Veolia Boosts Renewable Generation for Southern Water
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Technology
Veolia is helping Southern Water derive even more of its power from sewage.
The company is installing new combined heat and power (CHP) engines at three of Southern Water’s treatment works - Budds Farm and Fullerton in Hampshire and Gravesend in Kent.
The work will save around 3,600 tonnes of CO2 emissions each year and is part of Southern Water’s wider project to generate even more renewable energy by upgrading CHP units at five of its sites.
Southern Water Services is the provider of water and wastewater services for Kent, Sussex, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Routed through a sewer network of 39,000km, 718 million litres of wastewater get treated and recycled at the company’s 368 treatment works every day.
Each new Veolia project includes the design, installation and operation of the biogas cogeneration units by Veolia’s specialist CHP team, and adds to the systems already serving seven other Southern Water treatment sites. These CHP will now deliver around 48.3GWh of renewable electricity each year, taking pressure off the local electricity infrastructure and saving 8,800 tonnes of CO2 emissions - equivalent to the output from nearly 5,800 cars.
Biogas, captured by anaerobic digestion from the wastewater treatment processes is used as a fuel, and will provide the electricity needed to power the wastewater treatment operations, with the surplus being fed to the Grid. The heat recovered from the CHP units is fed to the AD process to speed up the bacterial digestion of organic matter and biogas output.
Around 190 UK wastewater sites now produce biogas to generate electricity which is used on site or exported to the national grid. Today, the potential power from human sewage in the UK could now keep around fourteen million LED/LCD TVs or ten million game consoles running constantly.
Read more on: Veolia
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