Vancouver Sun

Metro aims to widen biosolid applicatio­ns

Region intends to build a facility that will dry waste to be used as fuel, fertilizer

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com twitter.com/jensaltman

Metro Vancouver is going ahead with planning for a facility that will dry the solid waste left over from sewage treatment so it can be burned as fuel or mixed into fertilizer.

“It’s innovative for us, it’s new for us, it’s a proven technology,” said Lillian Zaremba, a program manager with Metro’s liquid waste services department. “This is exciting because it’s different uses than we’ve had in the past, so a diversity of options.”

The regional district’s five waste-water plants treated more than 450 billion litres of sewage in 2018 and generated 55,000 tonnes of treated sewage sludge, or biosolids.

Over the past 20 years, Metro has used 98 per cent of its biosolids on land, including in Nutrifor topsoil for landscapin­g projects in the region, for reclaiming mine sites and gravel pits, as a biocover for landfills to absorb methane, and for fertilizin­g range and agricultur­al land in the Interior. The small amount that was not used for land applicatio­ns was sent to landfill.

It is expected that as plants upgrade from primary to secondary treatment and the population grows, the region will produce more than 90,000 tonnes of biosolids by 2021, and more than 150,000 a year by 2050.

Metro believes it’s unlikely that it will be able to continue using such a high percentage of biosolids on land, because projects are vulnerable to fluctuatio­ns in customer markets and public concern.

There is also no space at treatment plants to stockpile biosolids, so any that could not be used would have to be sent to landfills outside of B.C.

“That’s why we want to beneficial­ly use as much as we can,” said Zaremba.

To deal with the extra solids in the future, Metro is looking at building a facility at one of the treatment plants to dry biosolids using biogas from the plant and natural gas. The resulting dried biosolids, which are in pellet or granular form, could replace coal in cement kilns or be used as an ingredient in blended fertilizer­s.

An analysis showed that those two markets could each use 75,000 tonnes of dried biosolids a year.

“It just adds versatilit­y and diversity by opening up that fuel option,” said Zaremba.

A drying facility would cost about $197 million to build.

But drying biosolids is expected to cost less in the long term than land applicatio­ns or landfill disposal.

Staff are going to report back to the board of directors with procuremen­t options.

At a recent Metro Vancouver board meeting, longtime Richmond Coun. Harold Steves, who is also a farmer, said he doesn’t mind Metro looking at drying biosolids, but wants to see them continue to be used in soil.

“The problem we have worldwide is we’ve depleted our soils — 68 per cent of the world’s soils are depleted of organic materials,” Steves said.

Peter Navratil, Metro’s general manager of liquid waste services, said the regional district is still committed to land applicatio­n.

“The proposal here is to look at adding a dryer into our asset base to give us a little bit more versatilit­y and flexibilit­y in how we handle biosolids,” he said.

Metro is also looking at other alternativ­es.

Up to 25,000 tonnes of undried biosolids could be burned at Metro’s waste-to-energy facility in Burnaby.

Work on a $9-million pilot hydrotherm­al processing facility that will turn sewage sludge into biocrude and then low-carbon fuels is underway for the Annacis Island waste-water treatment plant.

Metro has secured $750,000 from the province and almost $2.5 million from Parkland Fuel Corp., and will spend $4 million from its sustainabi­lity innovation fund for the project. Consultant­s and a fabricator are expected to be retained by the end of this year.

“The hydrotherm­al processing is exciting,” said Zaremba. “I would say it’s further out in the future for full-scale implementa­tion.”

On the provincial side, the Ministry of Environmen­t is updating how it regulates the use of biosolids for land applicatio­n. Proposed policies include increasing public transparen­cy and informatio­n sharing, including specific requiremen­ts around notifying and engaging with First Nations and local government­s.

Proposed changes to the Organic Matter Recycling Regulation are expected to be implemente­d next year.

 ?? METRO VANCOuvER ?? Nutrifor employees use soil that contains biosolids, produced at Metro sewage-treatment plants, for a Highway 1 interchang­e project earlier this month.
METRO VANCOuvER Nutrifor employees use soil that contains biosolids, produced at Metro sewage-treatment plants, for a Highway 1 interchang­e project earlier this month.

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