClips is filled with articles from around the region and the world. This edition includes some positive articles, including an article from Sussex County, Delaware, where they approved a bid from Noria Energy-Chaberton Energy for a floating solar array to be placed on 11 acres in Lagoon 4 to operate some of the plant’s equipment.  And an article from Farm and Dairy that shares biosolids as an attractive option for some farmers to cut their nutrient bill. 

There are also informative stories, including an article about the latest briefing paper published by the Institute for Molecular Science and Engineering (IMSE) that explores the journey of microplastics from domestic wastewater to agricultural fields. To prevent microplastics reaching the soil, the authors propose the use of microbes and/or enzymes as part of the wastewater treatment process.

Unfortunately, there are some less-than-positive articles in this edition, including articles about issues at facilities and within local communities, as well as articles covering lawsuits against local community governments and wastewater treatment plants.   Additionally, there is an article from the Bay Journal from a guest contributor from the organization Move Past Plastic, who will also be hosting an event in Carlisle, Pennsylvania on Tuesday, April 9.  Information about the event is included in a link below, and if you are interested in or planning to attend the meeting, please contact Mary Firestone.

The monthly newsclips are brought to you by the MABA Communications Committee, and they are looking for MABA members who are interested in learning more about their work for the biosolids sector.  Please reach out to Mary Firestone if you are interested in checking out an upcoming Communications Committee meeting. 

Stay tuned for more information from MABA.  If you have biosolids news to share, please reach out to Mary Firestone at 845-901-7905 or [email protected]

Biosolids News 

MABA Region
Sussex County going green at treatment plant
Sussex County, DE (5 March 2024) - Sussex County is going green at the Wolfe Neck Regional Wastewater Treatment Facility near Lewes. On the recommendation of retired county engineer Hans Medlarz, at its Feb. 27 meeting, Sussex County unanimously approved a bid from Noria Energy-Chaberton Energy for a floating solar array to be placed on 11 acres in Lagoon 4 to operate some of the plant’s equipment. “For the support of the biosolids removal and dewatering equipment, a new electrical service and power distribution center is needed,” he said. He said the existing electrical infrastructure does not support the power needed at the facility and the biosolids removal system.
 
How PFAS, microplastics join forces as a synergistic threat
Mayo, MD (7 March 2024) - Farmlands and wastewater treatment plants contribute to the problem. Biosolids, a fertilizer byproduct of sewage treatment, are a potential carrier of PFAS, impacting agricultural lands and, subsequently, the food supply. The lack of comprehensive testing methods and standards for PFAS in biosolids poses a significant challenge. There are 516 major sewage plants in the Chesapeake Bay region. A study found that each plant releases an average of 4 million microplastic particles daily. Biosolids are created from processing municipal sewage. Many known or suspected PFAS contamination sites in Pennsylvania are located near the state’s 51 sewage treatment plant. The EPA and Pennsylvania’s DEP permit six of them to produce biosolids for land application.
Conversation on Compost, Biosolids, Food, and Plastic - Community Event - April 9, 2024 6:00 PM ET
 
Middlesex County unveils $22.8 million sewer rehabilitation project
Middlesex County, NJ (22 March 2024) - An estimated $22.8 million project will enhance the efficiency and reliability of Middlesex County Utilities Authority's (MCUA) wastewater treatment operations. MCUA, along with the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the New Jersey Infrastructure Bank announced the project Tuesday when a ceremonial groundbreaking was held at the Authority in Sayreville.
 
Schuylkill County hears biosolids odor complaints
Schuylkill County, PA (22 March 2024) - The residents of the western end of Schuylkill County took the opportunity of the Schuylkill County Commissioners first night meeting of 2024 Wednesday evening to reiterate their complaints of a foul odor outside their homes. Commissioner Chairman Larry Padora questioned why the smell has gotten worse recently, while the suspected source - biosolids - has been present for many years.One resident said the number of trucks bringing in the material has increased recently.Padora said he intends to find answers to the problem at a meeting scheduled for April 15.
 
Opposition to Saratoga Biochar continues to mount
Moreau, NY (26 March 2024) - Earthjustice, the environmental law nonprofit, is leading a chorus of 78 environmental and political action groups, including the Sierra Club, in speaking out against the proposed construction of Saratoga Biochar Solutions in the town’s industrial park. In a more than 250-page memo to the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation that includes supporting appendices, Earthjustice argues that the DEC should not issue state air and solid waste permits to the controversial $95 million plant that would convert biosolids, also known as sewage sludge, to fertilizer.
 
