DC Waters waste to energy plant goes online
The multimillion dollar energy from wastewater plant has been unveiled by DC Water. The $470 million waste to energy (W2E) project is now online and is producing a net 10 MW (megawatts) of clean and renewable electricity from an innovative wastewater treatment process, with the generated power making up roughly one third of the Washington D.C. Blue Plains plant’s energy requirements. Clean energy is generated using various pieces of equipment. In order to be able to turn wastewater into energy, the plant features a dewatering building, four concrete 80-foot high anaerobic digestors that can e…
The multimillion dollar energy from wastewater plant has been unveiled by DC Water.
The $470 million waste to energy (W2E) project is now online and is producing a net 10 MW (megawatts) of clean and renewable electricity from an innovative wastewater treatment process, with the generated power making up roughly one third of the Washington D.C. Blue Plains plant’s energy requirements.Clean energy is generated using various pieces of equipment.
In order to be able to turn wastewater into energy, the plant features a dewatering building, four concrete 80-foot high anaerobic digestors that can each hold 3.8 million gallons of solids, three jet engine-sized turbines, and 32 thermal hydrolysis vessels. George Hawkins, DC Water’s General Manager, said that the plant is going to generate clean energy that “reduces our carbon footprint by a third.”
District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser said about the W2E plant that “DC Waters Blue Plains facility is converting waste to clean water and a nutrient-rich soil byproduct, producing energy and helping to put the District on the path towards a zero waste future.” Bowser also stated that “We cannot afford to allow waste to be just waste.”