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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Several years ago, Fedler was also sought by officials from Mexico City, who were canvassing US engineering firms for proposals on handling 2 billion gpd of urban effluent. Construction bids came back in the hundreds of millions. Fedler’s demonstration site in Lubbock was their last stop on the return leg home.

When the visitors told Fedler about the massive centralized plants other engineers had pitched, he suggested they consider digging a patchwork of simple IMPSs. These would easily knock out “about 80% of the waste load” all naturally, he told them. A quick calculation came up with a comparative cost at about one-fifth the next lowest.

With IMPs in the developing world, Fedler sees almost endless potential. “There are a lot of good things that can result, if we can just get the technology out there to them,” he says.

Risks, Challenges
Yes, there are good things, but, naturally, things also go wrong, Fedler candidly explains.

One—noted above by Martin—is the risk to vegetation posed by the high salt content of this treated effluent. If not adequately evaluated and dealt with, it can choke or even destroy, rather than nourish, a cropland. Miscalculations on this issue are a leading cause of earlier-generation AIWPS failures. Risks are greater with municipal rather than agricultural wastewater, but in any case, he advises, “Pond designers need to pay close attention to the water, nutrient, and salt balance.”

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Besides salty water, two other undesired byproducts are insects and odors. Inland bodies of water always attract bugs, but designing for surface aeration can reduce problems, says Fedler. Cropping nearby vegetation and stocking with insect-eating fish also help. Applying new, money-saving multi-enzyme products can further control odors naturally, but he concedes, “Some stink is inevitable.”

Another challenge: Being small ecosystems rather than machines, ponds sometimes come up with hard-to-diagnose idiosyncrasies. Despite good management, they do not always function as expected. Eventually, with skillful troubleshooting or outside expertise, issues are almost always correctable. Next Page >

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