July 28, 2008


Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Treatment Technologies

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

2 Comments


Site Characteristics
Manufacturers were asked to provide information regarding characteristics that need to be considered for selecting various stormwater technologies, including climate, soil type and slope. The manufacturers’ responses indicate that their technologies are suitable for most climates with a slight trend showing that more technologies are suitable for dry arid climates than for wet tropical climates. At least 80% of the respondents said that the technologies are suitable for all of the climates in the survey (Table 4).

The manufacturers indicated that most of the stormwater technologies are suitable for all of the soil types with the highest proportion of respondents indicating that the technologies are suitable for somewhat erodible and moderately erodible soils (Table 5 and Figure 7). Some of the respondents indicated that the question was not applicable, reflecting technologies that are not installed directly into soils, such as drain inserts. The respondents indicated that most of the stormwater technologies are suitable for areas with moderate or slight slopes, while areas with steep slopes were the least suitable for stormwater technology application (Table 6 and Figure 8).

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Based on the responses to the three site characteristics (climate, soil stability and slope) it is interesting to note that manufacturers considered that climate was much less of a constraint for technology selection than soil stability or slope. Given the small number of responses by type of technology, the survey results cannot be expressed in terms of specific technologies, but the overall result is that it is important to consider soil stability and slope when selecting a BMP.

BMP Performance and Cost
Manufacturers were also asked to provide information with regards to removal efficiency for several common pollutants, maintenance intervals, flow rates and costs. With regards to pollutant removal efficiency, the manufacturers were asked to report on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1 was poor and 5 was excellent. They could also choose not to answer, if insufficient data was available or their technology was not targeted to a particular pollutant. There is a wide range of responses (Table 7), from technologies that deal well with many pollutants, to those that are only useful for a small range. Although an “average” removal efficiency is not very meaningful, the information in Figure 9 serves to highlight that certain pollutants can be targeted with many technologies with high removal efficiency, while metals, organics, bacteria and nutrients tend to be more challenging. 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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