Thurston faces uphill battle defending its sewage sludge ban: Will state heed town’s warning of PFAS risk?
Thurston, NY (30 March 2024) - Legal precedent is not on the side of the Town of Thurston as it prepares to defend its law banning the spread of sewage sludge on fields in a bid to protect public health. In the past decade, towns in Clinton, Wyoming and Niagara counties have each had enforcement of their local sludge laws blocked by the state Department of Agriculture and Markets (AGM), which is charged with protecting the interests of farmers. When one of those rulings was appealed, a state court upheld it.
 
Nationally
Environmental group finds extremely high levels of PFAS in biosolids used on Bristol farms
Bristol, TN (27 Feb 2024) - Nearly two months ago, the Sierra Club tested water across Northeast Tennessee, and found high levels of the substance downstream of wastewater treatment plants. Now club member Dan Firth says he's discovered a new source: biosolids from wastewater plants that are spread on farmland as fertilizer.
 
'Think about what you flushed today': Advocates raise alarm on 'humanure' fertilizers
Choctaw, OK (1 March 2024) - Should farmers continue to use human waste, or "humanure," to fertilize their fields? A Luther farmer and an Oklahoma lawmaker are raising concerns—asserting it's harmful to people, animals, and the environment. Two different bills on the matter didn't get a committee hearing in time for Thursday's deadline at the Oklahoma State Capitol, but State Sen. Shane Jett (R-Shawnee) still hasn't given up hope that they could come back up later during the legislative session.
 
IDEM planning public hearing on biosolid facility request in Bartholomew County
Columbus, IN (1 March 2024) - The Indiana Department of Environmental Management is planning to hold a public hearing on a request for a permit to create a sewage sludge-producing facility southeast of Columbus “due to citizen request.” However, the time, date and location for the hearing have yet to be determined, state officials said. The hearing comes as IDEM considers a request from Evan Daily of Biocycle LLC to accept dewatered biosolids for blending and use on farmland in Bartholomew and several neighboring counties. Biosolids are organic materials produced during the treatment of human sewage at wastewater treatment plants.
IDEM sets public hearing date on biosolid facility case
 
EPA Test Methods 1633 and 1621 Shape Future of PFAS Management
Sausalito, CA (1 March 2024) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized Test Methods 1633 and 1621, environmental sampling methods for analyzing up to 40 target per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in soil, groundwater, and other environmental media. The EPA’s recent adoption of Methods 1633 and 1621 aims to establish standardized and quantifiable standards for measuring detectable levels of PFAS in soil and groundwater samples, setting the stage for regulatory enforcement.
 
City's green cart program now inactive
Enid, OK (2 March 2024) - The city of Enid’s green poly cart program ended Friday, March 1, 2024, due to the program never meeting its intended purpose. “It was also supposed to combine the grass, leaves and woody debris with biosolids from the wastewater treatment plant to attain was called a Class A compost biosolids,” Hunter said. “And for a lot of reasons operationally, it actually never became what it was originally envisioned to be.”
 
Maine state chamber continues call for surgical approach to PFAS law
Albany, NY (6 March 2024) - The head of the state chamber of commerce called on Maine lawmakers Wednesday to take a more tempered approach to regulating the harmful chemicals known as PFAS, warning that a broad law unfairly targets all businesses. A 2021 Maine law requires manufacturers of products with PFAS to report the presence of the chemicals to the state. The original law set a Jan. 1, 2023 reporting deadline, which sparked pushback and led regulators to grant extensions to 2,500 companies worried about compliance. Since then, lawmakers extended the reporting deadline to Jan. 1, 2025, but starting in 2030, Maine will not allow products to be sold in the state if they have PFAS unless regulators determine it’s an “unavoidable use.” 
 
The scoop on human poop
Salem, OH (7 March 2024) - Benefits of biosolids. Biosolids are generally a good source of nitrogen, phosphorous and several micronutrients. Nutrient analysis may vary by wastewater facility, treatment process and by the batch. You will be provided a nutrient analysis when biosolids are delivered/spread on your field. Some facilities treat biosolids with lime, so you may also get some liming benefits. It’s hard to argue the cost of biosolids — they are usually free or have a very low cost of application. The opportunity for next-to-free nutrients is what usually grabs the attention of farmers. The organic matter is also very high, typically 50-70%, benefitting soil health. 
 
