February 2016 www.esemag.com
2016 GUIDE TO CONSULTANTS, EQUIPMENT / SERVICE SUPPLIERS AND PRODUCTS WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT IN COLD CLIMATES
METERING
MEASUREMENT & CONTROL
TREATMENT
DISINFECTION
IMPLEMENTATION
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Contents Page 18
February 2016 Vol. 29 No. 1 • Issued Feb. 2016 • ISSN-0835-605X
Page 30
DEPARTMENTS 6 8 14 16 18 22 26 28 44 50 52 53 54 56 60 64 67 68
ES&E remembers Ahron Nahmias Montreal lives through “Flushgate” Eco-fiscal challenges to building resilient communities Technical and engineering jobs in B.C. will need to be filled from abroad BIM offers benefits for water and wastewater treatment projects Improving the efficiency and resiliency for high rate clarification systems in Calgary New online calculator counts the cost of grit Biological nitrogen removal using fixed biofilm How to get the most out of your water storage tanks Why it can be better to risk assess instead of remediate contaminated lands UPS systems keep water facilities operating reliably Unrealistic roughness coefficient could impair pipe capacity Building a better framework for EAs in Ontario The importance of phase contrast microscopy in wastewater operations New evaporator improves efficiency of oil sands production Using CO2 for enhanced coagulation. Gender parity still lacking in the engineering boardroom Engineered structural wire mesh is a vital component of accelerated precast construction 70 Key things to consider when choosing a water level logger 74 Melaka gets tough on non revenue watermain loss 76 Orange peel waste helping to clean up mercury pollution
Special Focus on Water & Wastewater in Cold Climates 32 34 38 40
Mechanical wastewater systems in the Far North face many challenges New package water treatment plant built for the remote Inuit community of Kugaaruk James Smith Cree Nation water plant opens its doors NTWWA conference in Iqaluit examines challenges in Canada’s North - Cover Story
2016
Guide to Consultants, Equipment Suppliers and Products pages 81-113
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Consultants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 Suppliers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88 Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
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Environmental News. . . . . . 10-13 Product Showcase. . . . . . . . 78-80 Professional Cards. . . . . . . . 82-92 Ad Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
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COMING UP APRIL 2016
SPECIAL SPRING CONFERENCE EDITION SPECIAL EDITORIAL FOCUS Stretching Municipal Infrastructure Budgets SPECIAL SECTION CANECT Showguide THIS ISSUE OFFERS BONUS CIRCULATION AT: • Canadian Env. Conf. & Tradeshow (CANECT) • Partners in Prevention Health & Safety Show • British Columbia Water & Waste Assn. • Water Environment Assn. of Ontario • Ontario Water Works Association
Ad Booking Deadline: March 21, 2016 Contact us to reserve your ad space. T: 905-727-4666 TF: 1-888-254-8769 Penny Davey, ext. 26 penny@esemag.com Denise Simpson, ext. 21 denise@esemag.com
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In Memoriam
ES&E remembers Ahron Nahmias
Editor and Publisher STEVE DAVEY Email: steve@esemag.com
C
anada’s water and wastewater industry lost another of its bright lights last year, with the untimely passing of Ahron Nahmias, founder of Metcon Sales and Engineering, at the age of 63, after a courageous battle with brain cancer. I had the honour of knowing Ahron since the beginning of my career in 1982, when he worked at Control and Metering Limited. By the time Tom Davey and I launched ES&E Magazine in 1988, Ahron had already launched Metcon and his company became among our first clients - a relationship that continues today. Until his semi-retirement in 2014, I enjoyed many a great talk with Ahron about life, business, family and personal development, during numerous WEAO or WEFTEC shows. His continuous friendly and positive attitude was infectious, as was his laughter upon hearing a humorous quip Whenever I visited Metcon to work with one of the ever growing staff, he would often invite me into his impressive office to chat, which was always uplifting. To me it seemed that Ahron strove to help people reach their potential and willingly shared his perspective on the world. Coming from such a tremendously successful business and family man, this was extremely valuable insight. His philosophy of giving back also extended to the industries Metcon serves, as Ahron encouraged his staff to volunteer their time on various association boards and committees. This philosophy continues today. Ahron started Metcon Sales and Engineering in 1985, to distribute chemical feed and disinfection equipment to the Ontario marketplace. His model for success is very well respected and emulated. “Don’t just sell the metering pump or the analyzer; rather, sell the complete system,” he said. Consequently, Metcon builds complete chemical feed and instrument systems.
6 | February 2016
Assistant Editor PETER DAVEY Email: peter@esemag.com Sales Director PENNY DAVEY Email: penny@esemag.com Sales Representative DENISE SIMPSON Email: denise@esemag.com Accounting SANDRA DAVEY Email: sandra@esemag.com Circulation Manager DARLANN PASSFIELD Email: darlann@esemag.com Production EINAR RICE Email: production@esemag.com
Technical Advisory Board Ahron Nahmias (left), at a WEAO/ OPCEA tradeshow in the mid 90’s.
Archis Ambulkar, Jones and Henry Engineers, Ltd. Gary Burrows, City of London
(Photo Steve Davey)
Jim Bishop, Consulting Chemist, Ontario
Ahron always believed in selling quality equipment, backed up by quality service. Legend has it that shortly after starting the company he was performing repairs himself on a piece of equipment over a holiday weekend. The operator at the site asked him why he was doing this, and not his service technician. Ahron reportedly replied: “I can’t afford to hire a service technician.” The customer advised him: “You can’t afford not to hire one.” This made Ahron realize that the only way to make his company sustainable and self-sufficient was to create a high quality service team. Clearly his formula worked, as Metcon now employs over 30 individuals. In addition to a highly successful career and business, Ahron also leaves behind a strong legacy in his family, who adored him. His three daughters, two son in laws, three granddaughters and his wife Fern will never forget the amazing, selfless and good hearted man he was. As a man of great honour, Ahron was an inspiration to me in how to conduct one’s self, both personally and professionally. I will miss him a great deal. My deepest condolences to the Nahmias family.
Patrick Coleman, Black & Veatch Bill De Angelis, City of Toronto Mohammed Elenany, Urban Systems William Fernandes, Region of Peel Marie Meunier, John Meunier Inc., Québec Peter J. Paine, Environment Canada Tony Petrucci, Stantec, Markham Environmental Science & Engineering is a bi-monthly business publication of Environmental Science & Engineering Publications Inc. An all Canadian publication, ES&E provides authoritative editorial coverage of Canada’s municipal and industrial environmental control systems and drinking water treatment and distribution. Readers include consulting engineers, industrial plant managers and engineers, key municipal, provincial and federal environmental officials, water and wastewater plant operators and contractors. Information contained in ES&E has been compiled from sources believed to be correct. ES&E cannot be responsible for the accuracy of articles or other editorial matter. Articles in this magazine are intended to provide information rather than give legal or other professional advice. Articles being submitted for review should be emailed to steve@esemag.com. Canadian Publications Mail Sales Second Class Mail Product Agreement No. 40065446 Registration No. 7750 Undeliverable copies, advertising space orders, copy, artwork, proofs, etc., should be sent to: Environmental Science & Engineering, 220 Industrial Pkwy. S., Unit 30, Aurora, Ontario, Canada, L4G 3V6, Tel: (905)727-4666, Fax: (905) 841-7271, Web site: www.esemag.com
Steve Davey is editor and publisher of ES&E Magazine. E: steve@esemag.com Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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Wastewater
Environment Canada required modifications to Montreal’s plan to release untreated wastewater
I
n October, the Federal Minister of the Environment mandated an independent scientific panel to review the City of Montreal’s planned release of eight billion litres of untreated wastewater into the St. Lawrence River. Montreal’s raw sewage discharge into the St. Lawrence began on November 11, but ended three days ahead of schedule due to faster than anticipated repairs. This meant that 4.9 billion litres were discharged, not the 8 billion originally estimated. This release was necessary for repairs to be made to the City’s southeast sewer interceptor, which consists of three tunnels, between 1.8 m and 5.4 m in diameter, located about 33 metres below ground. These collect effluent destined for the Jean-R. Marcotte wastewater treatment plant in Rivières des Prairies. A snow chute used to dump snow into the sewers was also part of the repair work. Following a thorough review of independent scientific experts’ findings, Environment and Climate Change Canada issued a final Order on November 9, 2015, requiring the City of Montreal to modify its plans and meet four main conditions: 1. The City had to carry out visual surveillance of the effluent plume to identify locations of accumulation. Floating booms or other measures had to be deployed where matter had resurfaced and accumulated. 2. A management plan had to be in place with respect to unanticipated deposits from large industrial, institutional or commercial facilities to the City’s sewers during the construction period. 3. The City has to provide Environment and Climate Change Canada with data and results of water quality, effluent quality, and monitoring of sediments and flora at the points of discharge of untreated effluent as well as selected locations downstream from the project plume. This will be carried out until June 2016. 4. A comprehensive review of the events leading to this incident must be
8 | February 2016
Montreal skyline and St. Lawrence River. Photo Credit: Abdallahh, CC BY 2.0, Flickr
conducted. It will be led by the Department of the Environment and Climate Change, and will include those who may be affected by the release, including neighbouring First Nations communities and the province. An important objective of this review will be to ensure that proper engagement and consultations take place with respect to similar plans in the future. The review will reflect the objective that such a discharge does not reoccur in the future. The experts’ report showed that risks from the discharge would not be negligible. They could not quantify the risk, but stated that it would likely increase exponentially over time. Degradation of the infrastructure could limit the treatment capacity of the plant and also result in breakage, requiring emergency repairs. The report concluded that the best case scenario for a release of untreated wastewater was a planned one, where timing was controlled and mitigation measures could be planned and implemented. The worst case scenario was unplanned release due to infrastructure failure, which could result in a larger quantity of untreated wastewater being released, over a longer period of time. Specialized work crews and equipment needed to make the repairs would likely not be immediately available.
The timing of an unplanned release could also lead to greater risk to the fish reproductive cycle. It might also result in obstruction of the sewer, causing backflow into residential, commercial and industrial facilities. The experts indicated that an unplanned release would result in greater environmental impacts. They also recommended enhancements to environmental monitoring, which included biological monitoring of fish and bivalves. This would provide essential information for future evaluation of impacts related to discharges of untreated wastewater. Furthermore, they recommended that the monitoring be done over a longer period of time, at least until the indicators return to normal values. They also noted the importance of careful monitoring at drinking water treatment plants over the duration of the project, despite the low risk of impact. This sewage discharge generated criticism from environmentalists and lawmakers on both sides of the U.S– Canada border. “It’s unsettling to see Montreal have so little regard for the waterway, the wildlife that inhabits it and those that live along its shores,” said Patty Ritchie, a senator in the New York state legislature whose electoral district covers communities along 100 miles of the U.S.–Canadian border.
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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ES&E NEWS Shell Canada fined for discharging mercaptan
Ontario approves 22 source water protection plans
Road maintenance company fined for waste disposal violations
The Shell Sarnia Manufacturing Centre refinery in Corunna, Ontario is directly south of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation (AFN). It was recently fined $500,000 plus a victim fine surcharge of $125,000 for an odiforous discharge of mercaptan. It also had to pay an additional $200,000 in compensation to the AFN. On January 11, 2013, Shell personnel discovered a leak of liquid containing mercaptan. This flowed into an on-site ditch, which ultimately connects to the refinery’s wastewater treatment plant. The mercaptan’s foul odour affected numerous people in the AFN community, several of whom complained of sore eyes and throats, headaches, nausea and vomiting. The matter was referred to the ministry’s Investigations and Enforcement Branch, which resulted in one charge being laid. Following the incident Shell recommended to the City of Sarnia that a shelter-in-place advisory be issued for the refinery area, including the AFN community.
Ontario’s comprehensive approach to protect drinking water reached a milestone recently, when the province approved the 22nd and final source water protection plan, covering more than 450 municipal drinking water systems. Source water protection plans are locally developed, science-based plans, designed to protect the health of lakes, rivers and underground water sources that supply municipal drinking water systems. The plans set out actions to eliminate, manage or reduce potential risks to drinking water sources. Ontario is among the few jurisdictions in Canada to have source water protection plans in place. Local committees in 19 regions worked with the public, conservation authorities, First Nations, municipalities and the province to understand and come up with the most effective ways to protect water sources. Approving all 22 plans fulfilled Ontario’s public commitment to have the plans approved by the end of 2015.
Carillion Canada Inc. has been fined $80,000, for depositing waste in land that is not a ministry approved waste disposal site, contrary to the Environmental Protection Act (EPA). In 2012, the company entered into a contract with the Ontario Ministry of Transportation to perform maintenance on provincial highways in the Huntsville area. The company also leased a yard in the same area to run their operation. In May 2014, an employee of Carillion discovered two 45-gallon drums of unknown material in the yard. He requested direction on what to do with the drums and was told to bury them at the back of the yard. In January 2015, the ministry received information from a complainant who alleged that employees from Carillion were instructed to bury drums containing an unknown substance. As a result, the ministry’s Investigations and Enforcement Branch initiated an investigation of the allegations. The buried drums were subsequently located and
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Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
ES&E NEWS exhumed. They were found to contain waste petroleum oil and weathered paint/protective coating. As a result, charges were laid.
Lake Simcoe showing signs of recovery The Ontario government has released a five year report that shows that the health of Lake Simcoe is improving. In 2009, it launched the Lake Simcoe Protection Plan, which it claims is the most comprehensive watershed-based legislated plan in Canada, to reduce phosphorus pollution, improve water quality and fish habitat. The report shows that long-term spring phosphorus concentrations, which cause blue-green algae, have improved, and that some native fish are showing signs of recovery. The Protection Plan also involves: • taking further action to deal with poor water quality caused by excessive phosphorus; • protecting and restoring shorelines and wetlands; • restoring the health of coldwater fish
and other aquatic life; • setting strict phosphorus limits on wastewater treatment plants; • controlling and preventing invasive species; • undertaking monitoring and analysis to understand the effects of climate change.
Waukesha wants to divert water from the Great Lakes Waukesha, Wisconsin is the first city located outside the Great Lakes/St. Lawrence River Basin wishing to benefit from an exception to the ban on water diversions, as outlined in the Great Lakes– St. Lawrence River Basin Sustainable Water Resources Agreement. The City’s water supply source is currently contaminated and it needs to find an alternative by 2018. The Great Lakes–St. Lawrence River Water Resources Regional Body will need to determine if the proposal complies with the exceptions that are set out in the Agreement. These exceptions are very tightly controlled. For example, water withdrawn must be intended for public
water supply purposes. It must be completely returned to the basin of origin in accordance with very strict water quality standards. The application must demonstrate that the withdrawal will not have an impact on the basin’s ecosystem. In addition, applications to divert water to a community outside the basin, but located in a county that straddles its limits, as is the case for Waukesha, must also undergo a regional review to qualify as an exception. www.waukeshadiversion.org
Quebec adopts ambitious GHG reduction target Quebec’s Minister of Sustainable Development, Environment and the Fight against Climate Change, David Heurtel, recently announced that Quebec’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction target is 37.5% below 1990 levels by 2030. Quebec has one of the continent’s lowest carbon footprints, and is already making a positive contribution to global efforts to fight climate change. Over the continued overleaf...
