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MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

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MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007
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Page 1: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

MWEA PresentationFOG Control & Prevention

Programs October 24, 2007

Page 2: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Detroit Wastewater System 840 Sq. Mile Service Region

• 350 Significant Industrial Users• +15,000 Minor Commercial/Industrial Users• +10,000 Food Establishments (Restaurants,

Institutions, other) 78 Communities (Municipalities, Townships,

Counties, Authorities) Population = +3.9 million

Page 3: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Fats, Oils & Grease Fats, Oils & Grease Mineral Based Petroleum Based Animal & Vegetable Based

Definitions Fats – Solid at room temperature Oil – Liquid at room temperature Grease – Viscous semi-solids at room

temperature

Page 4: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention ProgramsWhat is FOG?What is FOG?

FOG

Animal Vegetable Mineral

Lard (Pork)

Tallow (Beef)

Schmaltz (Poultry)

Petroleum OilsSoy, Corn, Sunflower,

Peanut, Cotton Seed

LinseedTung

Edible Inedible

Gasoline,

Lubricating oils

Page 5: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsProgramsThe Problem(s)The Problem(s)

WWTP Interference & Pass-throughBlockages/ObstructionsSpills

Contained Uncontained

Page 6: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs Consideration of DWSD Facilities

Impacted by FOG Meter Station Downstream of a Snack-

Food Manufacturer Sewer Blockages & Similar Nuisances Grease Trap Cleaners Discharge

• Restaurants• Food Establishments

Oil Spills• $320k for 50,000 gals• $32k for 250 gals

Page 7: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Problems with Animal & Vegetable FOG Creates Obstructions - act as Cement-like

matrix, e.g. Forms Hard Deposits Involves Commonly Used Material

• Restaurant Clustering

• Difficult to Identify Responsible Source Existing Controls - Not Well Regulated

• Health Department

• Plumbing Code

• Water & Sewerage

Page 8: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

What Can WE DO?

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsPrograms

Page 9: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Page 10: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsProgramsOptions:Options:

Regulatory Approaches (Command & Control) Industrial Pretreatment Surcharge a.k.a. User Charge System

Non-Regulatory Approaches Voluntary Education

Page 11: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

Command & Control Programs: Work Well --

• Regulating Large Industrial/Manufacturing Operations

• Operations are Sophisticated • Control Group is Small

Don’t Work as Well -- • Problem is Occasional• Control Group is Large

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsPrograms

Page 12: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsPrograms

Command & Control Options Local Pollutant Discharge Limitations

• Limit = 1,500 mg/l• Headworks allocation: 48,000 lbs Domestic / 350,000 Available

General Prohibitions• Nuisance prohibition• Interference and pass-through prohibitions• Floating-oil prohibition

Economic = +$ 27 M/yr User Charge Program FOG Rate = $ 0.284/lb (2007/08)

• Excludes Restaurants

Page 13: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

Costs of FOGWho should bear the cost?

Source

Transport/Conveyance

Destination

Local Maintenance

Treatment Plant/Pump Station

User Pays

Public Pays

Page 14: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

What Kinds of “Problems” Lend Themselves to Non-Command & Control Strategies? Ubiquitous Pollutants

• Mercury• Fats, Oils & Grease

Numerous Small Sources (Examples)• Dental Offices• Restaurants

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Page 15: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention Programs Programs

Voluntary Methods Focus on Restaurants (Franchises, Institutions,

Grills)• Establishments often cluster, impacting local sewers

• Difficulty in identifying “sole”source

• Grease Controls – mixed– Grease Trap Requirements – sizing & maintenance

– Garbage disposers, Dishwashers – effectiveness of traps

Page 16: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsPrograms

Education Pollution Prevention Approach

• Provide notice of problem

• Transfer duty to prevent

• Development of maintenance plans and responses to “Manage” FOGs

Identifies “problem” for restaurant industry to focus upon

• Video/CD (5 minute information)

• Posters (Do and Don’ts)

Page 17: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

Decided to “Fill the Regulatory Gap” Found “LAPSE” in Regulation Need for Partnering Among Agencies

Decided to Regulate - DifferentlyDecided on Key Focus Group - Restaurants

Facilities Need to “KNOW” Facilities Need - Methods for Success

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Page 18: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs

Developed Response of Pollution Prevention Program Information about Grease Trap Maintenance Information about Instructing on Proper &

Improper Disposal Alternatives Informational Material (Posters) and Video

Involves Visiting & Distributing Materials to Large and Small Operations

Page 19: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsFOG Control & Prevention Programs ResultsResults

2-Year Results: 848 Facilities Visited Review Operations Provide Basic Materials Identify Disposal Methods Used

No-effect on Blockage Reports -- YETSurvey/Feedback Measures

Positive & Well Received Acceptance by Franchise Operators

Page 20: MWEA Presentation FOG Control & Prevention Programs October 24, 2007.

FOG Control & Prevention FOG Control & Prevention ProgramsPrograms

ConclusionsConclusions

Efforts have Demonstrated Good Alternative to C&C

BMP Approaches Provide Maximum Flexibility for Users

Codify Use of BMP into Local SUO Expanding Application to Other Pollutants Include Both “Voluntary” and “Required”

Participants


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