Legislature should reject sludge regulations that could harm farmers, damage farmland
Frankfurt, KY (7 March 2024) - On March 11, the Administrative Regulations Review Subcommittee will consider a set of revisions to Energy and Environment Cabinet regulations that weaken protections for farmers, farmland and the public from the application of contaminated sludges from municipal wastewater treatment plants. Called “biosolids,” the sludges remaining from city treatment of residential, commercial and industrial wastes contain nutrients of value to crops and for growing livestock forage. They may also contain heavy metals and chemical contaminants with no value to agriculture, including contaminants that are taken up into the food chain and may harm the health of livestock, the safety of crops and the health of the consuming public.
 
Groups sue to stop PFAS pollution in northwest Georgia
Rome, GA (7 March 2024) - On behalf of Coosa River Basin Initiative, the Southern Environmental Law Center filed a lawsuit against the city of Calhoun in Federal District Court for violating federal law and allowing harmful pollutants in drinking water. Located along two of northwest Georgia’s major rivers, Calhoun operates a publicly owned wastewater treatment plant that receives and treats industrial wastewater from major carpet producers and finishers – industries known to use per and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), or “forever chemicals.” Calhoun has improperly allowed the unrestricted discharge of PFAS into the wastewater treatment plant, contaminating sewage sludge that the city disposed on agricultural land in the region.
Federal lawsuit targets north Georgia city over water pollution
 
This farmer's livelihood was ruined by PFAS-contaminated fertilizer that few Midwest states test for
Des Moines, IA (11 March 2024) - Biosolids — a type of treated sewage byproduct from wastewater treatment plants — are used as a nutrient-rich fertilizer on farms across the Midwest. But a group of toxic “forever chemicals” are slipping through the cracks and could be inadvertently contaminating millions of acres of farmland. Grostic had been using biosolids, a treated byproduct from wastewater plants, to fertilize his crops, which he then fed his cattle. But what he thought was a cost-effective fertilizer, turned out to be laden with PFAS.
PFAS 'forever chemicals' could be contaminating millions of acres of farmland
 
Legal action could end use of toxic sewage sludge on US crops as fertilizer
New York, NY (12 March 2024) - New legal action could put an end to the practice of spreading toxic sewage sludge on US cropland as a cheap alternative to fertilizer, and force America to rethink how it disposes of its industrial and human waste. A notice of intent to sue federal regulators charges they have failed to address dangerous levels of PFAS “forever chemicals” known to be in virtually all sludge. The action comes as sludge has contaminated farmland across the country, sickening farmers, killing livestock, polluting drinking water, contaminating meat sold to the public, tainting crops and destroying farmers’ livelihoods.
 
Tampa wastewater system gets revamp with new Sludge Dewatering Building
Tampa, FL (20 March 2024) - Tampa's wastewater system is getting a major investment with a new state-of-the-art facility that leaders say will save money and improve efficiency. On Wednesday, Mayor Jane Castor and leaders of the Department of Wastewater unveiled the new Sludge Dewatering Building. The three-story, 15,028-square-foot facility features new technology that performs the final treatment of biosolids, otherwise known as "sludge." Biosolids are treated and sent to EPA-approved sites where they are used for agricultural purposes instead of being placed in landfills.
 
Franklin plans new wastewater plant following sewage sludge spill
Franklin, IN (21 March 2024) - The city of Franklin was fined $15,600 after 36,000 gallons of sewage sludge accidentally spilled from the wastewater facility and into Young’s Creek last summer. City officials say the root cause of the spill was broken equipment at the city’s wastewater plant, which last saw a major update in the 1990s. Officials already knew the plant needed work, but the spill underscored the need to update the plant. Design work is now underway to both fix up the plant and expand capacity.
 
Washougal awarded $966K for wastewater treatment project
Washougal, WA (21 March 2024) - The City’s current biosolids management strategy relies on the storage and treatment of biosolids within four large sewage lagoons that encompass more than 12 acres at the City’s wastewater treatment plant, Evers said. The project will construct a facility that will turn solid waste generated from the City’s wastewater treatment process into land-applied, Class-B fertilizer via an aerobic digester. Once the treatment plant is running, the City will decommission its existing lagoon storage system, according to Evers.
 
Water and sewer rates increasing in Fremont, inflation costs can’t be absorbed
Fremont, OH (23 March 2024) - Fremont city administration, citing increased costs, told city council it could no longer keep from increasing water and sewer rates. Final budget appropriations were also approved at $68 million. The largest increase is in chemicals, which cost $646,389 in 2019, and five years later will cost $1.5 million. However, sludge hauling went from $20,961 in 2019 to $170,000 in the 2024 budget.
 
