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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Results from the question, “On average, how frequently do you perform maintenance on the technology named above? (More than once a month, once a month, once every 6 months, once a year, less than once a year)” showed that the most common maintenance interval among all technologies is either once every six months or once a year (Figure 5). The vegetated swales had the largest distribution of maintenance intervals, with a skew towards more frequent maintenance. On the other hand, porous pavement had the smallest distribution of maintenance intervals, falling mostly within the 6 months or 1 year interval.

BMP Cost
Structural BMP implementation cost depends upon the size, location, and the design selected. As opposed to surveying BMP users about their total costs, users were asked about how much the BMP project costs varied from what they had anticipated using the following question: “For this technology how different were actual capital, installation, and maintenance costs from estimated capital, installation, and maintenance costs? (much less than expected, somewhat less than expected, same as expected, somewhat more than expected, much more than expected, or not sure).”

A summary of responses is shown in Figure 6 and indicate that vegetated swale projects are generally more likely to have capital and installation costs that are similar to what was anticipated, whereas infiltration basins and porous pavement, media filter and other projects have shown more variation in anticipated versus actual costs for capital and installation. In general the variation is towards higher expenses than expected, across all three cost categories. These results indicate that vegetated swale projects are generally most likely to stay on budget for capital and installation in comparison to other types of projects.

Porous pavement projects most frequently stayed on budget for maintenance, followed by vegetated swales, other technologies, infiltration basins, and media filters. It is interesting to note that media filter maintenance was “somewhat more than expected” in 41% of projects reported, indicating that maintenance budgets for this technology are frequently underestimated.

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Stormwater Technology Manufacturer Survey
The manufacturers that responded to the survey represent various types of stormwater technologies including: (Table 3)

The majority of the stormwater technologies (78%) addressed in the manufacturer’s survey are intended to mitigate only stormwater as opposed to both stormwater and combined storm and municipal sewers (CSO) which represented 22% of respondents. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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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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