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February 2016 | 11
ES&E NEWS past 15 years, it has adopted ambitious targets and devised the means to achieve them, especially through the creation of the Green Fund. As a result, Quebec succeeded in reducing its GHG emissions by 8% below 1990 levels in 2012. The province has set an ambitious objective for 2020: reducing its GHG emissions by 20% below their 1990 levels. In order to achieve this, it has implemented a series of measures that include
the carbon market, which spearheads the government’s climate change action. All revenue from the carbon market is paid into the Green Fund to finance implementation of measures contained in the 2013-2020 Climate Change Action Plan. By 2020, 3.3 billion dollars will have been invested in Quebec to support companies, municipalities and citizens in their transition to a low-carbon world.
Always be first to the finish line
By adopting a 37.5% reduction target, Quebec is keeping the commitment it made alongside the 10 other partners of the Conference of New England Governors and Eastern Canadian Premiers (NEG/ECP) to reach a regional GHG emissions reduction target of 35-45% below 1990 levels by 2030. The target also places Quebec on the GHG emissions reduction path recommended by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for industrialized countries. This was adopted by the Under2MOU Global Climate Leadership Memorandum of Agreement that Quebec signed in July with other governments that have pledged to reduce their GHG emissions by 80-95% by 2050. www.letsdoitforthem.gouv.qc.ca.
Ontario appoints new Environmental Commissioner Eliminate the need for fusing with the new Refuse-to-Fuse™ Victaulic® Style 905 coupling for 2 – 6" HDPE pipe.
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12 | February 2016
The Ontario government has appointed Dr. Dianne Saxe as its Environmental Commissioner. Dr Saxe has been rated as one of the world’s top 25 environmental lawyers, according to Best of the Best, 2008, as well as Toronto’s first Environmental Lawyer of the Year, according to Best Lawyers. As a certified specialist and the only practitioner with a Ph.D. in environmental law, she is considered Canada’s leading author on the subject and is an acclaimed public speaker.
Impacts of resource recovery on wastewater treatment processes The Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF) has funded significant research on recovery of resources from wastewater systems. It now seeks to understand how resource recovery practices impact wastewater treatment. WERF will fund research on whether water resource recovery facilities (WRRFs) that operate for enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR), and/or phosphorus recovery, are experiencing difficulties dewatering anaerobically digested biosolids. WERF also will fund research to examine how phosphorus accumulation and recovery are impacted, when combined with a low-energy, low-carbon process (such as mainstream deammonification). The first project, Unintended ConEnvironmental Science & Engineering Magazine
ES&E NEWS sequences of Resource Recovery on Overall Plant Performance: Solving the Impacts on Dewaterability Properties (NTRY12R16), will address recent reports of dewatering difficulties. WERF seeks research projects that will build upon prior and ongoing research to determine if the phenomenon is widespread; and to better understand dewaterability performance and its impact on overall resource recovery operations. The second project, Understanding the Impacts of Low-Energy and Low-Carbon Nitrogen Removal Technologies on Bio-P and Nutrient Recovery Processes (NTRY13R16), seeks bench, pilot, and/or full-scale studies to determine the design and operational impacts of incorporating EBPR, or other phosphorus recovery techniques, into a low-energy, low-carbon nitrogen removal process at a WRRF. www.werf.org.
High levels of lead discovered in Flint’s drinking water To save money, in April 2014, Flint, Michigan switched its water supply
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Flint Mayor Karen Weaver.
source from that supplied by the City of Detroit, to the Flint River. This has proved to be a disastrous decision. Shortly after the switchover, residents began complaining about water’s color, taste and odour. Boil-water advisories were issued by the city, due to coliform bacteria detection in August and September 2014. That same year, General Motors stopped accepting treated Flint River water for its engine plant, over corrosion concerns due to the high chloride content. But it is public health that is the greatest concern. Virginia Tech re-
searchers compared Detroit water with Flint River water and found on average, that “Flint River water leaches 19 times more lead to the water from supply piping than Detroit water.” The city switched its water source back to Detroit in October 2015, but the damage had been done. The same month, pediatrician Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha found the number of Flint children with elevated blood-lead levels had jumped from 2.1% to 4% in the period following the switch to Flint River water. She told the Detroit Free Press that, in certain areas, the numbers were worse, going from 2.5% to 6.3%. On December 14, 2015, Flint Mayor Karen Weaver declared a state of emergency and requested federal assistance to deal with the “manmade disaster” from switching to the Flint River. Aid has poured into Flint as concerned citizens, politicians and even celebrities try to help. President Barack Obama pledged $80 million in infrastructure aid, largely aimed at repairing the damage done to Flint. www. flintwaterstudy.org
February 2016 | 13
Infrastructure
Courageous conversations: Eco-fiscal challenges to building resilient communities By Ontario Coalition for Sustainable Infrastructure
L
ast year, leaders from 20 organizations within the municipal and public works sectors in Ontario, met along with representatives from the province, to discuss some of the funding and fiscal challenges to building resilient communities. The second annual Infrastructure Forum was hosted by the Ontario Coalition for Sustainable Infrastructure (OCSI) and created an opportunity for delegates to share courageous conversations on the critical infrastructure challenges facing the province. Three invited speakers shared their ideas and insights related to the impact of climate change and urban infrastructure resilience. Glen Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, spoke from the global perspective, citing the significant impact of increasing mean temperatures by 4°C on world food production. Locally, the province is mitigating its carbon footprint by planning for frequent electric transit service. Mel Cappe, representing Canada’s Ecofiscal Commission, recommended that all the costs of resource use be internalized. Government sets the framework, while market decisions determine allocation. An example of this is the cap-andtrade system. Gerry Lashley, from Intact Insurance, shared a first-hand perspective on the insurance cost of climate change as it related to flooding in Calgary, Toronto and Burlington. The World Bank is predicting a 10-fold increase in weather damage, largely due to climate change. The insurance industry can’t just increase premiums by 10-fold, as that is not affordable. “What can be achieved if we work together on mitigating the impacts of climate change?” Lashley asked. Those in attendance then broke into group discussions and responded to the specific questions raised by the speakers. By challenging the participants’ assumptions and encouraging them to dig deeper, valuable ideas were shared and new connections made on the various eco-fiscal challenges of climate change. Although communities should be adapt-
14 | February 2016
The Hon. Glen Murray.
able and resilient to many different types of events, flooding from intense storms was uppermost in the minds of many. Building resilient communities The prevailing outcome from the speakers’ presentations and the OCSI group discussions was summarized in four ideas: 1. Identifying the economic benefit of climate change mitigation and adaptation - One of the ideas identified was the need for new models for governments and the public, to help recognize and incorporate the economic benefit of climate change mitigation and adaptation. There is a need to mandate evidence-based decision-making based on life cycle assessment. Education is also a key to help drive changes in behaviour for early adopters, followed by standards and regulations that would require everyone to participate. How do we raise awareness of the value of mitigation and adaptation efforts that reduce risk to the community and to the homeowner? Incentive programs are needed to reward homeowners who implement resilience changes. These could include reduced premiums on insurance, and rebates for downspout disconnection and back flow prevention.
2. Encouraging innovation by municipalities - During the forum discussions, it was appreciated that technical and technological innovation will certainly be part of the solution. However, the greatest need for innovation is in the way that municipalities go about their “business” in areas such as procurement, policy and implementation. Existing municipal procurement processes will need to be modified to facilitate these advancements (e.g., by focusing on long-term value rather than short-term cost). Best practices such as qualifications-based selection (QBS) of consulting engineers must be considered. Other levels of government and, in particular, regulators must remove any roadblocks and constraints to achieving innovation. 3. Supporting leadership by the province - In a recent survey by OCSI, 22% of municipalities indicated that they are doing “nothing” with respect to climate change. Forty-nine per cent are thinking about doing something and 18% are already committed due to a significant weather event in their community. To encourage municipalities to consider climate change in their asset management planning, the province should provide direction through legislation and other tools (e.g., memorandums of understanding, charter) that set minimum standards, promote innovation and are based on professional expertise. The province could also reward municipalities that are incorporating climate change in their asset management planning, with easier access to programs and funding. 4. Planning and funding for resiliency - The pricing of municipal services needs to reflect the full cost of climate change. The ability of a community to attract employers is connected to the reliability of services. The mitigating and adapting initiatives of the municipality increase reliability of services and promote community resiliency. Programs that assist property owners to be more sustainable would encourage public engagement and understanding of actual costs. For more information, visit www.on-csi.ca
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Forget clog-Free
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Employment
Demand for technical and engineering jobs in B.C. needs to be filled from abroad By Leslie Emmons
I
n the next 10 years, British Columbia will face a considerable demand for engineers, scientists and technologists. Employers will need to change their recruitment methods to keep pace, according to a new study. Engineering, Geoscientists, Technologists and Technicians Labour Market Information has been published in a jointly funded initiative to provide supply and demand job information on 31 occupations in B.C. The report projects that more than 31,000 jobs will need to be filled by 2024 and nearly 11,500 new jobs will be created in the aforementioned 31 key occupations. Driving the demand is a combination of factors, according to Keith Sashaw, of the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies British Columbia (ACEC-BC). “We are seeing a lot of retirements in the engineering sector, as people are getting to that 60-65 age group,” he said. “A significant part of the demand is going to come for replacement workers. But we’re also very optimistic about B.C.’s economy and the outlook, in spite of what’s going in the resource sector. We think in the medium to long term the outlook is very positive for engineering in B.C., and that’s going to be driving a lot of demand as well.” John Leech, of Applied Science Technologists and Technicians of British Columbia (ASTTBC), agrees that retirement is one of the factors contributing to the demand, as is the overall latent demand for technologists and technicians in B.C. The study forecasts that 10% of potential workers will come from out-of-province, or from other sectors. However, 40% of workers will need to come from other countries to meet the expected demand. Leech said that, while initiatives like promoting science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education encourage local young people to pursue positions as technologists and technicians, there is still a strong need to attract numbers from outside of Canada.
16 | February 2016
“As I travel throughout the province, I find small and medium enterprises in particular facing a labour shortage to the point where they are turning down work,” Leech said. Along with the B.C. government, ASTTBC has put policies in place over the past five years to help internationally trained technology professionals better understand the B.C. job market. It has created a database that allows individuals anywhere in the world to do a self-assessment against the Canadian standards to see if they qualify as technicians and technologists. ASTTBC has also gone abroad to solidify supply channels for future workers. “We led a team from B.C., Manitoba and Ontario to the Philippines in 2012. Last year we took a team from Ontario and B.C. to India to get a better handle on their educational system. “We will head off in the new year to sign memorandums of recognition with a couple of Indian organizations. The purpose is to assure that, when an individual with those qualifications comes to B.C., they can be relatively sure of quick recognition of their credentials,” Leech said. As for meeting the projected goal of filling 31,000 positions by 2024, Sashaw said it’s all about economics. “If there’s a demand, there will be a
supply. As to how we achieve this, that’s going to be the real challenge. I think it’s a call to action to engineering companies and employees of engineers like B.C. Hydro and others that might hire engineers, as well as for the training institutions like ACEC-BC. We must start doing some planning and really addressing this issue.” In terms of the technologists and technicians industry, Leech said it comes down to three key points: “Number one - these are very well paid careers as technologists and technicians. Number two - they are recession proof. Thirdly - when you take a look at the future job market, young people with a diploma of technology as a technologist, are going to be well positioned in terms of not only initial job prospects, but long-term career opportunities.” The study was funded in part by the Government of Canada’s Sectoral Initiatives Program. The British Columbia Ministry of Jobs, Tourism, and Skills Training provided additional support. Engineers, Geoscientists, Technologists and Technicians Labour Market Information is available online at: www.lmionline.ca/projects/egtt/ Leslie Emmons is a writer for ES&E Magazine.
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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3D Modelling
With an easy-to-use interface and stunning graphics, Autodesk Infraworks is an ideal vehicle for group discussions.
BIM offers benefits for water and wastewater treatment projects By Sondra Galbichka
B
uilding Information Modelling (BIM) turns 3D models into a data powerhouse. From structure and system analysis to quantity take-offs and item scheduling, it is designed to increase efficiency and transparency throughout the life cycle of a project. While commonly used on elaborate architectural designs, BIM is often overlooked for water and wastewater treatment applications. However, the benefits to using BIM for treatment facilities are numerous.
A picture is worth a thousand words The first and simplest benefit to BIM is as a 3D visualization tool. Imagine being able to see your site come to life, as early as the conceptual design phase. Programs such as Autodesk Infraworks are designed exactly for that purpose. Predominantly used for site layout, Infraworks’ Model Builder tool includes a spatial database that combines topography with aerial photos from anywhere in the world. With an easy-to-use interface and stunning graphics, Infraworks is an ideal vehicle for group discussions. 18 | February 2016
Not only can Infraworks recognize and import models from a variety of software platforms, model elements such as ground surfaces, roads and pipelines can be exported to a number of applications as the basis of design. Due to the true-to-life nature of 3D elements, BIM models are highly detailed early in the design process. When used to supplement contract documents, 3D walkthroughs have been proven to promote discussion and aid in identifying potential problems. Workshops with the City of Regina, during a wastewater treatment plant predesign project, generated so much constructive feedback from the owners, plant engineers and operating staff that using 3D walkthroughs to present a design is now common practice. More than just a pretty face While visualization is a valuable tool, 3D modelling is much more than that. Features such as intelligent tagging, powerful modelling tools and automated view generation increase productivity and improve workflows. Better yet, programs such as Autodesk Revit can easily accommodate design changes by allow-
ing you to change fitting or valve types or sizes with the click of a button. This eliminates the need for costly rework. Once the models are established, programs such as Autodesk Navisworks improve collaboration, with the ability to combine models from a variety of software platforms. Not only is this useful for visualizing the project as a whole, but Navisworks can also run clash detection reports, identifying conflicts between model elements before they can become a problem on site. In addition to improved productivity and clash detection, having an accurate 3D model of your facility can speed up computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling workflows, as the boundaries are already defined. A major flood event in Thunder Bay, Ontario precipitated the construction of an emergency flood relief channel at the Atlantic Avenue water pollution control plant. The 3D model, combined with CFD modelling software, was able to replicate emergency flow conditions that would have been hazardous to test in the field. As a result of the CFD model, the bypass capacity was confirmed continued overleaf...
