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New Brunswick

Heat from sewage? TransAqua plans to tap into warm wastewater

A Moncton-area utility plans to spend about $500,000 in 2021 to add a heat recovery system to warm and cool some of its buildings with the effluent it treats.

Utility plans to spend about $500,000 to add heat recovery system in the spring

Steam rises from wastewater at TransAqua's sewage treatment plant in Riverview on a chilly December day. The utility plans to use the wastewater to help heat and cool four buildings starting in 2021. (Shane Magee/CBC)

A Moncton-area utility plans to use the sewage and wastewater it treats to heat four of its buildings starting in 2021 in an effort to cut its power bill.

TransAqua processes sewage from Moncton, Riverview and Dieppe.

The incoming materialfrom toilets, showers, sinks and washing machines is about8C.It's warm enough thatTransAqua wants to tap into using a heat recovery system for a heating and cooling system.

The work, expected to cost around $508,000, is anticipated to start in the spring as part of its nearly complete$90.4-million upgrade to comply with federal clean water rules.

Kevin Rice, TransAqua's general manager, said in a recent interview that the new system is expected to reduce the facility'snet greenhouse gas emissions by approximately 22 per cent.

"We need to think outside the box and say, how can we reduce our greenhouse gas emissions even more?" Rice said."So this is something that is significant."

Kevin Rice, general manager of TransAqua, says the facility will use the new process to heat and cool four of its buildings. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Part of the facility's existing wastewater treatment process involves blowing warm air into the water in a section of the plant called the bioreactor that helps break down organic material.

That brings its temperature up to about 10C. It's at that point, when the effluent is already cleaner than what's come into the plant, that the new system would be used.

It would heat and cool a newbuilding for ultravioletdisinfection,asludgethickening building and asludge de-watering building.

"So instead of using our expensive air conditioning systems and expensive heat systems, the amount of temperature that's drawn from the wastewater would be able to reduce those costs significantly," Rice said.

The utility worked with NB Power's industrial energy efficiencystaff to evaluate the idea.

Marc Belliveau, a spokesperson for NB Power, said it helped cover the cost of a feasibility study byTransAqua.

Rice said the study suggeststhe utility could save around $33,000 on its annual power costs.

Rice said the cost of the new system would be covered in part through an NB Powerenergy efficiencyprogram by offsetting TransAqua's power bill over time.

The TransAqua sewage treatment facility in Riverview along the Petitcodiac River. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Belliveausaid, based on the information submitted by engineering and environmental consulting firmCBCL, the incentive will be approximately $66,000.

As well, if the facility's overallupgrade project comes in under budget, he said the province has already given the OK to use some of the funding for that work to help pay for the new heat recovery system.

Rice said discussions with theCanadian Water and Wastewater Association'senergy efficiency committee led him to believe TransAqua will be among thefirst wastewater utilities in Canada to implement the system.

Robert Haller, executive director of the association, told CBC he's not sure whether TransAqua will be the first in Canada, but it will be one of the first.

"As municipal utilities work toward long termsustainability, it is innovative projects like this that will be an example for all," Haller said in an email.