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Upstream, First
of Many Treatment Plants Tackles Pollution
Three Gorges
Dam is creating a reservoir that stretches from Sandouping
in Hubei Province to Chongqing, approximately 630 kilometers
upriver. Negative aspects include the loss of productive
farmland and historical artifacts, displacement of more
than 1 million people and pressure on endangered species.
Many critics are equally concerned about the possible
negative impacts on water quality.
As the reservoir fills, the
Yangtzes flow will slow significantly. Environmental
engineers fear that water quality will decline. Some
warn that unless the sluice gates work as designed,
backed up silt will choke the mouths of the Yangtzes
feeder rivers in the basin. If the engineers sediment
transport models are off, Chongqing may be looking at
an extensive, expensive perpetual dredging program a
few years down the road.
Another fear connected with
a slower moving Yangtze is the potential for a biochemical
oxygen demand buildup that would choke the life from
the river. Just as the U.S. used its rivers as open
sewers before the Clean Water Act was enacted, China
uses its riverine networks to convey human and industrial
wastes. "Eighty percent of our untreated water
is discharged directly into rivers," says Suo Lisheng,
vice minister of water resources.
The Chinese realize that
business as usual no longer is an option as the country
modernizes. Recently, the government has taken a two-pronged
approach to water quality, simultaneously handing out
steep fines and prison sentences to industrial polluters
and also mandating an aggressive construction program
of wastewater treatment plants.
There are plans to construct
about 100 regional municipal plants in three stages
over the next decade or so. Beijing will provide some
of the funding and the remainder must come from local
sources. Treatment capacity size varies from 15,000
cu m to 500,000 cu m per day. The Beijing office of
U.S. multinational consultant MWH, in joint venture
with locally based BODA Environmental Engineering Ltd.,
in 2001 won engineer-procure-construct contracts for
four plants in the Three Gorges Basin.
The plants vary in size from
15,000 to 30,000 cu m. All use an oxidation ditch system,
sequential batch reactors, filter-belt presses and chlorine
disinfection to achieve secondary treatment.
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| Wan,
center, inspects new plant with E-P-C team members. |
The fast-tracked Zhong County
plant, now in final commissioning, is designed to be
a showpiece, says Wan Xu, the general manager of the
regional water and sewer authority. "We will use
this plant to train other operators," he says.
"It is important that everything meet the highest
standards."
The permitted limits for
maximum biochemical oxygen demand and total suspended
solids are 20 mg/l, says Zhang Chaoying, MWH operations
manager. Many U.S. plants have a lower standard, with
BOD and TSS limits of 30. But numbers on paper mean
little without operational proof through monitoring,
Zhang points out. "In the end, its a question
of enforcement," he says. "The State Environmental
Protection Agency must support the operators with a
strong inspection program."
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| Quality
engineer Xu shows off concrete column-slab underpinning. |
The plant rests on seven
250-mm-thick concrete slabs cantilevered over the river
and supported by 532 concrete columns. the piles typically
are 800 mm in dia, says Xu Yi-Huei, a civil engineer
with the quality assurance firm Chongqing Jiangxin Supervisors
Co. The foundation work was labor-intensive, he says,
noting that the piles were placed by hand. Using ultrasonic
testing after placement, inspectors rejected two members
that did not meet the specification, he adds.
The plant is designed at
present to handle an average daily flow of about 8,000
cu m per day from a gravity-fed collection system serving
the towns of Zhouping and Sujia. The network features
88 km of collection pipe, with a maximum diameter of
1.2 m.
The county is expanding the
collection to serve a population of 120,000 and hit
a goal of 74% coverage, Wan says. Hook-ups are mandatory.
As the system is built out, the plant will be scaled
up to handle a 30,000-cu-m-per-day flow rate, he adds.
"We hope to repeat our
work all over the rest of the Three Gorges basin,"
Wan says.
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