Environmental advocates plan to sue EPA, could lead to 'Sludgement Day' on Cape Cod
Woods Hole, MA (26 March 2024) - In their recent Notice of Intent to Sue, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) claim the EPA have failed to protect groundwater and food supplies by not regulating biosolids. The legal development could lead to EPA regulation of sludge, meaning more towns will be trying to get rid of theirs. This is a problem Cape Cod is already dealing with, according to Barnstable County’s Wastewater Division Director Brian Baumgaertel.
 
DNR: PFAS may be present in sludge
Cassville, MO (27 March 2024) - There is still time for public comments to be submitted in response to the DNR’s proposed permits for the application of human biosolids from Arkansas and slaughterhouse sludge from inside and outside of Missouri to Barry County farmland. If approved, permits proposed by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will initially allow the application of the waste materials to some 9,800 acres in the county. That number, however, is subject to increase. According to the proposed permits, waste-haulers Synagro Central and HydroAg Environmental will be able to add additional tracts of land to their existing permits on what appears to be a more or less as-needed basis. A public notice and prior DNR approval will not be required.
 
County to ban import of sewage sludge
Bartholomew, IN (27 March 2024) - The Bartholomew County commissioners are taking steps to ban out-of-county sewage sludge from being imported into the county. They voted unanimously to instruct county attorney Grant Tucker to start the process of drafting an ordinance that would prevent out-of-county biosolids from being spread on agricultural fields within Bartholomew County. The commissioners, who said they will provide input into the new ordinance, added the ordinance will also address proper storage.
 
Viridi, Casella say expanded AD facility can help address Maine’s biosolids issues
Washington, DC (27 March 2024) - Benham said Viridi’s agreement with Casella will be the “differentiator” in running the facility at maximum capacity once it is fully operational in 2026. “We’re bringing to bear engineering best practices, operational best practices, anaerobic digestion expertise, coupled with stable, consistent supply from Casella to get the project revamped and become part of the solution for Maine’s biosolids challenges,” Benham said. This is Viridi’s first biosolids-focused anaerobic digester, and the company is bringing on contractors that specialize in the feedstock for the project. The company believes this is the only biosolids anaerobic digestion facility in Maine. 
 
Resolution calls for prohibition of biosolid applications
Cleburne, TX (28 March 2024) - A resolution issued Monday by the Johnson County Commissioners Court calls for the prohibition of applying biosolids in Johnson County. The resolution follows a February presentation by the court concerning high levels of toxins tied to the application of biosolids in Grandview. Such toxins have been tied to cancer and other ailments. The resolution packs no force of law, County Judge Chris Boedeker and commissioners said. “As a county, we’re limited in our regulatory authority, which is why this is a resolution and not an order,” Boedeker said. “But we wanted to make clear that we don’t want [biosolids] here.”
 
Sewage Sludge Danger
Boston, MA (29 March 2024) - Millions of acres of cropland in the U.S. may be contaminated from PFAS-tainted sewage sludge spread on fields as fertilizer. These “forever chemicals” are taken up by plants and then consumed by livestock and people, making them sick. Kyla Bennett of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) joins Host Jenni Doering to reveal the invisible threat of PFAS in our food and discuss why she believes EPA has failed its mission to protect the public.
 
Internationally
Iranian University Researchers Produce Phosphatic Fertilizer from Sludge
Tehran, Iran (3 March 2024) - “Struvite in the presence of biochar as a slow- release phosphate fertilizer from wastewater” is the title of a post-doctoral research conducted by researcher Marziyeh Piri under supervision of Ebrahim Sepehr at Urmia University and was sponsored by Iran National Science Foundation (INSF). Biochar is a carbon-enriched biomaterial generated by combustion of the biomass through a process called pyrolysis. Phosphorus such as struvite is used as a fertilizer in soils because it contains some of the major nutrients.
“Studies have shown that urban wastewater contains a large amount of phosphorus which is removed in treatment plants before releasing the wastewater into the environment given the irreparable effects of phosphorus on the surface waters through the enrichment process,” said Piri, who has a PhD from Urmia University in soil science.
 
What is sludge? The new levy that’s about to hit Wellington ratepayers explained
Wellington, New Zealand (3 March 2024) - Wellington has an icky problem and it’s called sludge. It’s going to cost the city $400 million to fix and will be paid for via a special levy on ratepayers over 30 years. Georgina Campbell explains. Sewage sludge is a natural and unavoidable byproduct of the process of treating wastewater. It has a high moisture content so it’s not easy to dispose of and can create a bad smell if it’s not handled properly.
 
