July 28, 2008


Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Treatment Technologies

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By Jenny Phillips, Reni Keane-Dengel, Arturo A. Keller

3 Comments

    When faced with the decision to select effective and appropriate stormwater treatment technologies, also denominated Best Management Practices (BMP), the vast range of options can be daunting. The need for effectiveness data is especially acute, since the investments made at a watershed scale can be quite significant, and needs to be justified. In an attempt to understand the success or shortcomings of various projects, users and manufactures of stormwater mitigation technologies were surveyed for information about the citing, effectiveness, maintenance and cost of stormwater treatment systems they have installed or designed.

    Prior to conducting the survey, a number of resources were identified that provide useful information. In 1996 the US Environmental Protection Agency and the American Society of Civil Engineers began the International Stormwater BMP Database (www.bmpdatabase.org) in an effort to consolidate BMP performance studies. The site has since grown to include other partners and services that provide performance summaries, BMP evaluation protocols, and other resources. The California Stormwater Quality Association also provides valuable information in four handbooks available at their website (http://www.cabmphandbooks.com/). Each handbook is sector-specific and focuses on new development/redevelopment, construction, industrial/commercial or municipal stormwater projects. A study by Weiss et al. (2007) also is a valuable planning tool and provides an evaluation of the cost and effectiveness of contaminant removal (total suspended sediment and phosphorus) for dry extended detention basins, wet basins, sand filters, constructed wetlands, bioretention filters, and infiltration trenches. Another study by Sample et al., (2003) presents new methods for evaluating stormwater controls and BMPs within a land development context. Fifield (2004) also provides a considerable number of designs, with information for cost estimation and assessing effectiveness.

    To complement these various references, a survey was conducted. The survey was conducted via the internet between the months of September and December 2007, receiving voluntary responses from stormwater BMP users and manufacturers across various sectors and geographic locations throughout the US. The study was developed to acquire information regarding expected versus actual costs, effectiveness of pollutant removal, and situational applicability of structural BMPs from the perspective of industry practitioners. Technologies including infiltration basins and trenches, vegetated swales or buffers, porous surfaces, and media filters were highlighted in the survey, while information regarding the effectiveness of other technologies was solicited as well.

    Survey Respondents
    A combined total of 189 complete responses were received from users and manufactures of stormwater technologies. A majority of respondents were BMP users, with 40% from local governments, 53% from consulting firms and 8% from universities and other respondents. User responses were solicited in five categories that asked if they had installed any or all of the following types of BMPs: vegetated swales, infiltration basins, porous pavements, media filters or other. A breakdown of responses for each of these categories is shown in Table 1.

    The experience that each user had with stormwater BMP systems varied greatly, with respondents reporting to have installed between 1 and 500 systems. Among all technology types, the average number of systems installed was 27. Figure 1 shows the average number of installed vegetated swales, infiltration basins, porous pavement, media filters and “other” technologies

    Results From Stormwater BMP Technology Users
    Users of stormwater BMPs responded to questions about BMP installation locations, functional characteristics of the BMPs such as maximum flow and removal efficiency, and expected versus actual cost for capital, installation, and maintenance of vegetated swales, infiltration basins, porous pavements, media filters and other technologies. It is important to note that the technologies included in the “other” category varied widely and summary statistics for this category include information from the following technologies:

    • Baffle boxes
    • Bioretention cells
    • Catch basin inserts
    • Catch basin screens
    • Concrete washout systems
    • Oil skimmers
    • Downspout filters
    • Dry ponds
    • Dry wells
    • Flow-through boxes
    • Green roofs
    • Hydrodynamic separators
    • Inlet inserts
    • Manufactured treatment devices
    • Oil water and grit separators
    • Rock check dams
    • Silt fences
    • Sediment logs and wattles
    • Stormceptor
    • Swirl separators
    • Underground detention
    • Water treatment systems with sand filter

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    Site Characteristics
    To understand the situational characteristics of locations where various stormwater BMPs were installed, users were asked about the climate, precipitation, level of development, and severity of erosion at the BMP installation locations. Climate information was solicited with the question, “what regime best characterizes the climate in the area of use? (arid, semi-arid, temperate, sub-tropical, or tropical.)” A majority of respondents reported installing systems in temperate or semi-arid climates, with fewer respondents reporting installing systems in arid, sub-tropical, or tropical climates (Figure 2). The large number of respondents installing systems in temperate or semi-arid climates may result from the greater level of development in these climates compared to arid, sub-tropical, and tropical climates. Next Page >

    What Do You Think?

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    kashmore

    February 17th, 2009 11:38 AM PT

    does anyone have a spreadsheet or matrix of the catch basins technologies anvailable? I would like a copy if someone has it. Thanks

    gcrozier

    September 30, 2008 2:03 AM PT

    It is interesting to read this piece in comparison to the report earlier this year from Chesapeake Bay where BMP applications (particularly agricultural) did not meet model expectations and the factors used were being significantly lowered for future model applications. The question is whether widespread BMP use is really producing projected ecological improvement at a watershed scale?

    Gordon

    July 30, 2008 3:08 PM PT

    The bottom line for BMP comparisons should be the cost per kg of pollutant removed. For some BMPs this can be done with actual cleanout records. Others will be calculated removals. This is how the WWTP guys compare technologies.

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