Infrastructure, Networks & Equipment
Municipal WWTP Companies
Municipal wastewater solution providers, plant design, upgrades, retrofits, and nutrient-removal expansions.
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Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant Design: Activated Sludge Parameters, Nutrient Removal, and Effluent Standards
Municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) process domestic, commercial, and industrial sewage through primary (screening, grit removal, sedimentation, 30 to 50 percent BOD removal), secondary (biological treatment, 85 to 95 percent BOD and SS removal), and tertiary (nutrient removal, filtration, disinfection, meeting advanced effluent standards) stages. Secondary treatment by activated sludge (AS) uses aerobic bacteria to oxidise soluble BOD at food-to-microorganism ratios (F:M) of 0.05 to 0.25 kg BOD per kg MLVSS per day, with mixed liquor volatile suspended solids (MLVSS) of 2,000 to 4,000 mg per L, dissolved oxygen maintained at 1.5 to 4.0 mg per L, and sludge retention time (SRT) of 5 to 15 days for BOD removal, 10 to 20 days for nitrification at 15 degrees C.
Biological nutrient removal (BNR) extends activated sludge to remove nitrogen and phosphorus. Nitrification converts ammonia to nitrate (Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter bacteria, minimum SRT 8 to 12 days at 15 degrees C, DO above 1.5 mg per L in aerobic zones). Denitrification converts nitrate to nitrogen gas in anoxic zones (no DO, using BOD as electron donor); 5-stage Bardenpho or Modified Ludzack-Ettinger (MLE) configurations achieve total nitrogen below 10 mg per L TN. Biological phosphorus removal (EBPR: Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal) uses anaerobic-anoxic-aerobic (A2O) or similar configurations where polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) take up excess phosphorus; achieves TP below 1 mg per L. Chemical phosphorus removal (dosing aluminium sulphate or ferric chloride, 5 to 20 mg per L) provides compliance backup.
EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive (91/271/EEC, revised 2022 as proposal) sets effluent standards by catchment size: for sensitive areas, BOD below 25 mg per L, SS below 35 mg per L, COD below 125 mg per L, total nitrogen below 10 to 15 mg per L, total phosphorus below 1 to 2 mg per L. US EPA secondary treatment standards: BOD below 30 mg per L (30-day average), SS below 30 mg per L. UK standards from Environment Agency discharge consents are site-specific but typically BOD below 20 mg per L, SS below 30 mg per L, ammonia below 5 mg per L for rivers above a certain flow standard. Effluent disinfection is required in the US (UV or chlorination plus dechlorination) but not universally mandated in the UK and EU.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between primary, secondary, and tertiary wastewater treatment?
Primary treatment (physical): Screens (6 to 25 mm bar screens) remove gross solids (rags, plastics). Grit chambers remove sand and grit (settling velocity above 0.2 m per s) to protect downstream equipment. Primary sedimentation (clarifiers, HRT 1.5 to 2.5 hours, surface loading 25 to 40 m3 per m2 per day) removes 50 to 70 percent of suspended solids and 30 to 40 percent of BOD as primary sludge (3 to 6 percent DS). Secondary treatment (biological): Activated sludge aeration tanks (HRT 4 to 8 hours) with secondary clarifiers remove 90 to 95 percent of BOD and 85 to 92 percent of SS from settled sewage. Produces secondary sludge (0.5 to 1.5 percent DS from secondary clarifier returns). Tertiary treatment (advanced): Removes nitrogen, phosphorus, residual SS, or pathogens. Includes sand filtration, UV, chemical phosphorus precipitation, constructed wetlands, or advanced oxidation. Achieves effluent suitable for sensitive receiving waters or reuse.
How is ammonia removed in wastewater treatment?
Ammonia removal requires biological nitrification: aerobic bacteria (Nitrosomonas converts NH4+ to NO2-, Nitrobacter converts NO2- to NO3-) oxidise ammonia to nitrate in the aeration basin. Design requirements: dissolved oxygen above 1.5 to 2.0 mg per L in all aerobic zones (below 1.0 mg per L suppresses Nitrosomonas); pH 6.5 to 8.5 (optimal 7.5 to 8.0); sludge retention time (SRT) sufficient for slow-growing nitrifiers (SRT above 8 days at 15 degrees C, above 12 days at 10 degrees C, above 20 days at 5 degrees C; cold temperatures slow nitrification significantly). Nitrification converts NH4-N to NO3-N (not full nitrogen removal); denitrification in anoxic zones (DO near zero) with organic carbon as electron donor then reduces NO3- to N2 gas. Combined nitrification-denitrification (Modified Ludzack-Ettinger, A2O, SBR) achieves total nitrogen below 10 mg per L.
How much energy does a municipal WWTP consume?
