GIS-BASED STARTING TOOLS OF DECISION MAKING FOR WASTEWATER
TREATMENT PLANNING
NGUYỄN THỊ HỒNG1, HORST WESSEL2,
JÖRG HARTLEIB3
1Faculty of Geology, Hà Nội University of Sciences, Hà Nội, Việt
Nam
2Moskito GIS GmbH, Mengeder Str. 623, 44359 Dortmund, Germany
3University of Greifswald, Jahn-Str. 16,
Abstract: Since a past couple of years, the water resource quality
in the medium-sized city of
I. INTRODUCTION
Water
plays an important role in the socio-economic development of a territory as
well as in its ecosystem. Although Việt
The approach of an Integrated Water Resources Management
(IWRM) was developed in order to give water related issues in an effective and sustainable way.
In
II. METHODOLOGY
1. Decision Support
System (DSS) and GIS
1.1. Decision support system: There are
given several definitions for DSS but they all have in common that a DSS
requires the use of computers and that it produces informations for decision
makers.
According to Kjelds et al (1999), typical DSS interactive and integrated components
are:
-
Data and information management;
-
Analysis and modelling;
-
Scenario management and alternative formulation;
-
Decision making.
Following
the main idea of the DSS approach the following steps have to be fulfilled in
order to be able to provide data and to support the decision makers in the
field of sanitation and waste-water treatment:
1.
Location of waste-water discharge points (industrial zones: list of companies,
type of production, amount of wastewater, limit of discharge);
2.
Classification of industrial waste-water according to type of production;
3.
Identification of the type of pollution based on the type of production;
4.
Waste-water amounts: estimation from production numbers;
5.
Calculation of the total amount of waste-water to be treated;
6.
Identification of treatment technologies required to treat identified types of waste-water;
7. Draft of technical concepts;
8. Cost estimation.
The
above procedure does not include the selection of suitable locations for waste-water
treatment facilities. Anyway this is an important step and during the decision
process location and technology have to be reviewed several times in order to
find the optimum solution (according to Förstner, 1993; Hosang & Bischof,
1998; Waste-water Ordinance (AbwV), 2004; German standard DIN 4261, 2006).
1.2. GIS and its applications:
Developing
a GIS application generally requires six typical steps (Fig. 1) Step No. 3 requires
software development. Step No. 4 is highly recommended because it provides an
opportunity to test the system design for a small pilot project area and
fine-tune the design and computer programs, if necessary.
In case of Decision Support
Systems (DSS) which are related to spatial data GIS are also applicable and are
a very valuable tool in this context.
In this research, Moskito-GIS 5.0 system is used as the
main tool to process and analyze spatial data in
Figure 1. Six typical steps for developing GIS application
[3]
Figure 2. Planning process of GIS database (Source:
Nguyễn T. H., 2009)
2. Estimation of
costs for waste-water treatment facilities
Engineers and planners for waste-water treatment
facilities are using cost models based on personal equivalents (PE) to estimate
the expected investment. iaks GmbH has developed its tool based on projects
between 500 and 500,000 PE. The tool estimates the costs for standard treatment
technologies like activated sludge (AS) treatment and includes the investment costs
for the sewer system and for the sludge treatment. For example a planned 400,000 PE
unit has the following estimated costs in
Estimated costs for sewer system: ~ 76.7 million €
Estimated costs for sewage
treatment: ~ 66.7 million €
Estimated costs for sludge
treatment: ~ 8.4 million €.
Based on the project database of
iaks GmbH the following equations can be found (iaks GmbH, 2009):
Estimated costs for sewer system: y
= 4660 x -0.256
Estimated costs for sewage
treatment: y = 3756 x -0.247
Estimated costs for sludge
treatment: y = 434.18 x -0.237
The selected example is based on the German DWA
regulations which requires the basins of about 100,000 m³ to be constructed by
water-impermeable concrete (Imhoff, 2006). Therefore, the costs for basin
construction already sum up to 2/3 of the estimated total costs.
Iaks GmbH has also developed a model to estimate the
area demand of waste-water treatment (WWT) facilities using activated sludge
technology:
Estimated area for AS-facilities: y = 12,353 ln(x) -
92,105
The data basis for the cost model of trickling filter
(TF) facilities is much smaller. The following equation for the estimation of
costs has been found:
Estimated costs for sewage
treatment: y = 7931.1 x -0.396
III. RESULTS OF
SELECTED WORKING STEPS
1. Geographic
mapping and analysis
Until now GIS has not been applied in water management
planning in
One of the first tasks during a GIS analysis is the
transfer of all available data from the different software formats into one
software version. The data are organized by differentiating them into layers
with specific features: administration, hydrology, transportation, sewer
system.
In the first step a decision maker should know details
about the sources of waste-water in the project area, i.e. the quality and
quantity of waste-water. Figure 3 shows a map of the textile industry currently
operating in the industrial zones of
Measurements of the waste-water quality in the two
industrial zones show exceeded standard TCVN values for total P (up to 232
mg/l), COD (up to 2457 mg/l), SS (up to 80 mg/l), BOD5 and Total N. The maps
(Figs. 4 and 5) show selected pollution parameter concentrations and amounts of
waste-water in the two above industrial zones.