Concerned group calls out CRD for burying harmful toxic biosolids at Hartland Landfill
Capital Regional District, British Columbia (5 March 2024) - A public interest group is calling out the Capital Regional District (CRD) for continually burying toxic biosolids at the Hartland Landfill, which they believe is leaking into nearby watersheds and could be polluting nearby agriculture. The Peninsula Biosolids Coalition is heading up the effort and is comprised of a number of interested parties, including the Butchart Gardens, who work in the area to ensure environmental responsibility. 
CRD under pressure to make a plan for biosolid waste by June
CRD has not spoken with biosolids contractor about Texan farmers’ lawsuit
Biosolids pile up in capital region with few short-term disposal options
 
OFA Submission regarding implementation of an interim limit for PFAS in biosolids fertilizers
Guelph, Ontario (5 March 2024) - OFA comments on the interim limit proposed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) for municipal biosolids imported or sold in Canada as fertilizers. OFA supports setting clear rules and procedures that are based in scientific evidence to limit exposure to this group of chemicals. While we generally support establishing a limit for biosolids sold or imported to Canada as commercial fertilizer intended for use in agriculture, OFA is concerned that further investigation is required to ensure the proposed limit is evidence-based, measurable and effective.
 
Designing microbes to remove microplastics pollution
London, England (6 March 2024) - The latest briefing paper published by the Institute for Molecular Science and Engineering (IMSE) explores the journey of microplastics from domestic wastewater to agricultural fields. It describes how tiny particles of plastics can enter the environment, specifically through wastewater. For example, certain types of clothing generate microplastics during laundry which are then collected in urban wastewater. At the wastewater treatment plant, microplastics accumulate and become part of the sewage sludge treated to produce fertilizer. 
 
Environment Agency to face court over abandoning commitment to regulate chemicals in sewage sludge
Twickenham, England (8 March 2024) - The group Fighting Dirty - headed up by high profile journalist George Monbiot - will challenge the EA in the High Court later this year after the agency removed a commitment to have sewage sludge tested for microplastics and ‘forever chemicals’ before it is spread on agricultural land as fertiliser. The EA regulates the use of sludge, which is sold to farmers by water companies, and made up of processed sewage solids, industrial effluent, and surface water run-off. According to the water industry trade body Water UK, 87% of sludge in the UK is recycled to agricultural land.
 
Hyundai E&C chosen as preferred bidder for Gumi biogas project
Gumi, South Korea (18 March 2024) - Hyundai Engineering & Construction (E&C) was selected recently as the preferred bidder for a 176.7 billion won ($132 million) project to build and operate a biogasification facility in the greater Gumi area in North Gyeongsang Province, the construction unit of Hyundai Motor Group said Monday.
The facility will be built in Chilgok County in the province after remodeling the Gumi Sewage Treatment Plant’s facility that processes food waste, sewage sludge and excreta. It will supply gas to the greater Gumi area after converting biowaste into 475 tons of biogas daily.
 

April 2024 - Sally Brown Research Library & Commentary

Sally Brown

Provided for consideration to MABA members by
Sally Brown, PhD., University of Washington


Reinvent the toilet

It is time to get some perspective. Too many libraries on parts per trillion or micro contaminants. I need reading glasses for regular print, let alone parts per trillion print. For this month the focus is on an issue big enough that I can do without the reading glasses - global sanitation. The Gates Foundation brought a spotlight to this with their reinvent the toilet challenge - https://www.gatesfoundation.org/our-work/programs/global-growth-and opportunity/water-sanitation-and-hygiene/reinvent-the-toilet-challenge-and-expo. Last week, there was an exhibit at the Foundation on the progress and accomplishments to date. As is noted in the above link 3.5 billion people (not parts per billion) lack access to adequate sanitation. This is a big problem. A problem that the Gates foundation has thrown a lot of money at. 

For the first paper in this library, it seems appropriate to get an update on their progress. Article #1: Advancing sanitation: 10 years of reinventing the toilet for the future was written by someone from the foundation. Disclosure here, my husband received funding from the foundation for a toilet (urine diverting, dry (no water) composting toilet) that he developed so I have been privy to aspects of this program since its inception. This article extolls the progress made by the foundation. Much of this progress has been in very high tech, high $$$ systems. You can click on links in the article to see the Nano Membrane Toilet, the Omni Processor system and a toilet developed by Swiss engineers. Here are a few pictures from the exhibit. My first reaction to seeing these inventions was that if you happened to breathe sideways while using one of them, it was highly likely to short circuit. 

sb1

The toilets at the Foundation had pictures of unimproved systems on their doors. One of the new self-contained systems is a striking contrast.