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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3D Modelling and suggestions were made as to how flow configuration could be improved. What you see is what you get Retrofitting existing structures can be daunting. On large, complex, or older facilities, it is often difficult to accurately depict existing structures and systems. This may lead to costly changes during construction. 3D scanners emit laser beams to measure spatial data. Once a beam encounters a surface, it generates a digital point. A group of points, or Point Cloud, can then be imported into a variety of software programs. Programs such as Autodesk Revit can recognize certain point formations, making it easier to convert Point Clouds into 3D geometry. Once converted, you are given an accurate representation of existing structures and systems, forming a reliable 3D model of your facility. Time is on your side On every project, timing is an important factor. There is often a need for careful planning, using schedules and construction sequence plans to coordinate time-sensitive activities. But what if you could see into the future and witness the construction of your project without even breaking ground? 4D simulations do just that. A 4D simulation takes a 3D model and factors into the fourth dimension – time. Importing schedules directly from MS Project or Primavera, programs such as Autodesk Navisworks can link schedule activities to model elements, creating construction events. Once the timeline is finalized, you can watch the simulated construction of your model in real time, allowing you to identify potential issues on site. You may also assign monetary values to each construction activity, to help determine the approximate cost at every stage of construction. Model behaviour – putting the ‘I’ in BIM There are many programs, licensed or freeware, for creating 3D models, but the ‘Information’ side of Building Information Modelling is what sets it apart. Programs such as Autodesk Revit generate true-to-life walls, pipes and equipment, not just empty geometry. Each element placed in the model environment 20 | February 2016
The ability to see complex piping arrangements from every angle improves workflows and reduces errors.
has its own data set, which can be reported in tags and included in schedules and quantity take-offs. Schedule and quantity
Not only can the data be used to quantify and itemize elements, it can also be used in the program’s built-in analysis functions. tables are fully customizable to show only the required data, and will update automatically as elements are modified. During the functional design phase of the City of Portage la Prairie, Manitoba water pollution control facility expansion, quantity take-offs were taken directly from the 12 Revit models. This automatically calculated over 1,200 metres of pipe, 7,300 cubic metres of concrete and over 600 valves and fittings, saving valuable time.
Not only can the data be used to quantify and itemize elements, it can also be used in the program’s built-in analysis functions. Combining commodity data (temperature, viscosity, density), pipe material data (dimensions, roughness) and piping layout, Revit can calculate the flow in any segment of pipe in a system, or analyze a system as a whole, facilitating engineering checks. Regardless of a project’s size or complexity, BIM has the tools to save you time and money. By keeping the momentum going once your facility is up and running, you can actively monitor its performance. Use its scheduling capabilities to generate complete inventory lists and maintenance and repair logs. Input system data into the model to track building and process performance, monitoring trends in energy consumption and identifying areas that are not performing to their design standards. Sondra Galbichka is with AECOM in Winnipeg. Email: sondra.galbichka@aecom.com
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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Water Treatment
Improving operational efficiency and resiliency for high rate clarification systems in Calgary By Sarah Laidlaw
T
he City of Calgary operates two conventional surface water treatment plants with a combined production capacity of 950 ML/d. Glenmore water treatment plant was originally constructed in the 1930s and draws its source water from the Elbow River Watershed. Bearspaw water treatment plant was constructed in the 1970s and draws from the Bow River Watershed. In both watersheds, surface water turbidity ranges from 1 NTU to well over 1000 NTU during spring runoff events. In order to handle the large variation in source water turbidity, provide reliable year round capacity and ensure consistent, high quality treated water, both plants were upgraded in 2007, with high rate ballasted flocculation (ActifloÂŽ) clarification systems for pretreatment. This process consists of coagulation, polymer and microsand injection, flocculation and high rate settling. The settling tanks are equipped with lamella tube settlers, designed for a nominal 40 m/h rise rate, covering a surface area of approximately 104 m2. There are four process trains at Glenmore and six trains at Bearspaw, each designed to produce nominally 100 ML/d. Operating high rate clarification systems provides a number of production and performance benefits. The units have a much smaller footprint than conventional clarifiers (up to 50 times smaller) and the process is able to handle a large variation of incoming turbidity levels. At both Calgary plants, the process has proven to be resilient during high turbidity events. In addition, there is a high chemical (alum) turndown capability, wide nominal flow range (+/50%) and solids are removed from the process in real time. Although there are many advantages, the system does require a higher level of attention during variable water conditions. Lamella tube settlers require periodic cleaning to prevent buildup of floc particles. When operating under high rate loadings with the combination of polymer, microsand and higher source water turbidity, the risk of material buildup
22 | February 2016
Aerial view of the Bearspaw water treatment plant.
Air scour system in operation.
increases. This leads to an increased risk of overloading the lamella support systems and results in higher frequency cleaning requirements. A common practice in Calgary was to wash down the tube settlers from the top, using spray water. However, with higher frequency cleanings and limited access to the larger surface area units, it becomes difficult to achieve uniform coverage using spray wash methods and
the surface openings of the tube settlers are more susceptible to damage, further increasing the risk of material buildup. Challenges faced from 2011 to 2013 In 2011, after the first four years of operation, the City started experiencing surface deterioration of the lamella tube settlers and increased solids buildup within the tubes. Cleaning typically involved continued overleaf...
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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Water Treatment
Tube settlers after cleaning process.
Tube settlers before cleaning process.
fully draining down the tanks to manually clean all areas of the tube settlers. The City began to experiment with an integrated air scour cleaning system to reduce the use of spray water and the frequency of manual maintenance procedures. In the spring of 2013, the lamella support system for one of the clarifiers collapsed due to an increased buildup of solids within the tubes. In June 2013, Calgary experienced one of the most extreme runoff and flood events recorded. The water treatment plants saw source water turbidity rise to 3800 NTU at
Bearspaw, and over 4200 NTU at Glenmore, before the turbidity instrument range maxed out. The City managed to keep the clarified water turbidity coming out of the pretreatment process below 5 NTU throughout the flood event, and maintained consistent high quality production of drinking water. However, these events emphasized the need for improved resiliency of the clarification system and accelerated the development of a permanent and efficient air scour cleaning system.
Collaborative team approach The City engaged a team consisting of its engineers, consulting engineers (Associated Engineering) and vendors, Anthratech Western Inc. (AWI) and Veolia, formerly John Meunier Inc.(JMI) to provide an innovative design solution for the problem. AWI was retained to design an integrated tube settler cleaning process in the form of a new and innovative high rate fixed grid air scour system. JMI was retained to provide heavier gauge tube settlers for better resiliency. Associated
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Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water Treatment Engineering designed more robust structural beams, coordinated blower supply for the air scour system and additional components to provide a more resilient overall process system. In-house testing was completed by AWI, using test modules (tube settler packs) and a blower to determine flow distribution, orifice alignment and spacing to develop the optimum air scour system. Air flow and pressure requirements were determined and various water depths were tested to obtain the desired rolling effect in the water to allow solids to dislodge and settle. New air scour system and other components After conducting a significant amount of research and full scale in-house testing, it was concluded that providing a substantial amount of intermittent air flow up through the tube settlers would result in sufficient agitation to detach the solids buildup. A full scale air lateral was built and tested. A stainless steel lateral grid air scour system was custom-designed to accommodate the existing tank’s configuration.
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The risk of tube settler system failure was mitigated by incorporating additional features into the system. Structural supports were made more robust, a beam deflection monitoring system was added, new lamella tubes were installed and in-tank lighting was included to facilitate tube settler inspection. The heavier structural beams can carry a greater capacity load and beam cross bracing was added to improve torsional rigidity. Angle bracing was added to reduce lateral deformation and risk of buckling. Beam deflection is monitored through vertical rods attached to the beams which can be visually inspected by operations staff. Additionally, a laser beam monitors deflection of the beam and sends an alarm to the plant’s control system if deflection occurs. The new tube settlers are heavier gauge and provide a more robust solution. The material was changed from PVC to styrene due to its stronger tear resistance, in order to minimize surface damage over time. The new lights allow staff to see through the tubes to visually monitor internal accumulations.
Operation of the air scour system Air scour cleaning is triggered after a preset interval, or when fouling of the tube settlers is noticed. Observing beam deflection would also indicate that air scour should occur. The procedure includes taking the clarifier offline and lowering the water level to just above the tubes so that the desired rolling effect for the cleaning process is achieved. The air scour lasts for a maximum period of ten minutes. Following this, a settling period is recommended to allow the detached solids to settle to the bottom of the clarifier. Conclusions The air scour system has been successfully installed and operated in all 10 units at the Bearspaw and Glenmore water treatment plants. The cleaning method is no longer time-consuming and inefficient. The collaborative team approach allowed for smooth project delivery and resulted in successful improvements for the City of Calgary and its operators. Sarah Laidlaw, P.Eng., is with Associated Engineering. Email: laidlaws@ae.ca
February 2016 | 25
Wastewater Treatment
New online calculator counts the cost of grit
H
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of all grit entering the plant. Using this as a target, the system can predict estimated improvements to operating efficiency by removing much greater volumes of grit before they clog tanks, basins and channels and abrade downstream process
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equipment.” Having set operating plant capacity and preferred equipment lifetime cost into the system, users can input estimated or known costs of their downstream plant maintenance activities. These include the periodic cleanout of grit basins, aeration basins, or anaerobic digester tanks, as well as replacement and refurbishment costs for equipment such as pumps, centrifuges or membranes. Where operators are unable to provide values, averages are suggested based on actual costs from operating plants. Users can then save or print a detailed analysis of the results of the calculation. “Every plant is different, so the calculator is no substitute for a detailed site assessment of real-world grit concentration and behaviour, and actual sampling of incoming effluent prior to a detailed plant design,” adds Hutchings. “However, our research shows that poor grit removal is a major source of avoidable process inefficiency, operating, maintenance and replacement costs. We hope the tool will help designers and operators to simply demonstrate the benefits for improved grit removal and help to justify optimum capital and operating cost decisions.” For more information, Email: wwinquiryUS@hydro-int.com, or visit: www.advancedgritmanagement.com
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Sustainable Wastewater Ecosystems Treatment
Soil retaining system helps urban treesbiofilm reach Biological nitrogen removal using fixed maturity By Eric Keshavarzi By Simon Vincent
S G
ince 2012, Regulation and 2008‐47 reen infrastructure susof tainability the Montreal Metropolitan goals are of inCommunity has been creasing (CMM) importance, and applied by municipal authorachieving them requires techities with regard to liquid effluent disnical knowledge and training in varied charge into sewers and watercourses fields. Integration of soil and trees into that exceeds regulated concentrations. urban areas substantially improves susA number of food and beverage, tainability and helps alleviate some of our pharmaceutical and other industries most pressing ecological challenges. within the CMM exceed certain reguThese include air and water quality, rising lated parameters, mainly for oils and temperatures, flooding and erosion from greases, chemical oxygen demand daily rainfall events. (COD), total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) The West Don Lands, in Toronto, Onand/or ammonia nitrogen (NH3, NH4). tario, is a community that is people foOnly a limited number of treatment cused, family friendly, environmentally options exist for liquid effluent loaded sustainable and beautifully designed for with ammonia nitrogen. Often, analyliving. It has a Stage 1 LEED ND GOLD sis of capital and operational costs vs. certification under the pilot program esperformance achieved clearly weighs in tablished by the U.S. Green Building favour of in situ biological treatment. Council. Nitrogen present in industrial wasteOne notable sustainable component, water originates from multiple organic utilized in the design of the area’s streets, and inorganic compounds used in the is a soil retaining system called Silva industrial production chain. The fixed Cells™. Typical urban trees in the city biofilm processes used to treat biologcore die after approximately seven years. ical wastewater containing nitrogen However, Silva Cells help extend their compounds have the advantage of being life spans, thus promoting the growth of robust and compact, enabling treatment mature street trees. of both organic nitrogen compounds Although the City of Toronto had preand ammonia nitrogen. viously used Silva Cells as part of a An inert carrier is used to grow spestormwater management pilot program in cific bacteria for the desired biological The Queensway, their use as part of site
reactions by regulating the optimal conditions for their growth. The biomass that develops on the carrier is constantly growing, resulting in a continuous detachment of excess biofilm. This detached biomass in the liquid state flows into the effluent of the reactor with the treated water.
Often, analysis of capital and operational costs vs. performance achieved clearly Installation of Silva Cells inweighs Mill Street. development is new. In West Don in favour offact, inthe situ Lands streets are the first in a Toronto subdivision to be designed with this sysbiological treatment. tem installed under parking lay-bys and sidewalks. Carriers are primarily made of high‐ Mill Street was the first subdivision density polyethylene (HDPE) and range street in Toronto to be designed to include in size from 3 mm to 70 mm in diamethis soil retaining system. As the lead ter and 2 mm to 10 mm thick. One imengineering consultant, R.V.Anderson portant factor when selecting the type Associates coordinated all plans and specof carrier is its protected surface which ifications with the landscape architect. provides an optimal quantity of biomass About Silva Cells for specific biological reactions. Silva Cells are a plastic/fiberglass Thus, the use of fixed biofilm carriers structure of columns and beams that supas a treatment method allows for a reducport paving above un-compacted planting
tion in the volume of the biological reactors, as compared to an activated sludge process, by increasing the concentration of active biomass in the biological reactor. The carriers available on the market offer substantial protected surfaces. One cubic metre of plastic media is, on average, equal to three times the surface area of a tennis court. The protected surface of each carrier varies by supplier, while the type of media selected varies according to the application. Nitrification, denitrification and deammonification More stringent industrial wastewater quality regulations make it necessary to incorporate organic nitrogen and amsoil. The structure has 92% void space monia nitrogen treatment before disand is a stable surface for the installation charge into a sewer system. Different of vehicle loaded-pavements. biological reactions are used to oxidize When properly installed, they can and reduce nitrogen prior to discharge. achieve an AASHTO H-20 load rating. The choice of treatment stages deCanadian Highway Bridge Design Code pends on the desired characteristics of loading can also be achieved through apthe raw and treated wastewaters, and propriate design. This is the required load the flow rate. In nearly all cases, uprating for structures such as underground stream pre‐treatment proves necessary vaults, and grates in areas of trafin ordercovers to eliminate coarse particles via fic including sidewalks and parking lots. a screening stage and oils and greases Theacell structure the force disto a via flotation unit.transfers Many industries base layer below the structure. charge wastewater heavy with carbon Soil within the cells remains at low (COD/BOD ) and ammonia nitrogen. compaction 5rates, thereby creating ideal
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& Engineering Magazine Environmental Science & Engineering
Wastewater Treatment Organic matter must be eliminated upstream of the ammonia nitrogen removal stage to avoid bacterial competition. Organic nitrogen is ammonified into ammonia nitrogen, which in turn can be nitrified. Nitrification is achieved under aerobic conditions in two successive steps by autotrophic bacteria, first into nitrites (NO2‐) and then into nitrates (NO3‐). The final product of nitrification is therefore nitrates, which are not regulated by the CMM. Nitrification consumes a significant quantity of alkalinity (often lacking in industrial wastewater) at a ratio of 7.14 mgCaCO3/mgN nitrified. A pH control using soda ash is generally required in order to fill this gap. Unlike nitrites, nitrates produced during nitrification are not toxic to aquatic life at concentrations lower than 1000 mgN/L. In the event that a regulation was adopted on total nitrogen, nitrites and nitrates (NOx) would have to be eliminated prior to discharge. Denitrification enables the reduction of NOx to nitrogen gas (N2) via the biodegradation of a carbon source in which the oxygen atoms of nitrite and nitrate molecules are used for biomass respiration. The main advantage of denitrification is the gain in alkalinity produced by the reaction. Likewise, adding a pre‐ denitrification stage upstream of nitrification makes it possible to reduce the consumption of chemicals to be fed into the nitrification reactor. Also, the carbon coming from the COD/BOD in the raw water can be used. A recirculation loop allows for the influx of NOx from the nitrification reactor at the head of the treatment process. As the biomass is fixed on the plastic carrier, a biomass specialized in each condition develops in each reactor, eliminating potential bacterial competition. An innovative and recently marketed alternative combines these two processes into one: the deammonification process. A single treatment stage is now used for the abatement of ammonia nitrogen while limiting nitrate production in the wastewater. The ANITA™Mox process consists of promoting the growth and protection of specific bacteria on media carriers, while ensuring the control of biomass in the reactor and minimizing external oxyC
M
Y
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Nitrogen present in industrial wastewater originates from multiple organic and inorganic compounds.
