This Is What It's Like To Work In A Sewage Treatment Plant
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Business
Ever considered working in a sewage treatment plant? Take an exclusive look at a day of treatment plant operator and the ups and downs of the job.
Source: SAYS
Attached link
http://www.youtube.com/embed/J17milyOGxUMedia
Taxonomy
- Sewage Treatment
- Raw Sewage Recycling
- Waste Water Treatments
- Wastewater Treatment
- Sewage
1 Comment
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I applaud your work expertise and job dedication. If you will please clarify one aspect of this video. You showed a microorganism tank. Next was the valve used to let the treated water go to a river. You mentioned "an accepted level of BOD according to 1974 environmental regulations. 1. if the treated water cleaned by microbes why do you need to dump back into a river. 2. If there is a price to pay for cleaning water then I would think using recycled water to be a cost cutting tool. If your observation is BOD post microbe tank then you seriously need to review your microbial protocol. A proper bio tank should have a natures balance of RNA and DNA microorganisms. 70% RNA, 15% bacterial, 15% fungal.
Not to worry. US facilities are not as advanced as your company. They still use chlorine to clean water. Destroying all immune systems and creating a generation of medical, insurance, and government dependency. You are light years ahead of the US. Just keep chlorine out of the cycle and balance your microbial equations. Good job. Please contact me for any assistance in this area. (Bioremediation).