The second article: The economy in the toilet is a review of the state of sanitation outside of the Gates Foundation. In the real world, people without access to centralized wastewater collection and treatment systems typically poop in pit latrines. Here is a graphic from the article showing how people poop by continent. The authors note that even if wastewater is collected, it is often not treated or used appropriately. Across the world, where centralized systems exist, between 80-90% of what is collected isn’t treated. In high income countries about 30% is untreated. 

sb2

Remember when you were worried about microplastics? 

More and more, there are efforts to collect the material from these latrines. A challenge is that in most cases, the latrines are unlined letting a majority of material seep out into the subsoil. Emptying is often done by hand and shovel. Think about that before you complain too much about your job. The article details some examples of what happens when the material is collected. All of the examples are from different countries in Africa. In one case, the fecal sludge is dried and used for fuel. In another it is composted and sold in pellets as a soil conditioner. The last example uses black soldier flies to eat the material with the flies then used as animal feed or a source of oil. In all cases, businesses are developed with minimal government subsidies. 

From here the library goes into the more typical peer review literature. Article #3: A review of sanitation technologies to achieve multiple sustainable development goals that promote resource recovery goes into detail not only on types of toilets but on how the contents of those toilets can be used to achieve additional sustainable development goals. In 2015, 17 sustainable development goals were approved by the global community - a continuation of the Millennium Development Goals 
(https://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/bkgd.shtml#:~:text=The%20Millennium%20Develo pment%20Goals%20set,environmental%20sustainability%20%E2%80%94%20can%20 be%20measured.). The authors note that in addition to the public health benefits associated with improved sanitation, sustainable management of the fecal matter can help to achieve increased food security and the sustainable management of natural resources. Waste prevention can also be integrated here through recycling and reuse. Sound familiar? 

Here are the technologies that they looked at: 
1. Dig and cover 
2. Bucket latrines 
3. Ventilated improved pit latrine 
4. Double vault composting latrine 
5. Urine diverting composting latrine 
6. Pour flush toilet with a septic tank 
7. Sewered toilet 

The systems that allow for collection and treatment have the highest potential for resource recovery. 

Here is my favorite quote from the paper: "One type of flow diagram is the excreta flow diagram (often referred to as a shit flow diagram). This diagram is used to readily understand and visually communicate how excreta physically flows through a city or town."

I think that this feature should be incorporated into Google Maps. 

The authors then estimate the potential for nutrient and carbon recovery for the different systems. They group the systems into three categories: unimproved with no resource recovery, improved but no resource recovery and improved with resource recovery. The last category includes double vault composting latrines and urine-diverting composting latrines. 

The figure below shows distribution and recovery of N, P and C from the improved systems.

sb3

The 4th paper: Review of Dry and Wet Decentralized Sanitation Technologies for Rural Areas: Applicability, Challenges and Opportunities focuses on rural areas where decentralized systems are less challenging to manage. This is written more as a review of available technologies that are appropriate for rural communities, including communities in the developed world. It has a table with area required, temperature achieved, efficiencies in pathogen destruction and required retention times. While the systems discussed here are pertinent for regions with no sanitation or unimproved sanitation, it almost reads like a guide for decision making in your off-grid cabin. If you are looking to design different systems for rural areas using established technologies - this is the paper for you. 

The 5th paper in the library: Anaerobic Digestion as a Core Technology in Addressing the Global Sanitation Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities looks at the applicability of a known and loved technology in decentralized systems. The authors note that in-home digesters are being used in China and India. These often digest animal waste and food scraps in addition to feces and urine. They talk about different systems in urban areas and how pathogen destruction is not optimized with short retention times and cooler temperatures. They talk about AD systems that have been designed to optimize energy recovery AND pathogen destruction. They also note that poor system performance and abandoned systems are often the result of people not having enough education to properly operate these systems. Training and education are critical for success. So are some subsidies. The authors point out that the return on investment for these subsidies is extraordinarily high in terms of savings on public health and well-being. 

I’ll end with the most practical thing that I saw at the Gates Foundation. A fraction of the cost and very low breakage potential. A simple plastic cover for pit latrines to keep out the odor and flies. That can really make a difference.

sb4

Sally Brown is a Research Associate Professor at the University of Washington, and she is also a columnist and editorial board member for BioCycle magazine. 

Do you have information or research to share with MABA members? Looking for other research focus or ideas?

Contact Mary Firestone at [email protected] or 845-901-7905.

 

Important Update for MABA Members:
Results from the 2nd National Survey of Biosolids Regulation, Quality, End Use and Disposal in the U.S.

