Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 31

www.waterafrica.co.za Rhodes University (EBRU) at the Belmont Valley Wastewater Treatment Works (WWTW) in Makhanda (Grahamstown), the IAPS is modelled on one of a variety of advanced integrated wastewater pond systems (AIWPS) designed and innovated by the late Professor Bill Oswald and his co-workers and was indeed designed by Oswald himself. The system comprises a primary facultative pond with submerged anaerobic digester or fermentation pit, which together feed paddlewheel- driven high-rate algal oxidation ponds linked in series. Suspended biomass is separated from the treated water by algal settling ponds prior to tertiary treatment. The latter typically involves a Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 31 I n January 2010 and in March 2013, Water, Sewage & Effluent published articles respectively titled, “Golden Pond” and “Golden Pond? — Yes!”. These articles provided detail on the configuration, operation, and water quality of an integrated algal pond system (IAPS) that treats domestic sewage under South African conditions. Here, Taobat Jimoh, Richard Laubscher, Keith Cowan, and Derek Askew examine peroxonation as a means to mitigate concerns around availability of land and residual chemical oxygen demand (COD) and total suspended solids (TSS) in the final IAPS effluent. Located on the campus of the Institute for Environmental Biotechnology, innovations By Professor A Keith Cowan, Taobat Jimoh, Richard Laubscher, and Derek Askew maturation pond series or similar. Kinetic and operation parameters of each IAPS component determines quality of the final effluent and a complete evaluation of the process has recently been published (Water Research Commission TT 649/15). Even so, while IAPS-treated water appears to comply with the general standard for either irrigation or discharge, large gaps in terms of technology status, design and process operation, and cost of construction exist that can only be addressed following implementation of full-scale commercial systems. In the March 2013 Water, Sewage & Effluent article, Professor Keith Cowan and co-workers alluded to a strategy whereby IAPS can be used to valorise the bulk by-products including water for recycle/re-use, methane, and biomass. Quantification of these by-products from the Belmont Valley IAPS revealed that this 500PE pilot-scale system produced ~28ML/y treated water for recycle/re-use, a methane-rich biogas Supporting peri-urban agriculture and food production. Golden Ponds peroxonated — for water, energy, and food