Veolia and Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans establish groundbreaking partnership to reinvent wastewater treatment
April 25 2024 - 8:30AM
Business Wire
> New environmental challenges prompt iconic American city
and leading global water company to reinvent treatment management
to improve city’s environment and quality of life
> Reinvented partnership will save city $2 million per
year and eliminate 150 annual truck trips by developing
sustainable oxygen supplies on-site
> Modern oxygen system will reduce chemical costs and energy
use by at least 10% and eliminate 12 metric tons per
month of greenhouse gas emissions
Veolia North America, the leading provider of environmental
solutions in the U.S. and Canada, and the Sewerage and Water Board
of New Orleans (SWBNO) have established a groundbreaking
partnership to reimagine how the city collects, treats and manages
its wastewater, turning the byproducts of wastewater treatment into
environmental assets and improving the quality of life in New
Orleans. The new partnership will save almost $2 million a year,
reduce energy and chemical consumption, reduce carbon emissions and
install new technology for better environmental performance.
Karine Rougé, CEO of Veolia North America’s Municipal Water
division, said, "Veolia has been proud to support New Orleans’
dedicated efforts to modernize its wastewater treatment
infrastructure since 1992, and our partnership is now focused on
implementing a new generation of physical and process improvements
that reimagine this vital city service. We are glad to partner with
SWBNO to envision a forward-thinking plan that is a major step
toward delivering newer infrastructure and better public
service.”
Veolia and the Sewerage and Water Board have worked together
more than 30 years and have dramatically improved the environmental
and financial performance of one of the city’s most vital services.
The partnership has rebuilt and expanded treatment processes at the
city’s two wastewater treatment plants, improving water quality and
operational efficiency, while also providing extraordinary
operational support during hurricanes and natural disasters. A new
five-year agreement finalized this month will set the partnership
on a new path toward reimagining what wastewater treatment can do
for the future of the city.
Ghassan Korban, Executive Director, Sewerage and Water Board
of New Orleans, said, “As part of our utility’s commitment to
infrastructure reliability and resiliency, as well as technology
modernization, this investment will make our East Bank and West
Bank wastewater treatment plants far more efficient and
effective.”
Digital upgrades to optimize future operation
The comprehensive investment and upgrade program supports New
Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell’s goal of remaking the city’s
infrastructure as a source of strength and a framework for growth
and renewal. Veolia will install its cutting-edge digital
monitoring and analysis tools to continually optimize the
performance of New Orleans’ wastewater system, allowing it to
perform better, use less energy, generate less waste, emit fewer
greenhouse gases, and reduce the potential generation of unpleasant
odors:
- New digital monitoring systems will make it easier for plant
operators to manage changing conditions and optimize the treatment
process, providing real-time monitoring of wastewater treatment for
the first time.
- A new system for receiving, storing and treating sludge at the
East Bank facility will improve efficiency, provide more odor
control and help generate additional revenue in the future.
- New pumps, bar screens and other equipment will help both East
Bank and West Bank plants improve operations, while new bleach
storage capacity at the West Bank facility will upgrade its
disinfection capability.
- Veolia will also install a new system to dissolve oxygen into
the aerobic digestion process of wastewater treatment, eliminating
the need for three truckloads a week of costly liquid oxygen
supplies delivered to the plant. The new system will save almost $2
million a year, reduce chemical costs and power use by at least an
estimated 10%, and eliminate an estimated 12 metric tons per month
of carbon emissions.
Veolia actively supports community needs and
improvements
These upgrades will continue the renewal of New Orleans’
wastewater infrastructure that has been a hallmark of Veolia’s
partnership with the Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans.
Veolia has steadily improved daily operations of the wastewater
treatment system since 1992, while strengthening its long-term
capacity, functioning and resilience. When New Orleans’ wastewater
treatment system was devastated by Hurricane Katrina and later by
Hurricane Ida, flooding the wastewater treatment plants, Veolia
drew on its global resources to restore service for residents and
recover from the damage without waiting for federal assistance. As
the top-ranked company for environmental services, Veolia intends
to make the most of its global expertise to help America meet its
need for sustainable growth. Last week, the group announced its
ambition to double its size in the country by 2030.
The renewal also provides Veolia the opportunity to continue its
support of community, educational and environmental initiatives
across New Orleans. Veolia has donated $35,000 to community groups
in the last two years to support initiatives including producing
the New Orleans East Festival, rejuvenating Joe W. Brown Memorial
Park, and establishing the Sankofa Wetland Park and Nature Trail in
the Lower Ninth Ward. Veolia employees volunteer with the Sankofa
organization to support its community events, in alignment with
Veolia’s corporate mission of ecological transformation to address
the changing climate.
Veolia has also established teaming agreements with Delgado
Community College and the Southern University System, one of the
largest historically Black college and university systems in the
nation, to create mutually beneficial partnerships that drive
innovation, develop talent and maintain a network within the
academic community. Veolia also partners with neighboring high
schools to create STEM educational opportunities for students, and
students in Veolia’s internship and apprenticeship program have
used that experience to join Veolia’s New Orleans team. More than
27% of Veolia’s contract spending in New Orleans is disbursed to
local disadvantaged business enterprises.
ABOUT VEOLIA NORTH AMERICA
A subsidiary of Veolia Group, Veolia North America (VNA) offers
a full spectrum of water, waste and energy management services,
including water and wastewater treatment, commercial and hazardous
waste collection and disposal, energy consulting and resource
recovery. VNA helps commercial, industrial, healthcare, higher
education and municipality customers throughout North America.
Headquartered in Boston, Mass., Veolia North America has more than
10,000 employees working at more than 350 locations across the
continent. www.veolianorthamerica.com
ABOUT VEOLIA GROUP
Veolia's ambition is to become the benchmark company for
ecological transformation. With nearly 218,000 employees on five
continents, the Group designs and deploys useful, practical
solutions for managing water, waste and energy that help to
radically change the world. Through its three complementary
activities, Veolia contributes to developing access to resources,
preserving available resources and renewing them. In 2023, the
Veolia group served 113 million people with drinking water and 103
million with wastewater services, produced 42 terawatt-hours of
energy and recovered 63 million metric tons of waste. Veolia
Environnement (Paris Euronext: VIE) generated consolidated sales of
€45.3 billion in 2023. www.veolia.com
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240425969079/en/
VEOLIA NORTH AMERICA DeShanon Cobb Manager,
Communications and Community Relations 504-491-9478
deshanon.cobb@veolia.com
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