The National Biosolids Data Project (NBDP) has been recently unveiled. You are invited to its comprehensive, user-friendly, data-rich website: http://biosolidsdata.org.  This website provides both a national overview of biosolids generation and utilization/disposal in the target year 2018, but, importantly and most usefully for practitioners in the mid-Atlantic region, the NBDP also includes state summary reports.  Your MABA staff and volunteers are assembling a webpage which will allow quick access to the state reports in our region. 

This NBDP data site was prepared over a two-year period. It was accomplished on a shoe-string budget of about $60,000, with a small EPA grant and some financial contributions from WEF, NACWA and public agencies, and with many hours of volunteer time. The focus  is comprehensive, with details on technologies, particularly the distinction of Class A and Class B levels of pathogen treatment, with categories of utilization outlets and products (compost versus pellets), with capture of landfill and incineration disposal, and with an overview of each state’s regulations. 

A key feature of the project was the survey of water resource recovery facilities (WRRFs), generators of biosolids.  The survey had 452 valid and representative responses from WRRFs in 43 states and DC. This is a set that comprises a flow of about 12,000 MGD, or 34% of total municipal effluent flows in the United States. When generously supplied by public agencies, surveys provided in addition to mass of biosolids and uses, information on pollutant concentrations, program costs and points of view on hurdles and barriers. In a few cases, the surveys of state officials were able to elicit information on septage management.  The EPA biosolids records for 2018 in ECHO (Enforcement and Compliance History Online) was also brought into the analysis. 

Every effort was made to provide comparable data across all states, but this goal was elusive. In the end, the data reports of 32 states were judged of high confidence, 12 were of moderate confidence and 4 of low confidence.  Every state office responsible for biosolids management was afforded an opportunity to review and correct its state’s data and description.  

While this richly compiled database might clearly have commercial value, the results are freely available and are intended to aid in the transparency of biosolids programs to the public. 

Ned Beecher, for 20 years executive director of NEBRA and then special projects coordinator for the early PFAS response,  is the principal investigator for this “second” survey. He was the principal designer of the two surveys (one for state officials and the other for public agencies) and of the database, though with much feedback along the way, Ned had been also the leader of the first survey, which was released fifteen years ago, July 2007, based on biosolids generation and use in 2004, which explains in part the ambitious goals of the current survey. 

Many biosolids practitioners over the years had come to rely on this first survey. It was clear to all who used it recently that the first survey had become dated. Ned took on this herculean project, and now with its completion, we can give hearty kudos to Ned for his vision and persistence. Today you will note from Ned’s email communications that he is now the “former” special project manager for NEBRA and available for hire.  But updates to the second survey, whether to correct or amplify it, or to change it to reflect new developments, will need to be shouldered by others, and we await these folks to emerge and step forward. 

The survey year of 2018 may have the feel of “historical” today. But, at the opening of the project in mid-2020, this was the year most likely to be complete in its data set from federal, state, and municipal sources. The project was intended to be completed by Spring 2021, but whether a victim of pandemic staffing challenges or from competing issues for biosolids practitioners, data collection for this new survey was a slog.  In the mid-Atlantic region, the year 2018 had an atypical influence of large rainfall volumes, and in the Northeast region the discovery of perfluoroalkyl substances disrupted programs. 

Here is the big reveal!  Total biosolids used or disposed of in the U. S. in 2018 was 5,823,000 dry metric tons (dmt). This compares to 6,132,000 dmt reported in the 2004 survey.  This decline in total biosolids was a surprise to the NBDP team. The decline may reflect less double counting than in 2004 of solids hauled from small to larger plants for treatment, or in some locations it may reflect a shift from alkaline stabilization to digestion, the latter technology reducing total dry solids. The 2018 database involved fewer estimations, particularly of biosolids production at small WRRFs. With the estimation in this second survey of the sewered population served, the total national average per capita production of biosolids annually is 37 pounds. That agencies and states show a wide range around this average suggests other aspects at play, perhaps the proportion of combined sewer systems and the acceptance of septage from unsewered areas. 

Here is the second big reveal.  Fifty-three percent of biosolids produced in the United States in 2018 were beneficially used. Within this number are some important findings.  More Class A EQ biosolids are being produced in 2018 than in 2004. Despite policies for organics diversion from municipal waste landfills in some states and regions, the same percentage of biosolids are commingled with municipal waste in 2018 as in 2004.  The percentage of biosolids fed to incinerators has declined, with a fewer number of sewage sludge incinerators in operation.  The survey showed, too, decreased full time equivalent (FTE) employees regulating biosolids at state and federal agencies.  As our industry has asserted in the past, the proportion of our nation's croplands receiving biosolids as a nutrient source is very small, less than 1%.

