January-February 2009

Aquaculture Irrigation Combination

Newly emerging pond system reclaims wastewater for hydroponics, fisheries, and endlessly renewable fuel.

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By David Engle

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Hypothetically, if Colorado City ever wanted simply to discharge its treated effluent, the quality would easily meet strict Texas standards. Thus, the new ponds are relieving Colorado City from paying for the much costlier plant it otherwise would need. On that score:

  • The border town of Rio Hondo, TX, commissioned similar ponds a few years ago, at an estimated cost of just one-twentieth the expense of a conventional plant.
  • Other IMPSs will soon be commissioned in Texas at Presidio and Valentine. Reclaimed water at these will grow alfalfa or other animal foods, notes Roberto Gil, who is project engineer for both. 
  • In a recent design proposed for a new tribal casino in California, the IMPS would do anaerobic treatment of sewage, and then support a wetland and a pond of exotic fish. Luxurious lawns and gardens will flourish from the tertiary irrigation, serving as a recreational park. To keep it green year-round, little or no freshwater will be needed.
  • A housing developer in the Southwest is considering using IMPSs near a stand of trees to irrigate roots, with reclaimed wastewater being piped below ground.
  • In mid 2008, an abattoir in Narrikup, Western Australia, needed to expand its existing wastewater plant. Having heard of IMPSs, company managers asked Fedler if his ponds could be used to supplement an existing plant infrastructure. “Yes, easily,” he told them. In a quick design draft, a single-process hydroponic treatment pond looked like it could also yield enough fuel to provide the site one-third of its total electrical and hot water load and, along with it, thousands of gallons of fertilizer-enriched water for adjacent croplands. Managers took barely hours to render enthusiastic approval.

A Role in Developing Nations?
Given the ponds’ high value and low initial costs, it would seem that their greatest potential for doing good may lie in the world’s poorest regions.

Exploring this possibility, in 2004, Fedler visited a village in the Andes Mountains of Peru of which he says, “The sun goes down early… and then they have no light to read by, which inhibits their ability to be educated easily. 

“So, I asked them, ‘What do you do with all the waste?’” he continues.

“They said, ‘We throw it on the ground.’

“I said, ‘That’s an energy source!’ So, we designed a little digester that they could build out of local materials. It’s a strange design, but, nonetheless, it has worked quite well,” turning human and animal wastewater into reusable effluent and fuel. The latter provides heat for cooking by day, and there’s enough left over to keep lights burning all night. 

“Now the most important result is the kids have light to study by and are receiving education,” says Fedler.

At another site in that high-altitude region, residents were found dumping 10 million gpd of raw sewage into a stream. Consequently, “everything is dead for miles downstream,” he says. “It should be growing trout, but it is not even clean enough to grow catfish.”

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A simple pond was designed, which would remove 80% of the biological load and provide reclaimed wastewater to grow land crops. “The flow was so simple that there was nothing they could do to make the system go wrong,” notes Fedler. The only maintenance chore was periodic cleaning of a filtration screen.

Unfortunately, local politics somehow intervened, and further progress and communication ceased. Next Page >

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