Municipal WWTPs consume 0.3 to 0.7 kWh per m3 of treated wastewater for conventional activated sludge with secondary treatment only; 0.5 to 1.0 kWh per m3 for full nutrient removal with tertiary treatment. The dominant energy consumer is aeration (50 to 60 percent of total WWTP energy): fine bubble diffuser systems at 1.2 to 2.4 kg O2 per kWh are standard (coarse bubble at 0.6 to 1.2 kg O2 per kWh is less efficient but lower capital cost). Pumping (primary, return activated sludge, sludge handling): 20 to 25 percent. Biogas generated from anaerobic digestion of primary and secondary sludge can offset 50 to 100 percent of WWTP electricity demand (gas generation 0.25 to 0.35 m3 CH4 per kg VS destroyed; electricity generation in CHP at 35 to 40 percent efficiency). Some modern energy-neutral WWTPs (Strass, Austria; DC Water Blue Plains, USA) generate more energy from biogas than they consume, achieving net energy positive operation through optimised primary treatment maximising sludge capture.
How is sludge from municipal WWTPs disposed of?
Municipal sewage sludge (biosolids) disposal routes in descending preference (UK Environment Agency 'safe sludge matrix'): (1) Agricultural land application - beneficial reuse as soil amendment and fertiliser (phosphorus, nitrogen, organic matter), subject to limit values for heavy metals (Sludge Use in Agriculture Regulations 1989 in UK; US EPA 40 CFR Part 503); 60 to 70 percent of UK sludge is land-applied; (2) Enhanced anaerobic digestion plus land application - thermal hydrolysis pre-treatment (THP: 160 to 165 degrees C, 6 bar) produces pasteurised Class A biosolids with higher biogas yield; (3) Incineration - for sludge unsuitable for land application (high metal content, pharmaceutical micropollutant concerns); co-incineration in cement kilns or standalone sludge combustion (phosphorus recovery from ash is an emerging driver); (4) Landfill - minimum use, declining due to landfill tax; prohibited in several EU countries. Global trend: phosphorus recovery from sludge (struvite precipitation, thermal treatment ash) is gaining regulatory support as part of circular economy policy.
A 120,000 PE activated sludge WWTP serving a market town in the East Midlands was routinely failing its Environment Agency ammonia consent (5 mg per L) during winter due to cold-temperature nitrification suppression at SRT below 12 days. The EA had issued a regulatory notice requiring compliance within 24 months.
A process review identified aeration control as the bottleneck. Dissolved oxygen control was upgraded from on/off blower switching to variable-speed drives with NH4-based aeration control (ammonia sensor feedback loop maintaining DO at 1.8 to 2.5 mg per L). SRT was increased from 10 to 15 days by reducing WAS frequency. A chemical phosphorus dosing system (ferric sulphate, 10 mg per L) was added for TP compliance ahead of a future EBPR retrofit.
Ammonia compliance rate improved from 78 to 99.1 percent within two operational seasons. Aeration energy fell by 22 percent year on year due to DO optimisation. The EA regulatory notice was formally closed 19 months after the upgrade programme began.
Questions to Ask Shortlisted Providers
- 1
What are the EA consent limits for BOD, SS, ammonia, and phosphorus for this discharge point?
Consent limits define the treatment standard required; tight ammonia or phosphorus limits often require BNR or chemical dosing systems that significantly affect capital and operating costs.
- 2
What is the design population equivalent and the 20-year flow and load growth projection?
Undersizing secondary treatment for population growth causes consent failures within 5 to 10 years; hydraulic and organic capacity must be assessed at present and future peak loads.
- 3
How is sludge produced and what is the proposed disposal route?
Sludge disposal represents 20 to 40 percent of WWTP OPEX; the availability of agricultural land, AD with biogas, or incineration significantly affects whole-life cost.
- 4
What energy recovery options are included and what is the target energy balance?
Modern WWTPs can achieve 50 to 100 percent energy offset from biogas CHP; the energy strategy should be integral to the design, not an afterthought.
- 5
What resilience provisions apply if the secondary treatment stage is taken out of service?
EA permits typically require an emergency response plan; bypass arrangements and storm storage must be designed to meet regulatory requirements during maintenance or failure events.
What Drives Cost in This Category
Tank and blower sizing scales with PE and the storm flow ratio; a 2.5 times DWF storm allowance adds 20 to 40 percent to aeration tank and final clarifier capital cost versus dry weather sizing.
BNR for total nitrogen below 10 mg per L and phosphorus below 1 mg per L doubles or trebles biological treatment capital cost versus BOD-only removal; chemical P dosing is a lower-cost interim option.
Anaerobic digestion plus CHP adds 2 to 8 million GBP capital for a 50,000 to 200,000 PE works but significantly reduces OPEX; thermal hydrolysis pre-treatment adds further capital for enhanced biogas yield.
Urban WWTP sites with poor access, contaminated ground, or high groundwater tables can add 20 to 50 percent to civil construction costs.
Key Regulations & Standards
Transposes EU UWWTD 91/271/EEC; sets secondary treatment requirements for all agglomerations above 2,000 PE and more stringent nutrient limits for sensitive area discharges.
Environmental permitting controls all WWTP effluent discharges; the EA issues site-specific permits with consent conditions for BOD, SS, ammonia, phosphorus, and other parameters.
Governs land application of sewage biosolids in England and Wales; sets heavy metal limit values and requires soil and sludge testing before each application.
Large WWTPs (above 100,000 PE or receiving significant industrial load) must meet IED BAT-associated emission levels; BAT Conclusions published by the EU Commission define best available techniques.


