The Mid Atlantic Biosolids Association participated in the NBDP project. It reviewed electronic record reports to the EPA and state environmental agencies, and also surveyed state officials and larger public agencies.  In the work covering the 7 states and one district in this region, the NBPD documented that the over 1,800 significant POTWs serve 50 million “sewered” customers, producing 1.3 million dry tons of biosolids annually. Sixteen WRRFs in the region produce over 10,000 dmt. NYCDEP is largest agency (~100,000 dmt), and in descending order are Philadelphia Water Department, DC Water, Passaic Valley Water Commission, Middlesex County Utility Authority, Baltimore Department of Public Works, ALCOSAN (Allegheny County, PA), Hampton Roads Sanitation District (VA), City of Rochester (NY), DELCORA, Bergen County Utility Authority (NJ), Suffolk County (NY), Arlington County (VA), Nassau County (NY), and Fairfax County (VA). The average per capita annual biosolids production in the MABA region is 54 dry pounds.

The NBDP state reports include narratives describing notable facilities and programs that serve to treat and use biosolids. In the MABA region report are these distinctive points. Composting is a major treatment technology in the region (e.g., Burlington Co, Rockland Co, Baltimore, A&M Composting, Natural Soils, Spotsylvania (VA) and many small facilities). Two new, large compost facilities under development in reach of Philadelphia.  DELCORA and ALCOSAN are large utilities with sludge Incinerators; others in NY (Rochester), NJ (ACUA) and VA have upgraded to meet new MACT standards.  The US’s principal service companies, Synagro and Denali, have main offices in the MABA region and serve hundreds of agency clients NYC is the sole large facility in the US without a pathway to Class A EQ products. PVSC is the exclusive example of a long-tested Zimpro wet oxidation solids treatment, and this agency accepts solids from dozens of agencies.  Co-digestion with high strength organic waste has great reference facilities in the MABA region (Rahway Valley SA, Lehigh County Authority, and Hermitage, PA). Landis Sewerage Authority in Vineland NJ is arguably the “greenest” WRRF, with zero effluent discharge and wholly onsite biosolids use.

The narrative also sets the stage for understanding how Pennsylvania, producer of significant biosolids, is also a destination for biosolids from other states. The nature of Pennsylvania’s “accommodative” regulation of biosolids, and similarly restrictive rules in New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland, ensures that the transport of biosolids regionally and in the direction of Pennsylvania is a significant part of the story of biosolids management regionally. This role is only indirectly revealed in the NBDP. That is because the survey was structured to discuss for each state the mass of biosolids production and the utilization outlets for those state-generated biosolids.  

Though the NBDP is the latest information source available to us biosolids practitioners, in a way it is already outdated. Since the 2018 target year for data collection, pressures on two major categories, landfill disposal and land application, have increased.  Important issue areas of PFAS contamination worries, risks of new regulations of soil phosphorus, and the experience of inadequate seasonal storage have underscored the challenges of maintaining farmland for biosolids applications.  But landfill owners have tightened access by biosolids generators to municipal landfills. This is not only a challenge to Pennsylvania agencies, but more widely to agencies in adjoining states in the mid-Atlantic, which have been reliant on Pennsylvania destinations.  

The other side of this “challenges” coin with biosolids in the MABA region is the opportunities for development of merchant facilities and innovative technologies. These include existing innovative facilities, such as  regional composting (A&M Composting, Burlington Co-Composting and Rockland County Composting), thermal hydrolysis combined with mesophilic digestion (DC Water and HRSD), co-digestion plants (e.g., Hermitage Food Waste to Energy Facility) and drying processes (Synagro in Philadelphia and Baltimore).  Indeed, the MABA region is a landing place for emerging thermal biosolids solutions, such as pyrolysis (BioForceTech), hydrothermal carbonization (SOMAX Bioenergy ), PA and gasification (EarthCare, EcoRemedy and Aries Clean Energy) --  solutions that seem to be particularly urgent in this time of PFAS.

The National Biosolids Data Project demonstrates that the mid-Atlantic region, responsible for nearly a quarter of the nation’s biosolids generation. It is your foundation for understanding future opportunities for biosolids management. Go use it: http://biosolidsdata.org. And, we who helped to assemble the database also will welcome corrections and updates as you find them worthwhile for keeping the information current and accurate, and you can do so by contacting Mary Firestone at  [email protected].

 
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