July 28, 2008


Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Treatment Technologies

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By Jenny Phillips, Reni Keane-Dengel, Arturo A. Keller

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To gauge the intensity of precipitation, erosion, and development at BMP sites, users were asked, “On a scale of 1 to 5 please rate the relative intensity of precipitation, erosion, and development at the site where the technology was installed. (1= minimal; 5= severe).” Responses suggest that most stormwater BMPs are installed in locations that are relatively well developed, with porous pavement and media filters installed in more developed areas, and infiltration basins and vegetated swales installed in slightly less developed areas (Figure 3). Average reported precipitation intensity ranged from 3 to 3.75 on a scale of 1 to 5, with porous pavement users reporting the highest precipitation intensity. The average reported intensity of erosion was not significantly different between technology types, with an average of 2.5 on a scale of 1 to 5. It was interesting to note that there was little variability in the various intensities, across all BMPs, as indicated by the error bars.

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A series of three questions about stormwater BMP characteristics were asked to identify trends in treatment/flow capacity, perceived removal effectiveness and required maintenance. First, respondents were asked, “What is the technology’s maximum flow interception capability? Please specify units.” Although many respondents did not address the question, the responses that were received were converted to m3/s for comparison. Note that 1 m3/s is equal to 15,850 gal/min or 70 acre-feet/day. The reported minimum, average and maximum flow capacities for vegetated swales, infiltration basins, and media filters are shown in Table 2. Information about porous pavement was not considered because of the low response rate. Results indicate that among the BMP users that responded to this question, media filters generally had the lowest maximum interception capacity with an average of 0.31 m3/s and infiltration basins had the highest interception capacity with an average of 0.41 m3/s.

To understand the removal efficiency of these constituents by various BMPs, the following question was posed to survey respondents, “On a scale of 0-5 Please indicate the removal efficiency for each of the constituents below. (0= the technology does not address this constituent, 5=complete removal.)” Responses vary greatly by technology and constituent and are shown in Figure 4. According to survey respondents, porous pavement and media filters performed best for most of the constituents, except trash (for porous pavement) and bacteria, metals and nutrients (for media filters). In most cases the removal efficiency observed by these respondents was good to very good, scoring between 3 and 4. In general, vegetated swales were seen as least efficient, even for sediments and nutrients. Next Page >

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gcrozier

September 30, 2008 2:03 AM PT

It is interesting to read this piece in comparison to the report earlier this year from Chesapeake Bay where BMP applications (particularly agricultural) did not meet model expectations and the factors used were being significantly lowered for future model applications. The question is whether widespread BMP use is really producing projected ecological improvement at a watershed scale?

Gordon

July 30, 2008 3:08 PM PT

The bottom line for BMP comparisons should be the cost per kg of pollutant removed. For some BMPs this can be done with actual cleanout records. Others will be calculated removals. This is how the WWTP guys compare technologies.

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