gen demand. Deammonification consists nitrogen consuming nitrites. Both take of an aerobic reaction of partial nitrita- place simultaneously in the fixed biofilm. tion (production of nitrites), combined Unlike a conventional nitrification/decontinued overleaf... with an anoxic oxidation of the ammonia PCP and Classic, T2 Ad 4.625 x 4.625 rev.pdf 1 2/3/2015 9:43:05 AM
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Wastewater Treatment
The ANITA™Mox process consists of promoting the growth and protection of specific bacteria on media carriers.
nitrification process, the ANITA™Mox process requires exceptional oxygen control in order to minimize the dissolved oxygen (O2) used to produce nitrites. This drives the conversion of the residual ammonia nitrogen into nitrogen gas (N2) by means of a deammonification reaction. A small quantity of nitrates is also produced by this reaction. Bacteria for the anoxic reduction of ammonia nitrogen (anammox: ANaerobic AMMO-
nia OXidation) require specific growth characteristics, such as high temperature and a low concentration of dissolved oxygen. Ammonia nitrogen removal rates of more than 80% are generally achieved in heavily charged water, i.e., more than 1000 mgN‐NH4/L. This technology is applicable for wastewater that has an ammonia nitrogen concentration exceeding approximately 150 mgN/L. In all cases, control of the nutrients
and the operating parameters needed for bacteria growth is required, as is the addition of a post‐treatment stage for the removal of the total suspended solids produced. This results in treated water that can be discharged into the sewer system and that meets all regulations. Simon Vincent, B.Sc. M.Eng., is with Veolia Water Technologies Canada Inc. www.veoliawatertechnologies.ca
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SPECIAL SECTION
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates
Mechanical wastewater systems in the far north face many challenges By Glenn Prosko and David Lycon
C
onsistent performance of waste water treatment in Canada’s far north can be an elusive objective and a frustration for engineers, communities, governments and regulators. Most northern communities utilize wastewater retention ponds with periodic discharge, as these systems perform well and the technology involved is simple. Mechanical wastewater treatment systems are used where lagoon systems cannot be applied. However, they have experienced a variety of challenges. In Nunavut, only Rankin Inlet,
32 | February 2016
Pangnirtung, and Iqaluit use mechanical wastewater systems. The system in Rankin Inlet is preliminary treatment by screening to remove large solids. Pangnirtung’s system is secondary treatment, which originally used a rotating biological contactor. The system in Iqaluit has preliminary and primary treatment for the removal of solids by screening. Although designs for secondary treatment systems have been completed in Rankin Inlet and Iqaluit, construction of them has not yet been authorized. In the Northwest Territories and the
Yukon, Fort Simpson, Carmacks, and Dawson City use mechanical wastewater treatment systems. All of these facilities are secondary treatment systems, with a disinfection process. In the early 1990s, Fort Simpson advanced a project for improvements to their wastewater treatment, using drum screens. However, a design/build proposal in 1997 proposed secondary treatment with a physical/chemical process instead. The system was commissioned in 2002, but it has experienced performance issues. Dawson had been planning to con-
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Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates struct a sequencing batch reactor facility in 2002, but the annual operation and maintenance estimate of $600,000 stopped the project. A new project emerged for an aerated lagoon, just south of the community. However, it was halted in 2008 because of its proximity to a residential subdivision. The Yukon Government then decided to fund a design/build proposal for a mechanical system. A contract for $25 million was awarded in 2009 for the Vertreat process (deep shaft technology). The facility was commissioned in 2012, but has had some performance issues. The original Carmacks wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) was commissioned in 1975, and the facility operated successfully for 35 years. A design/ build request for proposal was issued in 2005 for a new mechanical system. The facility has operated reasonably well since it was commissioned in 2009. Regardless of the community and the wastewater process, the natural environment in the north affects access for construction, operation and maintenance, due to extreme and highly variable weather. The climate in the far north is extremely cold, with an average daily mean temperature of less than 0oC. This means that all infrastructure must be designed and constructed for protection against freezing and, in some cases, thawing. There are generally great distances between northern communities and major centres further south. In Nunavut, for example, none of the communities have all-weather road access. They must rely solely on year round access by air, and resupply between late July and mid-October. These factors mean that the design and construction of a mechanical WWTP in the far north should follow well-established procedures and practices. The selection of a WWTP process for the north should be carefully executed, because the area is not an appropriate testing ground for new technologies or technologies that do not have a track record. In designing a facility, the consulting resources applied should have the appropriate northern experience. This goes for expertise in all of the technical disciplines associated with a WWTP, www.esemag.com
The outfall from Iqaluit’s wastewater treatment facility, with facility in background. The process currently provides primary treatment, with plans in place to upgrade to secondary treatment applying MBBR technology.
A flotation clarifier serves the Dawson City wastewater facility; the facility applies the Vertreat process, which uses a deep shaft aeration basin.
i.e., wastewater process, structural, geotechnical, heating, ventilation, electrical, instrumentation and controls. Contractors too should have the appropriate northern experience, or they will likely encounter problems during the project. Administrators of the construction contract for a WWTP must have the resources in place to provide comprehensive contract monitoring, reporting and responses from start to finish. Without this, a project can deviate from its objectives and may not recover properly, Effectively engaging the local population is vital to the successful operation
and maintenance of a wastewater treatment plant. This facility is an important legacy that should last a generation, and positively impact the human and financial resources of the community. Each and every project in the north is unique, so ultimately there is no “recipe� for success. However, by sharing project experiences, the potential list of things that can go wrong when a project is underway may be greatly reduced. Glenn Prosko and David Lycon are with Stantec. E-mail: glenn.prosko@ stantec.com, david.lycon@stantec.com February 2016 | 33
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates
New package water treatment plant built for remote Inuit community of Kugaaruk
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uilding a water treatment plant for a remote community with extreme weather conditions comes with a unique set of challenges. Kugaaruk, Nunavut, an Inuit community with a population of 770 and growing, is the location of the coldest wind chill ever recorded in Canada, -92°C in 1975. The sea around Kugaaruk is teeming with narwhals, belugas, walruses and polar bears. The land has been a traditional hunting ground for thousands of years. The hamlet’s water treatment plant was built in the late 1980s. It chlorinated raw water but there was no filtration or redundancy. Source water is from a manmade reservoir along the Kugaaruk River, two kilometres northeast of the Arctic bay. The bay and river surface are frozen most of the year, and when it does thaw, there are very high levels of sediments and dissolved minerals. The plant was suffering from extensive corrosion due to chlorine spills. Some of the pipes and fittings were growing green from chlorine contact. Vandalism from hunters in the area and fire damage to one of the two generators also took its toll. As there was no utility power available until September 2013, the only power available to the plant was from a diesel generator. According to the operators, residents considered the water from this plant to be undrinkable or over-chlorinated most of the time. They would often drive to the reservoir to refill their household water tanks rather than use water treated by the plant. In January 2010, a tidal surge introduced salt water into the reservoir, forcing residents to transport water by sled from the river upstream. In 2012, BI Pure Water and Williams Engineering of Yellowknife were contracted by the Nunavut government to design, build and deliver a modular water treatment system to Kugaaruk. The engineering objective was to maintain functionality and reliability of the water system in consistently subzero, and often -40oC temperatures. Mobility was
34 | February 2016
Schematic of the plant.
also a consideration. It was thought that, if salt water incursions occurred again, the plant would have to be relocated further upstream. The site engineering for a more effective water system involved positioning the intake lines between the river surface ice, which can be 2 m or more deep, and avoiding near-bottom layers
The new treatment plant not only called for ingenuity in engineering, but also in construction and delivery. where river sediment or pockets of salt water may be present. New screens were installed on the intake pipe, and it was raised above the river bottom. Salinity sensors were installed to alert the operator of possible salt water contamination. A new plant with two independent parallel treatment trains was designed. It included submersible intake pumps, high efficiency cartridge filtration, UV primary disinfection, chlorine residual
disinfection and dual truck-fill stations, for 100% redundancy. As the UV lamps take several minutes to warm up and cycling them too often can shorten their operating life, it was decided that they would remain energized 24 hours a day. During extended periods when no water is flowing from the reservoir into the delivery trucks, a small volume of water is retained and re-circulated through the UV units to cool the lamps. Excess heat is then transferred to the interior walls of the water treatment plant through heat exchangers, reducing demand on the interior heating units. The old building was completely refurbished and converted into a chlorine storage and backup generator building. New chemical resistant cabinets were installed, with appropriate ventilation, for secure storage of the water treatment chemicals. The new treatment plant not only called for ingenuity in engineering, but also in construction and delivery. It was built from three modified sea containers at BI Pure Water’s factory in Surrey, British Columbia. It was then loaded onto semi-trailer trucks for delivery to Montreal. From Montreal it was continued overleaf...
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates shipped to Nanisivik, a Canadian Forces naval facility at the eastern entrance to the Northwest Passage. With perpetual broken ice in the Kugaaruk area even in summer, shipments usually have to be transferred onto a Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker to complete the final leg of the journey. The normal icebreaker serving this region, the CCGS Terry Fox, was being refitted in 2013. The replacement vessel was smaller, reducing the normal size and weight limit for cargo. So, the original engineered length of the treatment plant and weight of all its components had to be reconfigured. Once the plant containers arrived on the open tundra, BI Pure Water staff had to complete the build of the system on site beside the reservoir. “You have to load the container with everything you think you might need or figure out how to get what you need without the normal resources,” says Paul Hendriks, project manager for Kugaaruk. “It’s not possible to run to a hard-
Project manager Paul Hendriks with narwhal tusks.
ware store for spare components that might be needed. You can’t spend money recklessly, so it has to be seen to be good value and the commissioning done
in an efficient way.” Heavy machinery was needed as there was none in the community. During concontinued overleaf...
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36 | February 2016
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Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates sultations with Kugaaruk’s senior administration officer, it became apparent that their maintenance department would benefit from a small excavator, similar to that which was required for the project. Agreement was made with the hamlet for the purchase of such an excavator, which was shipped along with the water treatment plant building modules. Plant commissioning, which can be done only during the short construction season, was completed by the fall of 2014. The plant can be monitored and managed quite easily by the operator via the touchscreen control panel, but remote monitoring was requested. A computer was added so that anyone with the login can view the plant’s software and performance via modem. It also allows BI Pure Water staff to assist the operator from Vancouver. The government also requested training videos to help local Inuit operators run the plant. After the plant was commissioned, orders kept coming in for replacement cartridge filters. They were too efficient
Plant commissioning was completed by the fall of 2014.
at filtering out particles! As filter orders would take several weeks to make it from the supplier to the community, the series filter arrangement was modified to a parallel-series configuration. This
extends filter life and improves truck filling time. For more information, Email: deannem@bipurewater.com
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February 2016 | 37
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates
James Smith Cree Nation water plant opens its doors
At the JSCN water plant, back row, left to right: Ryan Arnold, Bullée Consulting; Lawrence Lukey, Bullée Consulting; Roger Chapman, Sapphire Water; Councillor Alvin Moostoos, JSCN; Frank St. Marseille; Bill Marion, JSCN Director of Public Works; Adam McMurtry, Sapphire Water; Derek Schultz, Sapphire Water. Front row, left to right: Jude Drouin; Dr. Hans Peterson; JSCN Chief Justin Burns; Robert Gray, President, Sapphire Water; Prince Albert Grand Council Vice-Chief Brian Hardlotte.
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ast November, the James Smith Cree Nation welcomed about 50 people for an open house at their integrated biological reverse osmosis membrane (IBROM) water treatment plant. The attendees included First Nations, James Smith Indian Reserve residents, including James Smith Cree Nation (JSCN) Chief, Justin Burns, visitors from Stanley Mission, industry representatives, two representatives from the Water Security Agency, and main presenter, Dr. Hans Peterson. Peterson developed the IBROM technology through trial and error at Yellow Quill, Saskatchewan, from 2002 to 2004. JSCN Director of Public Works, Bill Marion, called the system “impressive,” expressing his thanks to Indigenous Affairs for funding the technology. According to Peterson, the IBROM process utilizes naturally occurring bacteria, in a controlled environment, to remove contaminants from the water. Following this process, treated water goes through a reverse osmosis (RO) membrane. Slight amounts of chlorine are then added to prevent contamination in the distribution system.
38 | February 2016
The Stanley Mission Project Management Team for all capital projects, back row, left to right: James Crawford; Gordon Hardlotte, Director of Operations; Elder Joe Roberts; Larry Charles, Public Works; Bob Hergott, Associated Engineering; Wayne Kabatoff, Project Manager. Front row, left to right: Councillor Linda Charles; Councillor Bernice Roberts; Councillor John Roberts; Glen Gillis.
“What’s interesting,” said Peterson, “is that the process renders water so pure that the treated water must pass through a mineral bed of calcium and magnesium to increase the pH and add nutrients that are beneficial to human health.” The system is currently operational in 15 First Nations communities, with two more scheduled for construction in 2016. “I think it’s very worthy to advocate
and promote this type of technology, not just within Saskatchewan, but nationally,” said Marion. JSCN’s old water treatment plant was always in need of fixing, Chief Burns expects a working lifespan of 25 to 30 years for the IBROM plant. Reprinted with permission from the Prince Albert Grand Council Tribune. Photos courtesy Ron Merasty.
