More than 250 million gallons of raw wastewater rushes down sewers every day across the Twin Cities. There, it flows with all the liquid waste and by-products from breweries, dairies and other industries into one of a number of treatment plants. Then it literally hits the fan.
Giant fans, more precisely, that require enormous amounts of energy to continuously pump oxygen into the wastewater. For decades, these fans and this aeration process has made wastewater plants the biggest energy consumer in local government.
The city of St. Cloud and researchers at the University of Minnesota believe they're close to finding far more efficient ways to treat waste. One of the answers, they say, comes from the human stomach.
Researchers are working to divert the thickest, most concentrated industrial sewage into treatment that doesn't require any oxygen at all. That would drastically cut the amount of energy consumed by sewage plants, as well as reduce the amount of carbon dioxide they produce.
A change is needed because running those fans in the aeration process accounts for about half of all the power used at a wastewater plant, said Paige Novak, a researcher with the U.
The oxygen keeps helpful bacteria alive so they can break down the solids and leave behind cleaner water, which is then further purified until it is safe enough to discharge. This aeration process is used as the first step in treating sewage at virtually every plant in the country, but there are two major problems with it, Novak said.
The first is cost. Every month, taxpayers spend more than $1 million to pay the energy bill to run the nine wastewater treatment plants in the Minneapolis and St. Paul metro alone. The city of St. Cloud's treatment center uses enough energy to power 520 homes for a year. Nationwide, wastewater treatment plants account for about 2% of all the electricity used in the country at a cost of nearly $3 billion, according to a study from the Water Research Foundation.
The second problem, Novak said, is that these waste-eating bacteria exhale carbon dioxide. Minnesota's roughly 600 wastewater plants produce the same amount of greenhouse gas emissions as about 72,000 cars, according to data from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.