Design services for a $1 billion, 10-year program to simultaneously upgrade two of Canada’s largest wastewater treatment plants, completed ahead of schedule and more than $90 million under budget. Both the128-mgd Annacis Island and 40-mgd Lulu Island WWTPs were upgraded to secondary treatment, including the implementation of cogeneration to provide more than half of the plants’ power needs. The plants were also the first in North America to implement Class A anaerobic thermophilic digestion to produce biosolids for 100-percent beneficial reuse.

Delivering North America's first Class A treatment

Delivering North America's first Class A treatment
Related News
- BC Compliance News: November 2021 environmental regulations
- Solving the nutrient challenge at Pueblo, CO
- Ohio treatment plant upgrade could include innovative digestion process
- The Water Research Foundation and utilities collaborate to fund energy efficient nutrient management study
- Brown and Caldwell’s Natalie Sierra appointed vice chair of the Water Environment Federation’s Residuals and Biosolids Committee
- Hidden Beauty of The Water Cycle: An Interview with Photographer Brad Temkin
- Poop-derived fruits are known to grow in sewage plants
- City of Columbus selects Brown and Caldwell for pioneering wastewater acid digestion project
- MSU-led team receives nearly $2 million EPA grant to explore biosolid treatments, effects of chemical pollutants such as PFAS
- Haunted Waters