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Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates
NTWWA conference examines challenges in Canada’s North By Thomas Rohner
T
he 2015 Northern Territories Water and Waste Association’s annual conference, held in Iqaluit, Nunavut, from November 20 - 22, was the little conference that could. For organizer Pearl Benyk, one of the highlights was that it happened at all, despite problems created by fickle Arctic weather, expensive air travel and restrictive flying schedules. “It wouldn’t be a conference anywhere in the North if some people weren’t weathered out,” Benyk joked after the conference. In the end, eight of the 60 registered participants were weathered out, but those who did make it to Nunavut’s capital enjoyed three days of presentations, workshops, networking and local entertainment. “This is the one time in the year when these people get to network and
40 | February 2016
Hunter Tootoo, minister responsible for fisheries, oceans and Canadian coastguard, gave his first remarks Nov. 22 at the NTWWA since being appointed minister.
hear what others in the territories are doing,” Benyk said. Federal cabinet minister Hunter Tootoo, from Nunavut’s Kivalliq region on the western coast of Hudson Bay, provided the keynote address on November 22 and reminded the audience how important their work is in ensuring remote communities’ access to clean water. “Groups such as yours, discussing cutting-edge technologies and how they can be provided in our unique northern environment, are key,” the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard said. There are many unique challenges that both operators and scientists involved in water and wastewater treatment face in Canada’s North. Justin Hazenberg, an engineering team leader
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates for the Government of Northwest Territories’ water and sanitation efforts, said many of those unique challenges can be boiled down to logistics. “Down south you can go to the hardware store; you can get parts shipped to you fairly quickly, and you can get an electrician or a plumber, sometimes within an hour, if you need to,” said Hazenberg, a long time NTWWA board member and past president. By contrast, all of Nunavut’s 25 communities are only accessible by plane during the winter months; the same goes for the overwhelming majority of the NWT’s 30-odd communities. That means that small parts required by plant operators in most communities need to be flown in, and large parts need to be shipped up from the south during the sealift season - about three months during the summer. “Also, you’ve got a limited pool of professionals and much higher energy costs to contend with,” Hazenberg added. While he is wary of rushing ahead
Iqaluit’s water treatment plant.
with new technologies, some advances can make a big difference. For example, he made a presentation on remote monitoring of the more than 20 com-
munities in the NWT that he supports from Yellowknife. The relatively recent introduction of 3G cellular technology continued overleaf...
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Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates in those communities has enabled him to provide much more efficient support. “Now I can connect to the computers in the water plants and read all the data local operators are reading,” Hazenberg said. Previously, he’d been using a dial-up system to connect to those computers, but, because of bad reception on phone lines, that was often a frustrating exercise. Also, the new 3G technology means fewer expensive flights into the communities. In general, technologies that are passive, low-energy and relatively uncomplicated tend to work best in the North. Wastewater systems across Nunavut and the NWT, for example, have historically used a combination of lagoons and wetlands. The cost to build lagoons can be substantial up front, but after construction they require minimal oversight and operate passively as micro-organisms break down organic matter. This system is similar to what is often used across rural Canada. In Nunavut, there are a few excep-
42 | February 2016
tions because of local, rocky terrain. The north Baffin community of Pangnirtung, for example, has the territory’s
The relatively recent introduction of 3G cellular technology in the NWT communities has enabled Hazenberg to provide much more efficient support. “Now I can connect to the computers in the water plants and read all the data local operators are reading.” only fully mechanical wastewater treatment plant. Three other Nunavut communities, including Iqaluit, have what are “loosely described as mechanical
plants”as they macerate waste, creating a slurry that is injected directly into the ocean. Research is still emerging on the environmental impacts of this practice on local marine ecosystems, Hazenberg said. Researchers from Nova Scotia’s Dalhousie University, funded by the Government of Nunavut, reported at the conference that only Iqaluit has seen a negative impact so far, with a “dead zone” created in the effluent area. But the lagoon-wetland system used widely across the North has a major drawback: the system works best in the short Arctic summer, and largely freezes up the rest of the year. And, for booming communities like Iqaluit, with a population around 7,000, the required size of lagoons can be impracticably large. Researchers from the federal National Research Council told the conference that they may have found a solution to this. Boris Tartakovsky, a senior NRC researcher, and Yehuda Kleiner, a principal research officer, explained that the vast
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water & Wastewater Treatment in Cold Climates majority of communities in the North have trucked water and sewage service. That results in residents using, on average, about one-third of the water per day, as compared to residents who receive their water through pipes. In turn, sewage waste from homes receiving trucked water service is much more concentrated. “The technology we’re developing lends itself very well to concentrated sewage,” Tartakovsky said. The technology basically involves adaptations to the primitive septic tank system. As anaerobic digesters, septic tanks produce onetenth of the secondary sludge as compared to aerobic systems. Methane gas is produced as a byproduct - usually vented out of the tank. Anaerobic micro-organisms metabolize organic matter by transferring electrons from the matter to an electron carrier, such as nitrate or metal - a process called oxidation. Tartakovsky and Kleiner say they’ve increased this rate of oxidation by inserting a set of electrodes into the tank:
one anode (negative) and one cathode (positive). The cathode collects electrons, helping the micro-organisms to transfer electrons more quickly, thereby increasing the rate at which they metabolize the organic matter. “We improve degradation rate in the absence of oxygen by electrically stimulating the micro-organisms,” Tartakovksy said. And that’s not all the researchers say they’ve accomplished. By harnessing the byproduct of methane gas, they can put that gas to work. “These processes require heat in the North. Temperatures have to be kept a little above zero Celsius,” Kleiner said. “There will be sufficient methane to provide heat, and very likely there will be waste heat, that can be used in the same enclosure to grow food, and to run a greenhouse 24/7. It’s not going to solve food insecurity problems, but it could contribute to the solution.” But, the researchers say they are taking a cautious approach with their new technology. Their lab results show that
刀攀搀甀挀椀渀最 䌀漀猀琀猀 ☀ 䴀攀攀琀椀渀最 刀攀最甀氀愀琀椀漀渀猀 䄀氀氀 䄀挀爀漀猀猀 伀渀琀愀爀椀漀 ∠ 䄀甀琀漀洀愀琀椀挀 搀愀椀氀礀 挀愀氀椀戀爀愀琀椀漀渀 ∠ 䰀漀眀 爀攀愀最攀渀琀 甀猀攀 ∠ 圀椀搀攀 洀攀愀猀甀爀攀洀攀渀琀 爀愀渀最攀 ∠ 刀攀搀甀挀攀 挀栀攀洀椀挀愀氀 挀漀猀琀猀 ∠ 䤀洀瀀爀漀瘀攀 漀瀀攀爀愀琀椀漀渀愀氀 攀昀ǻ挀椀攀渀挀礀 䨀漀椀渀 漀琀栀攀爀猀 椀渀 琀栀攀 伀渀琀愀爀椀漀 洀甀渀椀挀椀瀀愀氀 眀愀猀琀攀眀愀琀攀爀 洀愀爀欀攀琀 椀渀 洀漀渀椀琀漀爀椀渀最 礀漀甀爀 伀爀琀栀漀 倀 眀栀椀氀攀 挀甀琀琀椀渀最 挀栀攀洀椀挀愀氀 挀漀猀琀猀⸀
effluent standards can be brought to the new levels introduced by Environment Canada in 2012. The territories have been given a five-year leeway period to investigate how feasible the new standards are in Canada’s Arctic. The next step for the NRC is to run a pilot project with this technology in a less harsh climate, such as Ontario or Quebec, Kleiner said. After that, a pilot project in the Arctic would be needed before a larger-scale installation could be attempted. Discussing ideas with far-reaching potential, like that presented by the NRC researchers, is one of the things that makes the NTWWA annual conference so valuable to those involved in the water and wastewater industry in the North. “These are northern people here, and these are good souls. They always appreciate what they get,” Benyk said. Thomas Rohner is a journalist living in Iqaluit. Email: thomas.rohner@gmail.com
What is the future of water?
夀匀䤀 䤀儀 匀攀渀猀漀爀一攀琀 倀㜀 伀爀琀栀漀瀀栀漀猀瀀栀愀琀攀 䄀渀愀氀礀稀攀爀
㤀 㔀 㘀㜀㠀 ㈀㠀㠀㈀ 猀瀀搀猀愀氀攀猀⸀挀漀洀 猀愀氀攀猀䀀猀瀀搀猀愀氀攀猀⸀挀漀洀 㘀㐀㔀 一漀爀琀栀愀洀 䐀爀椀瘀攀 䴀椀猀猀椀猀猀愀甀最愀Ⰰ 伀渀琀愀爀椀漀 䌀愀渀愀搀愀 䰀㐀嘀 䨀㈀
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Design with community in mind stantec.com/water
February 2016 | 43
Water Storage
How to get the most out of your water storage tanks By Robertson Gibb vehicle inspection camera, by partially draining the tank, or by a completely dry confined space entry. After the warranty period, the AWWA recommends a comprehensive inspection every three to five years. Once the coating starts to break down, the rate of deterioration of the coating system and underlying steel substrate will be accelerated. Also, the amount of metal loss and pitting within the tank increases. It is most important to monitor the condition of the tank in the latter half of its service life to avoid more extensive repairs.
Regardless of tank type, a routine inspection schedule should be implemented.
W
ater pressure and distribution in most communities is maintained via steel water storage tanks, which operate relatively maintenance and trouble free for extended multi-year periods. However, the time comes when gradual corrosion, OH&S regulation updates, water quality fluctuations or even ‘loss-of-curb’ appeal, can result in this mostly ‘passive’ infrastructure requiring upgrades. This can cost up to one-third of the initial construction cost. Therefore, a rehabilitation program should be designed to ensure asset preservation, process water quality improvements, and operator safety. With tanks constructed 30 or more years ago, the entire exterior structure required recoating. These include multileg, spheroid, and single-pedestal fluted steel tanks. Both the water containing tank shell and supporting structure (i.e., pedestal or column used to raise the storage tank for optimal distribution pressures) required a coating system to
44 | February 2016
prevent rapid and excess rusting. In the early 1980s, composite welded steel tanks began to appear. While the elevated steel tank still required refurbishment every 15-20 years, the concrete pedestal was essentially maintenance free. The relatively low construction costs and reduced maintenance helped lead to an almost exclusive adoption of this tank type. Recently, a relatively new tower type, comprised of a concrete pedestal, supporting a bolted glass-lined steel tank, has emerged. This option is similar to the standard composite elevated welded steel tank except that the glass-lined bolted steel structure does not require recoating. Routine inspection Regardless of tank type, a routine inspection schedule should be implemented. Initial inspections should take place on the first and second year anniversary of a new coating application (or after new tank construction). These can be completed by a remotely operated
Initiating a tank rehabilitation program A field investigation (condition survey), combined with an NACE inspection of the interior and exterior surfaces of the elevated tank, is recommended to develop the overall scope of a project. The inspections will provide a basis for deciding which AWWA coating system(s) are most applicable and identify upgrades that should be done in parallel with the coating operation. There are five interior and seven outside coating systems listed in AWWA Standard D102. The NACE coating inspection should examine both the interior and exterior coatings to gather data to assess options. The inspection should include evaluation of blistering, chalking and UV degradation, size and frequency of visible corrosion areas, dry film thickness of the existing coatings and adhesion value. Sampling for designated and hazardous substances in the existing coating system should also take place. Interior coating The condition of the tank interior will dictate whether a full interior recoating or maintenance coating is warranted. Recoating consists of removal (through abrasive blasting) of the existing coating system down to bare metal and reapplication of a new coating syscontinued overleaf...
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water Storage TANK SYSTEM
POSSIBLE REPAIRS / UPGRADES
Life Safety and Fall Arrest Systems
- New davits, harnesses, anchorage tie-offs or rest platforms - Upgrades to fall arresters, vertical rigid rails and/or vertical lifelines
Communications and Antenna
- Provisions for new or replacement of aircraft warning lighting - Grounding and lighting protection - New antenna anchorage structure
Ventilation
- Upgrade to provide a frost-free vent
Water Quality Issues
- Installation of chlorine analysers or chlorine top-up systems - Installation of a mixing system to improve water consistency or reduce ice formation, nitrification or trihalomethanes - Backflow protection on overflow piping
Tank Access Improvements
- Replacement of corroded painter rails - Improvements to tank access hatches to meet current OH&S requirements
Site Security
- Repair or installation of site perimeter fencing - Integration of security systems
Tank Coating Systems
- Interior or exterior tank recoating, overcoating or maintenance coating - New exterior tower logo and colour scheme - Corrosion pit repairs - Seal welding or caulking of roof seams
Valve Room and Pedestal Modifications
- Re-coating of valves and interior piping - Provisions for heat-tracing and insulating fill and draw piping - Lighting improvements - Mezzanine storage, chemical or communications room additions in the base of the pedestal
Table 1: Tank rehabilitation repair and upgrades coating system assessment.
tem. Maintenance coating is applicable, when coating degradation is limited to specific irregular areas such as seams, welds or concentrated ice damage. Commonly specified interior coating systems are a 100% solids polyurethane coating (AWWA ICS-4) or an organic zinc-rich primer with epoxy top coat(s) (AWWA ICS-3, AWWW ICS-5). The ICS-4 system is a proven long-lasting method that has been used for many years. ICS-3 or ICS-5 systems are much more recent developments. However, accelerated laboratory testing suggests these will last longer than ICS-4. Full details of the coating systems can be found in the recently revised AWWA D102-14 standard. This provides the minimum coating standards for steel water storage tanks. However, they can be augmented to suit varying tank conditions, improve longevity, or 46 | February 2016
facilitate the coating process. Exterior coating There are three standard exterior coating approaches: recoating, overcoating and maintenance coating. The principles of recoating are similar to interior coating, except that the coating systems and surface preparation differ. Overcoating involves washing and application of a penetrating sealer over the existing exterior system. The new coating is applied directly on top of the old one. The principal advantages of overcoating are shorter construction time and the cost savings by avoiding full scaffolding and containment around the tank. However, an overcoating system would be expected to last 15 - 25 years compared to 25 - 30 years for a complete recoating. Also, if the tank is situated in
populated areas, or the existing coating system contains lead, exterior shrouding (containment) will be needed. After the exterior coating approach is selected, there are seven outdoor coating systems (OCS) identified in AWWA Standard D102-14 that may be considered. Consideration should be given to long-term durability, corrosion resistance, long-term colour retention, and UV resistance. Some key considerations are the season and timeline in which the exterior coating is being applied, and the available capital budget. Aliphatic fluorourethane finish on an OCS-4 system (zinc-rich primer, polyurethane, fluorourethane top coat) will offer excellent UV resistance and gloss retention, but will likely be more expensive, at least initially. The OSC-7 system is comcontinued overleaf...
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Water Storage Evaluation of anchorage points, ladders and fall arrest systems should be investigated. Of particular note, the CSA Standard CSA Z259.2.1 (Fall Arresters, Vertical Lifelines and Rails) has been split into two separate standards: CSA Z259.2.4 (Fall Arresters and Vertical Rigid Rails) and CSA Z259.2.5 (Fall Arresters and Vertical Lifelines). The requirements for rigid rails and trolleys have been updated to include a maximum arresting force, passing of a “fall back� (lean back) test, and inspection date markings.
prised of water-based coatings, and thus can be applied over a wider range of temperatures (i.e., colder periods). As with the interior coating, it is possible to augment the AWWA system with additional stripe coats or intermediate layers to gain more longevity. Hazardous substances Lead and chromium should be sampled in the existing paint system as they are often found in older tank coatings. If these substances are found, lead abatement measures, including tank scaffolding and containment, negative pressure ventilation, treatment of abrasive blasting materials and disposal of hazardous waste materials, will be needed. This testing step is also a requirement of Section 30 of the Occupational Health and Safety Act. The contract documents should clearly identify lead abatement control measures. Safety and fall arrest Fall arrest and access improvements may be required to bring older tanks in compliance with current regulations. Proper hatch sizing, along with provi-
Commonly specified interior coating systems are a 100% solids polyurethane coating (AWWA ICS-4) or an organic zinc-rich primer with epoxy top coat(s).
sions to lower an injured person to the ground (generally via a lifting davit and winch) from all parts of the tower should be reviewed.
