Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Ammonia spike in the STP or WWTP?


Ammonia spike in the STP / WWTP?
Recently, a plant supervisor called us about a major ammonia spike in their sewage treatment plant. This client has been using the microbes successfully for a few years for their lift stations. They used to have a big problem with FOG accumulation, and now they rarely need pump-outs and have not needed full cleanouts since they started with us. But unrelated to the lift stations, they suddenly were experiencing a huge spike in ammonia levels in the plant for unknown reasons.

The client was quite happy to learn that the same archaea-based microbe formula thrives on ammonia, and would bring the ammonia levels down rapidly and get the process back in parameters. A cheap, fast and easy solution to what could have been a much bigger problem.

Our biological wastewater treatment formulas are archaea-based, which means they are effective at far colder temperatures than most bacteria-based products. As a quick trivia sidenote, archaea have been found quite happily living deep in permanently frozen Antarctic ice.

The archaea-based consortium very effectively controls odors, eliminates FOG accumulation in collection infrastructure, reduces H2S build-up, and enhances (rather than disrupts) the efficiency of downstream treatment systems and processes. Basically, nature figured it out billions of years ago. Applying this knowledge to a wide variety of industrial and environmental settings just makes sense.

If you have a question about whether Akaya's biological wastewater treatment products might be helpful for you, please give us a call or email.


- A lifelong sailor and water lover, Kevin Mirise lives and works on the coast in Cohasset, near Boston, MA. He’s a Director at Akaya, a bioremediation and biorestoration company that uses beneficial microbes to treat wastewater and naturally eliminate toxic contamination from water and soil. 

Keys: Wastewater Treatment Plant, Waste Water Treatment Plant, Sewage Treatment Plant, Agriculture, Wastewater Lagoons, Waste Lagoons, Sewer Collection Systems, Wastewater Collection Infrastructure, Utility Infrastructure, Biological Wastewater Treatment Products, Beneficial Microorganisms, Beneficial Microbes, COD Reduction, Wastewater Treatment Odors, Bioaugmentation

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