Tuesday, August 29, 2006

WWEM 2006 Conference Exhibition and Workshops on Water

As you all should be interested in water treatment, we thought you would be interested in the following:-

WWEM 2006 Conference, Exhibition and Workshops on Water, Wastewater & Environmental Monitoring

1st & 2nd November 2006 Telford International Centre, England

www.wwem.uk.com

WWEM is a Conference, Workshops and Exhibition run with the Environment Agency for Water and Wastewater Monitoring.

As a visitor to WWEM, you can attend over 50 workshops, free of charge, on case studies, applications, Mcerts and new technology, as well as discuss business opportunities with over 100 equipment and service suppliers from the Water Industry.

As a Conference delegate, you can attend sessions on Modernising Regulations, Sensors for the Water Industry, Monitoring under the PPC regime, Mcerts updates and Analytical Techniques.

To download a full itinerary and programme, please log on to: www.wwem.uk.com/wwem.pdf

WWEM 2006

Oak Court Business Centre, Porters Wood
St Albans, Herts, AL3 6PH, UK
Tel: +44 (0)1727 858840. Fax: +44 (0)1727 840310
Email: info@wwem.uk.com
Web: www.wwem.uk.com

Monday, August 21, 2006

Are any other subscribers going to South Africa for Wastecon 2006?


Leachate Treatment Technical: There are two WasteCon 2006 conferences, one in the US, and one in South Africa. Two of our Leachate Team will be attending the South African international waste management conference next week.

Enviros Leachate and biological waste processing experts, Howard Robinson and Jonty Olufsen will be attending and presenting. Leachate treatment will be the subject of a paper which they will present:

"Full Biological Treatment of Landfill Leachate: A detailed case study of Efford Landfill in the New Forest, Hampshire, UK"

We would be very pleased to meet you if you are attending. Here is more about the conference:-

Wastecon 2006, Biennial Conference & Exhibition, 5 - 8 September 2006, Somerset West, Cape Town, South Africa. Organised by the Institution of Waste Management of Southern Africa (IWMSA)

More information is available on the Wastecon 2006 web site.

Although not yet spring in Cape Town the climate will normally be very pleasant and there are great places to visit in the locality - not least Cape Town itself.

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Thursday, August 10, 2006

Moderating the Leachate Forum: now 3 years old!

Envirosian Reports on the Leachate Forum:

The Leachate Forum has been running for three years now, and contains posts about a wide variety of leachate related subjects.

Some of the early topics were about "Iron in Leachate" and a "LIFE" (EU financed research) project.

A recent Topic has been on the subject of Incineration Leachate, which is a sign of the increasing activity in that area of waste management.

The most frequent users have been students, which is only to be expected, as the young have naturally adopted the idea of the Forum more rapidly than us oldies.

The posters have been well behaved and spamming has been non-existent.

I can remember only one post which it was necessary to delete, due to defamatory remarks about a member's competitor.

Unsurprisingly, the most viewed post has been on the subject of - wait for it! - leachate!

I look forward to the next 3 years wondering what posts we will see.

For any of you who have not yet looked at the Leachate Web Site Forum
Leachate Web Site Forum , why not take a few moments to visit. While you are there, register, (it only takes a few moments) and post your burning leachate related topic for discussion.

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Thursday, August 03, 2006

Welcome Existing Leachate Subscribers!

The Leachate Newsletter is back, and is now part of the Blogging Revolution...

Well personaly I am not so sure about blog posting exactly amounting to a revolution, but to use the Google Blogging system is free and very easy to use.

It is also accessible worldwide for us to add Post to the Blog and create Newsletter emails while abroad, and this matters incresingly as the world demand for our leachate plants continues to increase.

We are now designing our third plant in South Africa and our second in Malaysia. Additional overseas plants (and UK plants of course) are likely to be announced through this Newsletter this autumn.

In the UK we are anticipating moves this Autumn from the Environment Agency to issue final leachate BAT Guidelines, and for plants not yet covered under the site's PPC to be permitted under PPC.

We hope that you will enjoy this service and contact us via the www.leachate.co.uk web site, or via www.enviros.com in the event that we can work for you, as your leachate consultant.

Vissershok Leachate Treatment Success Continues into 4th Year


The operation of the Visserhok Leachate Treatment Plant (a first for South Africa) has now entered its fourth successful year.

Vissershok Landfill near Cape Town receives some 2000 tonnes of the City’s municipal solid wastes and low to medium hazardous wastes every day. The decomposing wastes produce up to 80 cubic metres of highly polluted leachate per day, which since July has been treated to high standards by a state-of-the-art, on-site leachate treatment plant.

Enviros was appointed to work with local consultants Arcus Gibb, to design, construct and commission the full-scale plant. Contractors for the civil, mechanical and electrical engineering works were appointed in August 2002, and biological commissioning to take place during July 2003.

The treatment scheme adopted includes pumping of leachate from the various tipping cells, into a large lined storage lagoon, which provides buffering of flows and quality for treatment by the plant. The main aerobic biological treatment process takes place in a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR), which comprises a 6m deep, 16m diameter buried concrete tank, that is aerated and mixed, and automatically settled each day to provide a clarified effluent.

This effluent is then passed through a subsurface flow reed bed, containing Phragmites australis plants, which provide final polishing of water to a quality suitable for use in dust suppression on the roads – replacing potable water previously used for this purpose.

The whole treatment process is controlled automatically by a PLC system, including all operations of the plant, and maintenance of optimum pH-values for treatment. The part-time plant operator is able to programme the PLC, and interrogate all operations of the plant, using a Software Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) system, on a desktop computer.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

James Jackson award paper.


Due to popular demand! As we have received a number of emails asking for the James Jackson paper, we have now uploaded the paper to our web space, for your downloading convenience.


Click here for the leachate paper link.