Structural analysis A tank rehabilitation project provides an opportunity to conduct a structural and buckling analysis of the tank, complete with field measurement verification when it is taken out of service. Finite element analysis can be used to compare the older, original design against current AWWA standards for composite elevated tank design. Additional stiffeners can then be assessed, designed and included with the general contract as needed to provide an additional factor of safety for putting the
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Water Storage tank back in service for another 20 - 30 years. Water quality improvements A mixing system can improve water consistency within a storage tank by circulating water to limit stratification and providing the following benefits: • Mitigate against significant variations in chlorine residuals (or pockets with low chlorine) which may reduce chemical dosage requirements upstream; • Limit the occurrence of short circuiting, nitrification and ice formation; • Minimize temperature and water age variations. Many existing tanks have separate inlet and outlet (fill/draw) piping to provide some built-in protection against complete “short-circuiting” of the water volume. However, these do not prevent stratification from thermal gradients, or chemical stratification of sodium hypochlorite. A tank rehabilitation project is a good opportunity to carry out water storage quality improvements. Historical chlorine residuals, levels and temperature fluctuations should be examined to assess if, and what type of
a mixing system might optimize water quality output. Selection of a mixing system will be dependent on the characteristics of a tank and the desired components to be mixed. For example, thermal stratification requires less mixing energy than chemical stratification to achieve the equivalent water uniformity. Mixing systems can be either passive or active. Passive mixing systems operate solely on differential pressure during the active fill cycle, thus tanks with low tank turnover will benefit less from a hydrodynamic mixing. Active mixing systems require a small electrical component, either for a booster pump or to drive small impeller motors within the tank. These active mixing systems generally have lower capital costs and can be turned on intermittently, if chemical dosing is being applied at the tank. Conclusions While the public’s perception of a project will likely revolve around the final selection of the exterior colours and logo, a tank rehabilitation program must go beyond simply “painting the tower”.
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The rehabilitation should seek to: • Ensure the correct coating system is selected for long-term corrosion protection; • Verify the coating system is being applied with sufficient quality assurance (i.e., inspection) to maximize the life of the coating system; • Identify and quantify the potential tank repairs that are needed before recoating; • Minimize financial risks to the tank owner due to unforeseen construction change orders or cost escalations, particularity due to hazardous substances; • Review and implement opportunities for water quality improvement; • Reduce liability related to overspray during coating application; • Ensure conformance with current Occupational Health and Safety (OH&S) requirements. If these steps are followed, a water storage tank can be confidently placed back in service for public water supply for another 20 - 30 years. Robertson Gibb, P.Eng., is with R.V. Anderson Associates Limited. Email rgibb@rvanderson.com
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February 2016 | 49
Brownfields
Why it can be better to risk assess instead of remediate contaminated lands By Sajjad Din
G
enerally speaking, remediation or reclamation is a process in which consultants, contractors, construction managers, engineers and scientists conduct a series of steps to return land back to its original pre-human activity state, in terms of concentrations of various compounds in the soil and groundwater. A risk assessment scientifically assesses the potential risk that exists for humans, plants, wildlife and the natural environment from exposure to a contaminant. The purpose of a risk assessment is to develop site-specific standards that will allow uses, such as residential, that are being proposed to take place on the property. In Ontario, remediation may only require cleanup to certain standards as outlined in the Soil, Ground Water and Sediment Standards for Use under Part XV.1 of the Environmental Protection Act. In many circumstances, achieving cleanup to these standards may be physically or chemically difficult due to various factors such as existing infrastructure, current land use, depth of impacts, soil types or shallow bedrock. For example, impacted groundwater may not be treatable due to it being at depths greater than 20 metres within the bedrock. Cleanup cost for said groundwater may be astronomical and hence beyond the financial reach of the owner or interested parties. Prior to completing a remediation program, remedial options feasibility assessment should be carried out, in order to assess what method or methods of cleanup would be most suitable and effective. This may also be called a comparative analysis, in order to prepare a Remediation Action Plan. As part of this process, the options of natural attenuation and/or a risk assessment should be considered. Natural attenuation considers the allowance for the natural breakdown and reduction in contaminants over time. This is verifiable by monitoring, i.e., testing of samples collected in the field. Risk assessments consider existing natural barriers or placing artificial administrative or engineered barriers between human occupants of a
50 | February 2016
property and the contaminants present. Municipalities want to curb urban sprawl, and brownfields redevelopment is one way to do this. The site assessment process is a significant part of urban brownfield development. However, once Phase I and II site assessments are complete and the aerial and vertical extent of impacts have been defined, depth to bedrock determined, soil characteristics verified, hydraulic conductivity and groundwater flow direction ascertained, it still is not always clear as to what remedial approach would be best suited to a site. This is because there may still be uncertainties regarding subsurface biochemical oxygen demand and other soil and groundwater characteristics. A major factor in determining remedial methods is the type of pollutant and its potential mobility and reactivity. Most contaminants can be broken down into volatile organic compounds, petroleum hydrocarbons, metals and inorganics, pesticides/herbicides and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. The type of contaminants found should be considered when deciding on whether to simply risk assess. This is because the mobility and the fate and transport of them will determine the level of risk to the local human and ecological populations.. With remediation, one can aspire to end up with a property that meets applicable standards. Ideally, all impacted material is removed or treated. This allows the site owner or developer to carry out any type of land use they wish. Also, lending institutions are more willing to front the funds to purchase such a property.
However, remediation work may cost millions, depending on the level and extent of contaminants of concern on-site, soil types, existing buildings, infrastructure and groundwater conditions. The remedial approach may involve both ex situ and in situ treatment methods. Additionally, there would likely be disruption to site activities. Though certain costs are inherently a part of any risk assessment process, this route may be far more cost-effective and time efficient. With remediation projects, specifically in situ, there is an inherent uncertainty of the amount of time that would be required for completion. The process would require study of which site-specific standards should be developed to allow contaminants to remain on-site in higher concentrations then would otherwise be permitted under the generic Ministry standards. For risk assessment, a team of professionals with diverse skills in science and engineering would develop specific standards based on the current and proposed site use. This would involve an assessment of site conditions such as geology, concentrations of contaminants, human occupancy, building structures (existing and proposed) and infrastructure. Based on these parameters, acceptable levels of contaminants left in place are determined. Additionally, certain engineering controls such as sub-slab ventilation, concrete barriers, solidification/stabilization, Waterloo Barriers and underground slurry walls are introduced into the assessment calculations. In the long run, a wiser use of both remedial and risk assessment options will be required for greater urban redevelopment and revitalization. Too many contaminated properties lie unused that could be redeveloped if a risk assessment is conducted and the risk posed by on-site contamination is deemed to be acceptable. Sajjad Din, M.Sc., P.Geo., is a part time professor at Seneca and Centennial Colleges and also a consultant with Toronto Inspection Ltd. Email: sajjad@torontoinspection.com. (References are available upon request)
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Operations
UPS systems keep water facilities operating reliably By Michael A. Stout
T
As true online uninterruptible powoday’s water treatment plants er supply (UPS) models regenerate new, are fully automated, relying clean AC power, they are often used to on an advanced Supervisory condition power to the SCADA systems, Control and Data Acquisition in addition to providing a backup power (SCADA) network to control the entire source. Due to their continuous duty inwater treatment process. This network verters, they can support minutes to hours is integrated throughout the plant and of backup. As most online UPS products has two primary functions: process on the market have been designed for use monitoring and process control. Should in protected 0˚C to 40˚C computer room one element of this network fail, it has environments, it is essential to select propthe potential to shut down the entire faerly rated industrial-grade online UPS, cility’s production. designed for use in a plant’s harsh enviMicroprocessor-based SCADA hardronment. ware is often power sensitive and relies Due to the improper use of ofon a high quality power source that is fice-grade UPS models in these unprotected from outages. Due to the presforgiving environments, unscheduled ence of large motors and pumps condowntime is common in the industry. In nected to the facility’s power system, Pre-configured NEMA rated online addition, the electronics in these types of the utility power supplied to the plant UPS system. UPS are not designed to operate reliably can become polluted with voltage sags, in the high temperature and corrosive gas high voltage transients and over-voltage conditions. It can also create problems through experiencing environment present in water treatment plants. short- and long-term outages. EAST Differences between industrial-grade and office-grade UPS Wide-temperature range, industrial-grade, online UPS models that are on the market have been safety agency listed, and their operational temperature can range from -30°C to 60°C. These units have been specifically designed to be more efficient and are manufactured with high-temperature-rated components. Most importantly, they are built to operate with a high investing in today for tomorrow level of reliability over their operational temperature range. POWER As a power protected environment is key to the reliability INDUSTRY of most electronic equipment, some online UPS manufacturNETWORKS ers offer their products in turnkey systems, pre-packaged inside ENERGY WATER NEMA 3 and environmentally-controlled NEMA 4 rated enENERGY closures. For NEMA 3 rated systems, the UPS must be paired ASSETS with robust batteries which have a wide operational temperaWATER ture range. However, this may not be a requirement when packSECURITY SCADA aged inside an environmentally-controlled NEMA 4 system. In some cases, 10-year long-life batteries can be incorporated. UTILITIES Turnkey systems are a fast, cost-effective solution to deploying wide-temperature range, high level power conditioning and backup into the difficult environment of water treatment plants. Not all online UPS systems are created equal. Only douexcellence. period. ble-conversion online industrial-grade UPS models offer the high level of reliability, power conditioning and battery backup protection that the SCADA hardware distributed throughout a water treatment plant demands. Plants must use care and select industrial-grade, online UPS solutions that will not only eliminate and protect against power pollution, but also offer long-term reliability in their demanding environments.
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Michael A. Stout is with Falcon Electric Inc. www.falconups.com Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Pipe
Corrugation growth in plastic pipe impacts Manning’s n Value.
Unrealistic roughness coefficient could impair pipe capacity By Paul Imm
D
ue to factors like climate change and intensified urban development, insurance claims in Canada from water damage exceed claims from fire, theft, and other natural disasters combined. This is compounded by the fact that the average cost of each home insurance claim is rising significantly because more homeowners are furnishing their basements as a living space. Because of this, the Insurance Bureau of Canada recognized the need to better understand their exposure from municipal-side factors and they were motivated to develop the Municipal Risk Assessment Tool (MRAT). This pilot project assesses the impact of severe weather events on urban drainage systems and identifies where potential municipal infrastructure vulnerabilities may exist. One aspect of sewer and culvert design which may come under scrutiny is how the Manning formula is used to determine a pipe size that is sufficient to carry a design peak flow. More specifically, design engineers need to use an appropriate flow resistance coefficient, or Manning’s n roughness coefficient. Many jurisdictions www.esemag.com
across Canada seem to agree that a Manning’s n Value of 0.012 or 0.013 is appropriate for all smooth wall pipe. This includes concrete, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe with a smooth interior surface. Surprisingly, a small number of Canadian municipalities are willing to ignore the best practices adopted by many of these jurisdictions and still allow the use of a Manning’s n Value as low as 0.009 for plastic pipe. Design engineers must keep in mind that the Manning formula, developed in 1890, is an empirical relationship with a roughness coefficient n Value that actually varies with pipe size, slope of the pipe, and flow depth. Engineers must also recognize that the Manning’s n Value of 0.009 is derived from laboratory studies that examined small pipe sizes, or is based on clean water flowing through short sections of new pipe, not in-service sewers. Similar laboratory studies with concrete pipe have also resulted in Manning’s n Values of 0.009. However, the concrete pipe industry has traditionally promoted the use of a more conservative
n Value to account for the differences between laboratory testing and actual installed conditions. Engineers familiar with pipe design know that flow resistance in a pipe is significantly affected by more factors than just the pipe material. Based on lab experiments, field studies, and hydraulic theory, it is evident that all hydraulically smooth wall pipes should be designed with the same Manning’s n Value, regardless of pipe material. For a simplified and conservative method of estimating pipe capacities and flow velocities in actual working conditions, a constant Manning’s n Value of 0.013 for all smooth wall pipe materials will account for the head losses at manholes, pipe joints and fittings, and alignment changes. Sediment deposits and slime buildup inside an in-service pipe also result in the roughness coefficient being essentially the same for all pipe materials. Any jurisdiction that still allows the use of an unrealistically low Manning’s n roughness coefficient for a sewer or culvert design may be unintentionally putting its own infrastructure and residents at risk of future sewer backups and flooded basements. Paul Imm, P.Eng., is with the Canadian Concrete Pipe & Precast Association. Email: paul.imm@ccppa.ca February 2016 | 53
Environmental Approvals
Building a better framework for EAs in Ontario
T
he Modernization of Approvals Branch (MAB) of Ontario’s Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change (MOECC) is leading the implementation of a modernized approach to environmental approvals, to create faster, smarter, streamlined government-to-business services, while maintaining high standards of environmental protection. MAB is supporting modernization through partnerships that put sustainable, innovative solutions into action. The branch works with stakeholders to propose, evaluate, communicate and support modernization activities within the context of a risk-based, client-centred system. First steps The first major milestone on modernized approvals came in 2011, with the implementation of a new, two-pronged risk-based online environmental registration system. The first stream of approvals was for more routine activities that presented lower risks to the environment and were well understood. Applications for these types of activities then became eligible to be submitted online through the Environmental Activity and Sector Registry (EASR). The second stream was for more unique or more complex activities that
Since 2011, some sectors like standby power systems have qualified for EASRs.
required an Environmental Compliance Approval (ECA). Since 2011, the following sectors have qualified for EASRs, resulting in time and cost savings for clients: • Automotive refinishing • Commercial printing facilities • Heating • Non-hazardous waste transportation systems • Small ground-mounted solar facilities
The idea of clean water is easy to grasp.