Figure 3.
Textile industry in the industrial zones of
(Source: Nguyễn T. H., 2009).
Figure 4. Map
of measured BOD concentrations in textile industrial waste-water in the industrial
zones Hòa Xá and An Xá (Source: Nguyễn T. H., 2009).
Figure 5. Map of waste-water amount (textile) in Hòa Xá and An Xá industrials
zone
(Source: Nguyễn T. H., 2009).
2. Cost estimations
According to this equation the WWT-facility of 400.000
PE using the trickling filter technology would require an investment of 19 million € which means only 1/3 of the costs for a
comparable activated sludge plant. The costs for sewer system and sludge
treatment are more or less the same for both technologies.
The area demand for trickling filters depends on the
sizes of filter towers and machine hall. A rising PE-value increases the
diameter and the heights of towers. Generally, the full facility requires less
than 1 ha.
Based on the cost estimation database different
scenarios are introduced and discussed.
Scenario A |
Centralized Treatment
Facilities at the two pumping stations Kênh Giá and Quán Chuột (This scenario represents the original
idea of ND-authorities) |
Water treatment |
2 x 200,000 PE |
Sludge treatment |
Scenario A1:
2 x 200,000 PE |
Scenario A2:
1 x 400,000 PE |
|
incl. 10 km sludge pipes (100 USD/m = 1 million USD) |
Table 1. Raw estimation of costs for scenario A for AS-T- and TF-technology
Activated |
||||
2 x 200,000 PE + 2x sludge |
Cost for sewer system |
Cost for water treatment system |
Cost for sludge treatment system |
Total costs |
96 million € |
84 million € |
10 million € |
190 million € |
|
2 x 200,000 PE + 1x sludge |
97 million € (incl. pipes) |
84 million € |
8 million € |
189 million € |
Trickling Filter technology for waste-water treatment
(GeoENcon) |
||||
2 x 200,000 PE + 2x sludge |
Cost for channel system |
Cost for water treatment system |
Cost for sludge treatment system |
Total costs |
96 million € |
26 million € |
10 million € |
132 million € |
|
2 x 200,000 PE + 1x sludge |
97 million € (incl. pipes) |
26 million € |
8 million € |
131 million € |
Scenario B |
Decentralized water treatment facilities &
Centralized Sludge treatment (main
idea of IWRM-group) |
Water treatment |
4 x 100,000 PE |
Sludge treatment |
1 x 400,000 PE |
& 40 km
sludge pipes (100 USD/m = 4 million USD) |
The above tables show that the investment costs for two
waste-water treatment facilities are rather different for AS-technology with
~84 million € and TF-technology with ~26 million € (see Tab. 1). The reason for
the strong difference are the additional costs for water-impermeable concrete
(~34 million €) and aeration equipment in the AS solution. The difference
between the two scenarios A1 and A2 are insignificant.
Table 2. Raw estimation of costs for scenario B for AS-T- and TF-technology
Activated |
||||
4 x 100,000 PE + 1x sludge |
Cost for sewer system |
Cost for water treatment system |
Cost for sludge treatment system |
Total costs |
112 million € (incl. pipes) |
92 million € |
8 million € |
212 million € |
|
Trickling Filter Technology for Waste-water Treatment
(GeoENcon) |
||||
4 x 100,000 PE + 1x sludge |
Cost for sewer system |
Cost for water treatment system |
Cost for sludge treatment system |
Total costs |
112 million € (incl. pipes) |
33 million € |
8 million € |
153 million € |
Because of
smaller units the total sum for each solution has increased by about 20 million €. The difference due to
construction and equipment remains similar (Tab. 2).
The local stakeholders
have to decide between the two technologies activated sludge (AS) and trickling
filter (TF) as well as between the following alternatives: one central WWT
facility (400,000 PE , 150 million €), two decentral WWT facilities (each 200,000 PE, 190
million €) or four
decentral WWT facilities (each 100,000 PE, 210 million €). The costs for TF-technology
would be ~60 million
€ lower. As the budget of the city is limited the construction of WWT
facilities cannot be done in one project but has to be developed step by step.
Furthermore,
the estimated costs for the sewer system need to be verified again as there is
already some existing drainage system infrastructure.
Scenario C |
Decentralized Water
treatment facilities & Centralized Sludge treatment |
Water treatment |
1 x 20,000 PE |
Sludge treatment |
No sludge treatment |
In the case
of new and fast growing residential quarters in
IV. CONCLUSIONS
For a
future GIS-based decision support system a typical dataset on industrial zones
was prepared where data can be handled and processed by a combined GIS and
EXCEL-tool. MOSKITO-GIS software is adopted as surface for this combined GIS
& EXCEL-handling. The trickling filter technology is very suitable for Việt
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