Date post: | 05-Dec-2014 |
Category: |
Technology |
Upload: | us-water-alliance |
View: | 792 times |
Download: | 0 times |
10/28/2011
1
Distributed DBOF Water Resource Solutions
Ed Clerico, CEOOctober 4, 2011
2
Water Reuse – 24 Years of DBOF Projects
• Over 40 systems using direct and indirect water reuse
• Residential, Commercial, Institutional, Industrial
• Water Reuse of 25%-95% providing significant reduction in water and wastewater demands
• Flush water, cooling, laundry, irrigation applications
• Wastewater mining and centralized system load shedding
10/28/2011
2
3
Ridgewood, NJ- 20 Yr DBOF – Biogas/Solar
Biosolids
Hea
t
Optimizing Renewable Energy via Solar + Internal and External Carbon SourcesGoal = Net Zero Energy
4
Wetland Based Passive Treatment Mechanisms
40 Wetland Based Treatment Systems – MN and GA –Conserving Energy, Carbon Sequestration, Improving Biodiversity – Low Cost Future CSO Solutions
10/28/2011
3
Create via Design Build – assume risk of implementat ionEliminate multiple contractor, multiple phase liability
Manage via long term Operation – assume risk of func tional performanceInclude operating functions into the design process and control ultimate performance
Direct Investment – Finance – assume risk of financia l performanceSponsor direct investments and funds into niche utility asset types as a blend of debt and equity, sometimes partnering with governmental agencies and funding mechanisms (PPP)
NSU Water Infrastructure Profitable long-term assets that provide appropriate risk/reward profile
How We Innovate – Creative Finance and Creative Delivery - DBOF
5
Why These Innovations Occurred – Innovation Drivers
6
• Scarce resource or lack of adequate supporting infrastructure
• Inadequate sustainable water supply
• Overflowing or noncompliant wastewater system
• Favorable economics
• Property values were adequately high – cost of innovation was small (typically < 1.5% of construction)
• Lower life cycle costs – superior TBL outcome
• Immediate operating and capital cost benefits
• Strong environmental initiatives
• Green Building
• Need to reduce environmental impacts
10/28/2011
4
How These Innovations Were Implemented
7
•Entrepreneurial drive
• Passion for innovation and new solutions
• Willingness to take risk
• Right mix of technical, functional and financial capability
• Leadership
• Top command establishes the mission with clarity and conviction
• Organizations align and have good integrity – New York City Buildings Sustainability Board as example
• Collaboration
• Willing regulators and existing service providers –willing to accept change
• Creative planners and developers
Responsible Management Entity as Distributed Service Provider
8
Ownership/Financing-Debt/Equity
Design Construction
Existing Utility/ Govt EntityAssociation/Co-Op/etc
IPP WWTP – Co-Owned by SPV
Responsible Management Entity (RME)
$
ServicesFees $
GroundLease/SiteServices
Design Build
Operations Repair & Replace
Own/Operate
Regulators
RME Assets
$
Service Fees
Water/Energy/Nutrient Services
Shared Savings
10/28/2011
5
9
Integrated Systems Thinking: Reuse and Regeneration
VEGETATION
NUTRIENTS
SOLID
BY-PRODUCTS
ENERGY
WATER
Efficient Source & Use:
Potable, Non-potable
Efficient Treatment :
Biomimetic Systems (storm, waste)
Efficient Total Reuse:
Water, energy, nutrients, solids
System Optimization
Water: Reuse
ENERGY: Renewable: Biogas
Efficiency: Heat Pump
NUTRIENTS:
Primary Nutrients: NPK
Soil Addatives
SOLID BY-PRODUCTS:
Carbon Sources: Beneficial
Reuse
VEGETATION:
Inedible, Edible
Carbon Sequestration
Biomass
10
* Operating performance based upon NSU track record, and returns, internal model.
Financially and Environmentally Superior Results
Uses50% less water.
Meets100% of water safety standards.
Cuts fossil fuels by 60%.
Costs60% less to operate.
Costs40% less to build.
Cheaper to Build, Operate and Maintain than most conventional systms:
10/28/2011
6
11
Build
Operate
Regenerate
Build
Master Plan
Design
Invest/ Own
Integrated DBOF Service
Master Plan
Thank YouEd Clerico, CEO
O: 908-359-5129
C: 908-963-2556