• Standby power systems. Moving forward In 2015, an important next step towards modernization took place when the ministry developed an electronic Environmental Compliance Approval System (eECAS). Moving to electronic service delivery means clients can apply for an ECA anywhere, pay for and then track the status of their application from their computer. Stormwater Quality Services include: Ministry of the Environment Compliance Inspections Oil/Grit Separator Unit Tracking Stormwater Flood Response Lab Analysis Stormwater Ponds Small Spills Removal Jellyfish® Filter Consulting
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Environmental Approvals The future of modernization of approvals does not stop there. The ministry is committed to modernizing other permitting, licensing and approvals programs over time, which will result in real benefits to clients, taxpayers and the government. These include such programs as brownfields, municipal wastewater and pesticides. To support the release of eECAS, the ministry is conducting a controlled launch. A limited number of online applications will be received and processed to better train ministry staff and make adjustments to improve the client experience. During the controlled launch period, ministry staff directly involved in the business of approvals received in-class training. The ministry also developed a series of eECAS e-learning modules available to all staff to allow them to get comfortable with the new system before launching to the public. Two online tutorials for external clients will be made available online. Other sources of guidance to support
clients include an updated ECA Guide, as well as updated or new sample applications. These provide a common understanding of the level and extent of documentation required for ministry decision-making on an ECA. Through learning by example, clients receive clarity, consistency and support for thorough and complete submissions. This material is also going to be available online. The ministry is well on the road to becoming a more modern regulator. The positive benefits include improved effectiveness, flexibility, transparency and cost efficiency. As of mid-January 2016, there were 4,203 EASR registrations, generating approximately $32.9 million in savings for businesses that have registered since 2011. Given the ongoing success of the EASR and the potential benefits to Ontario’s regulated sector, the branch continues to propose additional EASR candidates for consideration by the ministry. It is currently working on a draft regulation for posting on the Environmental Registry on End of Life Vehicles pro-
cessing sites registering on the EASR. Ontario is part of the North American manufacturing heartland, and home to thousands of manufacturing businesses. After California and Texas, Ontario has the most manufacturing employees of any jurisdiction in Canada or the United States. Proposing a new EASR to target low-risk, well understood manufacturing sectors under the category of ’general manufacturing’ will streamline the approvals process for a wide variety of manufacturing sectors in the province. It will provide significant benefits to this sector, while continuing to ensure these businesses operate without compromising Ontario’s environmental health. For more information on MAB or modernization of approvals, contact Walter Yee, Manager, Program Implementation. Email: walter.yee@ontario.ca This topic will be covered at CANECT 2016 on April 25-27. www.canect.net
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February 2016 | 55
Wastewater Operations
control strategies can be determined, on an individual basis, with respect to plant design and configuration, severity of problems, and financial implications.
Importance of phase contrast microscopy in wastewater operations By Ryan Hennessy
W
astewater process control is becoming increasingly complex, as permit limits become more stringent and BNR (biological nutrient removal) configurations are incorporated into new designs and plant upgrades. Also, there are many facilities that are operating above design loading conditions with aging equipment and infrastructure. In many smaller municipalities and industrial wastewater treatment systems, funding for plant upgrades can often be problematic. Every wastewater treatment facility has its own unique set of challenges, but the basic principles of phase contrast microscopy do not change. A trained professional is capable of finding out what is going on in a system within several minutes, using techniques from the 3rd Edition Manual on the Causes and Control of Activated Sludge Bulking, Foaming, and Other Solids Separation Problems (Jenkins, 2004). Sludge quality problems In wastewater operations, the goal is to produce a good quality sludge that
56 | February 2016
settles and compacts well and leaves behind a clear supernatant. Regardless of the process flow schematic, there is an area where biological treatment occurs and an area where solids (bacteria) are separated from the treated water. Also, growth pressures within the system will dictate the type of micro-organisms that will compete. To grow the desired types of organism, a “bug friendly” environment is needed. This involves the type of food present (such as limiting fats, oils, grease, septicity and sources of toxicity) in the influent; maintaining the desired values for pH, alkalinity, dissolved oxygen and nutrients; and, having a general control over the biological growth rates (sludge age, food to micro-organism ratio). Ultimately, sludge quality problems are a result of the conditions present within the plant. Common problems include dispersed growth (results in turbid effluent), sludge bulking (poor settling), poor floc quality (pin floc, diffuse floc structure, etc.) and foaming in the aeration basin. The microscope can be used to diagnose problems. Then, based on this diagnosis, short-term and long-term
Microscope essentials and tips To effectively use the microscope in wastewater, a research-grade, phase contrast microscope with 10x and 100x (oil immersion) phase contrast objectives that yield magnifications of approximately 100x and 1000x, respectively, is needed (Jenkins, 2004). For photography, a microscope with a trinocular head and a digital camera is needed. It is beneficial to include photos of floc structure and individual micro-organisms within a report to add to its credibility and professionalism. Becoming proficient at using the microscope and identifying filamentous bacteria is a learned skill that is developed over an extended period of time from hours of experience. For this reason, plant personnel often prefer to send samples out periodically to specialists that have experience with a wide variety of operations and routinely perform microscopic evaluations. The preferred frequency of microscopic evaluations is dependent upon the changes and stability of the plant and also the influent loading characteristics. Typically, every few sludge cycles is sufficient, but more frequent evaluations may be needed for specific plants. For plants that chlorinate the return activated sludge (RAS) line to control filamentous bacteria growth, it is important to determine the health of filamentous bacteria on a daily basis. Once 70%-80% of filaments show damaged cells or empty sheaths, it is recommended that chlorination be decreased or stopped (Richard, 2003). It is useful to know what “normal” is for a facility. Previous reports can also serve as beneficial troubleshooting guides to determine which direction certain characteristics may be heading. For example, if it is normal for a plant to have a common abundance of a certain filamentous organism and this organism has now reached “very common” abundance, a process change may be desired to help detect a problem before it develops.
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Wastewater Operations
Microtrix gram stain.
Stalked ciliate.
Strong flocs.
Floc characteristics (using the 10x objective) With 10x objective (100x magnification) floc size, floc characteristics, protozoa and other organisms, non-biological and inorganic particles, bacterial colonies, cells dispersed in the bulk liquid between flocs, and the effect of filamentous organisms on the floc structure can be determined. The reverse India ink stain may be used at 10x objective to judge polysaccharide (slime) abundance. Often, training at 10x objective is sufficient for operational personnel. With minimal amounts of training, a
general idea of the problem can be determined which allows the operator to decide if someone with further experience needs to get involved. Higher life form organisms are beneficial from a toxicity standpoint (free swimming and stalked ciliates are most sensitive); they also provide a relative idea of the dispersed bacteria prey density. As there are less dispersed bacteria present, higher life form organisms become more efficient at capturing dispersed bacteria prey. It is important to note that the higher life form organism populations can shift rapidly, depending on plant conditions.
They should not be used in correlation to sludge age or in determining wasting rates. If a slug load enters a facility within a very brief period of time, the predominant higher life form organism may change (e.g., from stalked ciliates and rotifers to flagellates and amoeba). For this reason, using the 100x (oil) objective is necessary as filamentous bacteria, floc structure, and other characteristics change more slowly. In determining sludge quality at 10x objective, one of the most important aspects is the strength of the floc structure. continued overleaf...
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PROBLEM: H2S and fugitive odors
from contaminants extracted from the influent and raw sludge holding tank.
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Wastewater Operations
Thiothrix I.
Waterbear.
Weak flocs.
Stronger flocs have more weight associated with them and can support a higher abundance of filamentous bacteria, with less impact on the sludge volume index.
characteristics, such as branching, motility, filament shape and location, presence of attached bacteria, presence of a sheath, presence of septa, filament width, filament length, filament cell shape and size, are needed for identification. Ultimately, filamentous bacteria identification becomes like “birdwatching” to the trained individual. After seeing a certain organism many times, most can be identified immediately. There is some subjectivity involved with this as organisms do not always fit neatly into different size and shape characteristics. Morphology may change depending on the type of substrate
as well as the growth rate of the organism. In industrial plants, it is common for a filament such as Thiothrix II to look slightly different than it may appear in a municipal plant. It is important to not “force fit” organisms and accept the fact that not every organism can be identified. It is important to look at the big picture. For example, if all the other indications present a “big picture” of septicity and the operator is unsure if the filament is type 0914 or type 0675, said organism is likely to be type 0914 because this grows due to organic acids and sulfide. Type 0675 grows at longer sludge ages and lower food to micro-organism ratios and is often found with filaments such as type 0041 and type 1851. Organism ranking is critical in determining the big picture. Common abundance is classified as 1 - 5 organisms per floc. Because one may be looking at the tail end of one condition and the beginning of another, it is important to not put much stock into an organism and its associated cause (s), unless that organism is ranked at common abundance or greater.
Filamentous bacteria identification Filamentous bacteria can be identified using table 2.18 of the 3rd Edition Manual on Cause and Control of Activated Sludge Bulking, Foaming, and Other Solids Separation Problems. This is entitled the Summary of Typical Morphological and Staining Characteristics of Filamentous Organisms Commonly Observed in Activated Sludge (Jenkins, 2004). Individual
Practical application Common short-term control strategies for filamentous bulking include return activated sludge chlorination, sludge juggling, coagulant/polymer addition, and change of process configuration, such as switching to step feed operation. Longterm control strategies involve identifying and eliminating the root cause of a problem. Every system is different and plant personnel should be involved in helping determine the best and most practical operational strategies. Ryan Hennessy is a Microbiology and Operations Specialist with Midwest Contract Operations Inc. Email: rhennessy@mco-us.com 58 | February 2016
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
We’re raising the Bar . . . Again! “Simulator” Experience added to Wastewater Courses
Teaming up with Canada’s leaders in operational simulations, Ontario based “Hydromantis”, WWOTC is now prepared for the inclusion of simulator experiences in many of our wastewater courses. Attendees will be provided with the very unique opportunity to experience real time operational demand, trouble shoot, solve problems, or simply experiment, all in a controlled classroom environment under the supervision of skilled instructors. Short of letting students play around with a real operational plant, this is BY FAR, the next best thing.
WWOTC announces 50% discount program for Post Secondary Environmental Studies Students
WWOTC believes that all “players” in the environmental education sector serve the same purpose – to develop operational knowledge, skills and capabilities. Rather than competing with post-secondary institutes, we complement each other for the bigger picture. BECAUSE of this, WWOTC is launching a new program to supplement the development of these full-time programs by extending significant discounts of up to 50% for any active full-time post-secondary student. Regardless of which chartered Canadian institution they are attending, if students can provide documentation reflecting an active status, or are within 6 months after the completion of their program, they will be eligible. This new initiative will escalate and reinforce the skills development of participating students and we hope that post-secondary institutes will share this information with their students. *Some limitations may apply based on regular student enrolment and capacity issues.
We’ve Partnered with Northern College
Ontario contractors who are contracted to maintain municipal watermains will be able to access critical employee training through a new joint Northern College/WWOTC collaboration. The program, Water Distribution Training for Contractor Company Labourers is a unique and comprehensive training opportunity designed to instruct individuals on the latest technologies, municipal guidelines, specifications, and best practices. This program is very timely given the expected degree of retiring long term experienced operators over the next 5 years and there is an increasing municipal trend towards sub contracting out the work to non-certified construction laborers. We want to provide contractor companies with an opportunity to raise their skill levels. Continuous diligence in safeguarding municipal water systems will ensure the highest quality drinking water is available to residents of Ontario.
For further information, Call Toll Free: 866-622-6535
Or email us at: info@wwotc.ca
Process Water
Horizontal falling film evaporator improves efficiency of oil sands production By Yaniv Schmidt
A
lberta’s oil sands industry is facing a challenging time. The rapid drop in oil prices from $110/barrel to less than $40/barrel is putting a lot of stress on new developments and making it almost impossible to raise capital. Companies are looking for ways to make new projects viable at current oil prices, not an easy task after the previous project break even at $80/barrel. The market is looking for lower capital investment installation efforts and risks, and shorter project execution time. To make a steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) project more cost-effective and competitive in a low oil price environment, it is necessary to reduce capital investment in equipment and maintain maximum site operation availability in order to ensure a steady flow of income. Developing a new SAGD 10,000 barrels/day project is an approximately $500M - $1,000M high risk operation. The economics are significantly affected by the steam to oil ratio (SOR), as well as the selection and performance of the water treatment equipment. At typical SAGD sites, more than 97% of the produced water is recycled and reused for steam generation, a process mainly carried out by evaporators. Produced water evaporators are robust process equipment that distill the produced water to pure water, which can then be fed into steam generators. The evaporators are critical elements in the water treatment process, as well as major contributors to capital investment. The market is turning to modular and prefabricated solutions to reduce site construction costs and minimize project risks. Horizontal evaporators, which are making their first steps into the market, are completely prefabricated and can be easily transported to site in small modules. In order to reduce the operation risk, IDE offers a process demonstration system, which is designed for small scale process simulation and demonstration of produced water treatment. The unit has been installed at the Alberta Innovates Technology Futures (AITF) facil-
60 | February 2016
IDE has developed a modular evaporator design which reduces installation costs.
ity in Edmonton. A 12-month testing program was completed, during which process condition optimization and chemicals usage were developed. The testing program was composed of several runs, each of which was executed continuously for 30 days. Different water sources from SAGD facilities were shipped to the testing site, and extensive analytical work was performed during each test run. Process and system description Produced water is fed to the system from a collection tank. It then flows to the degasifier to reduce the bicarbonate level. Downstream, feed water is mixed with brine from the evaporator sump and is divided into two streams. A small amount of the water flows as blow down to the brine tank. Most of the brine water is circulated and sprayed in the shell of the evaporator. The dropping water creates a horizontal falling film on the heat transfer tubes. Steam that is injected inside the tubes transfers heat to the brine, which evaporates. When the system operates with the compressor, compression adds ~2oC to the vapour and feeds this to the inner tube side. When the unit operates with external steam, the vapour flows to the condenser and continues to the distillate line. Steam, either from the compressor or from an ex-
ternal source, flows into the tubes, where it condenses and exits the tubes as distillate and is pumped into the distillate tank. The operator controls conditions such as pH, temperature, production, and chemical dosing rates. Chemicals are injected directly to the recirculation line. The trial demonstrates actual working conditions at the highest concentration and working temperature (worst case scenario) for brine concentration of the SAGD plant. This facility is used as a risk mitigation tool for new projects, allowing process optimization in a safe environment, instead of doing it on-site where costs can spiral. Modular horizontal evaporator IDE has developed a modular evaporator design which reduces installation costs. The modular horizontal evaporator is based on standard prefabricated modules that are easily transported and installed on site. Site installation includes positioning of the modules on piles, connection between them and lifting the evaporator vessel on top. The modules and the vessels are designed to fit standard shipping, making the supply chain very flexible. Manufacturing outside of Alberta lowers costs. The modular design can be suited to different evaporation capacities by adding more modules and more vessels, as
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Process Water
Modular MVC-3000 m3/day.
Modular MVC-1500 m3/day.
well as increasing the capacity of the vapour compressor. The modules are placed on piles driven into the muddy ground, which saves expensive concrete work. They are designed for fast connection, which shortens erection time from 4 - 6 months to 6 - 8 weeks. The cost saving on site erection is significant. However, for a project to be successful, daily operation and the oil production must be maintained at maximum. One of the problems facing SAGD operators is maintenance and
cleaning of the evaporator tubes, which results in expensive downtime. Removable tube bundle Evaporator availability is critical in SAGD operation. When the water train is down no steam is generated and oil production is stopped. The cleaning of evaporator tubes is done once or twice a year; it may take a whole week to complete, which is a significant downtime. The cleaning, which is done on site, is labour-intensive and involves the use of
hazardous chemicals. As part of the modular evaporator development, IDE offers removable tube bundle capabilities. During system turnaround, a fouled tube bundle can be removed from the evaporator shell and replaced with a spare clean bundle. The fouled tube is sent for offsite cleaning so no hazardous chemicals are handled on site, resulting in shorter and safer turnarounds on-site. Yaniv Schmidt is with IDE Technologies. Email: yanivs@ide-tech.com
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February 2016 | 61
Water
Education
T
he Walkerton Clean Water Centre (WCWC) recently he water emergency in hosted a delegation the Flint, Michigan hasfrom started Brazilian Association Sania firestorm over theofdanger tary and posed Environmental Engineering by lead in drinking wa(ABES), during their ter, and the failure ofmission officialstotoOntario. protect One highlight the visit was and a detailed public health. ofSocial media maintour of the WCWC Technology Demonstream news channels are filled with stration visit was part of a images Facility. of Flint The residents showing rust week of organized coloured bottles ofactivities, water. focused on water and wastewater in Parents are worriedmanagement, about what efpartnership the of Ontario of fect the highwith levels lead inMinistry the City’s Economic Development drinking water will haveand onInnovation, their chiland Department of Foreign AffairsFamand dren’s health and development. International Trade Canada. ilies have launched federal lawsuits ABES is the Brazilian chapter of the against Michigan and Flint. Inter-American Association of Sanitary In April 2014, the City switched its and Environmental of water supply to the Engineering. Flint River inOne an efABES’ and successful anfort to most save important money, according to Michnual is the Water Wasteigan initiatives Radio. Following the and switch, the water Qualitysupply National Award. with The City’s water was plagued program tofrom promote innoproblemswas anddeveloped complaints residents. vation to associated companies.
