Water Environment Research Foundation Awards Contract to Explore Sustainable Nitrogen Removal
Alexandria, VA (PRWEB) May 30, 2014 -- The Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF) is launching its second project under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency funded National Research Center for Resource Recovery and Nutrient Management by awarding Columbia University with a contract to explore sustainable nitrogen removal.
Given the increasingly stringent wastewater treatment and nutrient discharge standards, there is a critical need for the development and implementation of cost-efficient processes to meet these standards. This project entitled Development and Implementation of a Process Technology Toolbox for Sustainable Biological Nitrogen Removal Using Mainstream Deammonification (STAR_N2R14) seeks to provide wastewater treatment facilities with a technological breakthrough in nitrogen management practices allowing them to meet low nitrogen discharge limits at a much lower cost and using less energy.
The research for this study will be conducted through on-site pilot demonstrations at the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility, operated by DC Water, and the Chesapeake Elizabeth Wastewater Treatment Plant, operated by the Hampton Roads Sanitation District (Virginia).
The Water Environment Research Foundation, a nonprofit organization formed in 1989, is America's leading independent scientific research organization dedicated to wastewater and stormwater issues.
Carrie Capuco, Water Environment Research Foundation, http://www.werf.org, +1 (571) 384-2097, [email protected]
Share this article