Brazilian delegates from the Brazilian Association of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering (ABES) group.
During the visit, speakers highlighted WCWC services and three made in Ontario technologies, including MS Filter Slow Sand Filtration Systems, Real Tech analysers and Trojan UV units. The Walkerton Clean Water Centre is an agency of the Government of Ontario, established in 2004. WCWC’s headquarters in Walkerton is LEED Gold certified and is well-equipped for hands-on training, research and innovation. In peak weeks, WCWC trainers educate over 350 drinking water operators across the province. More than 39,000 have participated to date. WCWC’s research program is focused on solutions for small drinking water systems and supports technology development by providing comprehensive product assessments for small companies.
Every year the award-winning companies undertake a technical benchmarking visit to a country considered a leader in water and wastewater management. The delegation included managers of several Brazilian municipal water and wastewater utilities, and repFlint River in Downtown Flint, circa 1979. Water from Flint River was found to www.wcwc.ca resentatives from thefrom Canadian leach far more lead pipes federal compared to water from Lake Huron. and provincial governments.
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January Magazine 2013 | 65 Environmental Science & Engineering
CC. Public Domain
Walkerton Clean Centre water Crisis in Flint sparks fury overWater toxic drinking hosts delegation from Brazil By Peter Davey
Water
In October 2014, General Motors stopped accepting treated Flint River water for its engine plant over corrosion concerns due to the high chloride content. Flint switched its water source again, connecting back to Detroit on October 16, 2015, but the damage had been done. Virginia Tech researchers compared Detroit water with Flint River water and found on average, that “Flint River water leaches 19x more lead to the water than Detroit water.” Furthermore, the study found that the use of orthophosphate didn’t seem to reduce lead leaching due to the high levels of chloride. In October 2015, pediatrician Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha found the number of Flint children with elevated bloodlead levels had jumped from 2.1% to 4% in the period following the switch to Flint River water. In certain areas, Dr. Hanna-Attisha told the Detroit Free Press the numbers were worse, going from 2.5% to 6.3%. On December 14, 2015, Flint Mayor Karen Weaver declared a state of emergency and requested federal assistance to deal with the “manmade disaster” from switching to the Flint River. On December 29, 2015, the Flint Water Advisory Task Force, appointed by Michigan Governor Rick Synder, found that the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) was responsible for the tragedy in Flint. In a letter to Governor Synder, the task force found the MDEQ “failed in three fundamental ways:” 1. Regulatory failure: “In which technical compliance is considered sufficient to ensure safe drinking water in Michigan.” 2. Failure in substance and tone of MDEQ response to the public: In response to independent studies and tests, “the agency’s response was often one of aggressive dismissal, belittlement, and attempts to discredit these efforts and the individuals involved.” 3. Failure in MDEQ interpretation of www.esemag.com
the Lead and Copper Rule: “The federal Lead and Copper Rule calls for ‘optimized corrosion control treatment,’ which the MDEQ did not require in the switch to the Flint River.” The Flint water crisis has prompted the resignation of a number of public officials, including Howard Croft, Flint’s Director of Public Works on November 16, 2015; Dan Wyant, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality Director on December 29, 2015; and Susan Hedman, head of the Midwest region of the U.S. EPA on January 21, 2016. American Water Works Association CEO David LaFrance said, in a statement on January 19, 2016 that “the AWWA is committed to helping water utilities, elected leaders and customers in applying these and other lessons from the crisis in Flint.” LeFrance also said that the estimated $1 trillion cost to repair and expand drinking water infrastructure in the U.S. over the next 25 years, “does not include the cost of removing lead service lines on private property.” Aid has poured into Flint as concerned citizens, politicians and even celebrities try to help. President Barack Obama pledged $80 million in infrastructure aid, largely aimed at repairing the damage done to Flint. “[Flint] is a reminder of why you can’t shortchange basic services that we provide to our people and that we, together, provide as a government to make sure that public health and safety is preserved,” said President Obama. According to the EPA, early test results in February 2016 showed lead-removal filters distributed to Flint households were “working as expected.” The EPA is monitoring homes where detected lead levels are above the filter rating level.
WINNER OF WATER’S NEXT 2015 AWARD
Sources used in this article are available in the online version: www.esemag.com/flint-crisis For more information about the ongoing drinking water crisis in Flint, visit: flintwaterstudy.org February 2016 | 63
Water Treatment
Using carbon dioxide for enhanced coagulation By Andrew Kleisinger and M. Jason Stusick
H
istorically, water treatment systems have incorporated mineral acid feed systems for pH suppression. Their use, while effective when the process is properly controlled, presents numerous challenges to system operation. Challenges related to shipping, handling and storage of the large volumes of acid that are required are significant. Effective process control to ensure accurate dosing is critical. Overdosing of a strong acid can lead to overshooting pH targets, creating significant process related issues. As an alternative to acids, carbon dioxide (CO2) may be used for downward pH adjustment. When in solution, CO2 produces carbonic acid, which is less corrosive and hazardous than sulphuric or hydrochloric acid. The process Enhanced coagulation allows improved removal from source waters of natural organic matter (NOM), as measured by total organic carbon (TOC), by adjusting pH prior to the coagulation reaction. This is necessary to optimize the coagulation process, reduce residual aluminum when using aluminum-based coagulants, regulate disinfection reactions, and reduce the formation potential of trihalomethanes (THMs). In surface waters characterized by high pH and high concentrations of dissolved organic material, enhanced coagulation is implemented to destabilize the organic molecules. This enables them to flocculate and be removed during the filtration process. Acid is added to consume alkalinity and lower the pH of the raw water to a level at which the coagulant is most efficient at removing NOM. Coagulant is added to the pH adjusted process stream prior to rapid mixing. In applications where enhanced coagulation is practiced, alkalinity can be depleted and pH can be suppressed to levels below acceptable ranges. If water lacks alkalinity, it can be subject to large pH swings and become aggressive and corrosive. Aggressive potable water can cause
64 | February 2016
Bulk CO2 tank.
CO2 feed system with motive stream booster pumping, feed control panel and dissolution skid.
premature failure of mechanical equipment in the water treatment or distribution systems. Therefore, caustic is typically required after filtration to increase the pH and stabilize finished water. With source waters containing high alkalinity and pH, it can be difficult to use mineral acids in enhanced coagulation without exceeding the maximum usage limits (MUL) of the chemical. A benefit of CO2 is that it can effectively
adjust pH without consuming alkalinity. It can also be applied using dosage rates that typically do not exceed the MUL. Handling and safety Acid must be transported to the site, transferred to bulk storage tanks, and pumped to the point of injection. Spills or leaks can be hazardous to operators, as well as the public. As strong acids are continued overleaf...
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water Treatment corrosive and can be volatile, damage can occur to mechanical and electrical equipment from fumes and leaks. CO2 can be stored outside, eliminating the space requirements for storing acid within a facility and costly ventilation requirements. It is neither corrosive nor volatile and does not produce harmful fumes. Any leaks can be vented to the atmosphere without posing a significant risk to the public. Although it is not poisonous, it is an asphyxiant and can displace oxygen in confined areas. Therefore, a CO2 area monitor is recommended when installing a CO2 feed system. An additional advantage of using CO2 is that it is often produced as a byproduct from industrial facilities, such as fertilizer, gas, coal and ethanol plants, breweries, and distilleries. Its application in water treatment provides a sustainable use for a product that would otherwise be wasted to the environment. Carbon dioxide feed system design The main components of a CO2 feed system include: bulk chemical storage
tank, gas feed control panel, dissolution assembly (where required), injection equipment, and pH analyzers for process monitoring /control.
An additional advantage of using CO2 is that it is often produced as a byproduct from industrial facilities, such as fertilizer, gas, coal and ethanol plants, breweries, and distilleries. CO2 is most often stored in a liquid state in bulk storage vessels outside of the water treatment facility. Tanks range in size and come in different configurations, customized to specific site requirements. The bulk storage system
typically includes a vaporizer and refrigerator to maintain CO2 in its proper state for both storage and utilization. Where required, an element on the gas feed control panel is used to heat the gas as it is drawn from the tank. A gas feed control panel is required to feed CO2 to the process stream at a controlled rate. The panel consists of a gas flow measurement device, typically a thermal mass flow meter or Coriolis meter, a modulating flow control valve, gas temperature measurement device, CO2 area monitor, and isolation and pressure relief valves. CO2 dissolution in the process stream is required to ensure the gas becomes entrained to form carbonic acid. If sufficient mixing and length of pipe runs exist, the injection system can be as simple as injecting the gas directly into the process stream through a porous diffuser. In other cases, dissolution assemblies may be required. These may consist of a motive stream of raw or treated water, in which CO2 gas is dissolved to continued overleaf...
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February 2016 | 65
Water Treatment form a carbonic acid solution. The solution is then reinjected into the process stream. Dissolution assemblies may require a flow measurement device, an eductor to draw CO2 gas into the motive stream, a static mixer, and additional pumping. The selection of the appropriate injection equipment is a function of the desired CO2 gas utilization efficiency, equipment capital cost, and available plant footprint. In order to properly design the feed system, it is recommended that bench top testing be undertaken, to determine the range of CO2 feed rates required to adjust the pH to the desired level. In lieu of testing, water quality data and theoretical modeling software can be utilized to approximate the required feed rate. Process control Control for the CO2 feed system can be manual or automated. Manual process control may be limited to a manual flow control valve, rotameter, and a solenoid valve that is energized when
flow is observed in the process stream. Automated process control may be performed based on CO2 feed rate or pH set point control. For dosage based control, a programmable logic controller (PLC),
Carbon dioxide can be a viable alternative to acid for pH suppression in the enhanced coagulation process. process stream and gas flow meters with analog outputs, and gas modulating flow control valve are required. Based on a calculation programmed into the PLC and operator input for CO2 dosage rate (mg/L), the flow control valve modulates to set the gas feed rate. The operator can make adjustments to the dosage rate, based on the observed pH measurement taken from a point
downstream of injection. Process control can be further automated by adjusting the CO2 gas feed rate to meet a target pH level. In this case, the PLC utilizes feedback from a pH analyzer downstream of the CO2 injection point to control the position of the modulating gas flow control valve. The dosage rate is automatically adjusted until the pH reaches the target set point. Conclusions Carbon dioxide can be a viable alternative to acid for pH suppression in the enhanced coagulation process. A CO2 feed system can provide high-level process control while using a product that is safer and easier to handle. Many challenges posed by using mineral acids for pH suppression can be mitigated. There are negligible differences in overall capital and operational costs. Andrew Kleisinger, P.Eng., and M. Jason Stusick, P.Eng., are with MPE Engineering. Email: akleisinger@mpe.ca, jstusick@mpe.ca
www.mpe.ca
Proud of Our Past… Building the Future 66 | February 2016
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Workplace Issues
Gender parity in the engineering boardroom By Leslie Emmons
(left to right) Helen Wojcinski, P.Eng., OSPE Board, Tamara Paton, Mountain Equipment Co-op Board, John Koopman, Partner at Spencer Stuart, Clare Beckton, author, Maureen Jensen, Executive Director and CAO at Ontario Securities Commission, Nancy Hill, Owner at Hill & Schumacher.
W
that in the past boardrooms were old boys networks and many of them had no policies concerning diversity or gender equality. “I think typically [men] are most comfortable working with people just like them… without recognizing the need for or the benefit of diversity. It’s kind of human nature; unless you’re specifically challenged to think about it and whether that challenge comes from government policies, regulators’ policies, or through inspired leadership.” Clare Beckton, founding executive director, Carleton University Centre for Women in Politics & Public Leadership, spoke about a study conducted by the bank Credit Suisse, on corporate gender diversity. The 2014 study found that more women in senior management positions improve companies’ financial performance and investor returns. Despite the benefits, inclusion of women is still growing slowly. According to the math by one of the speakers, John Koopman, Partner at Spencer Stuart, at the current rate, it is going to take about 10 years until there is gender parity on boards.
hen Helen Wojcinski, Nancy Hill, P.Eng., also a board memP.Eng., began her career ber for OSPE, was a moderator during in 1989, only 2 per cent of Saturday’s evening portion of the forum. women in Ontario were For Hill, under-representation in the professional engineers. Now, it’s about boardroom is historical. She explained Leslie Emmons is a writer for ES&E. 12 per cent, but gender inequality in the boardroom persists. On November 28, 2015, the Lassoed School of Engineering at York University tackled this topic by hosting a forum entitled Getting a seat and having a voice: The importance of women engineers at the boardroom table. Presented by the Ontario Society of Professional EngiU.S.F. S.F Fabrication’s Hatch Safety Grate System is available in a variety S.F. ariety of configurations to meet virtually ually anySafety uall application. The System system allows for routine maintenance of pumps neers (OSPE), the all-day event featured U.S.F. S.F Fabrication’s S.F. Hatch Grate is available in a variety ariety of configuration and equipment when closed and may act as an additional barrier er when open. It allows panel discussions by industry experts. to meet virtually ually uall any application. The systemngs allows for routine maintenance of pump without exposing themselves to people to move freely lly around the hatch opening According to Wojcinski, who is on the and equipment whenfall-through. closed and may act as an additional barrier er when open. It allows dangerous board of directors for the OSPE, the idea opening ngs without exposing themselves to people to move freely ly l a round the hatch All Hatch Safety ety G rates feature: for the forum was sparked by a discussion • Tamper-res Tamp r res istant 316 SS hinges dangerous fall-through. with the former Minister of the Status of and nd hardw har are Women, Kellie Leitch. Wojcinski says • Powder-coated Po aluminum grates to All Hatch Safety ety Grates feature: that, although there is growth, it has been resist corrosion res •• Hold Tamper-res Tamp r istant res 316 SS hinges old open devices to lock the grates moving at a slower than desired speed. in theirhardw full upright and nd har areand open position One way to combat the shortage is an Can be ret r rofitted into existing initiative enforced by the Ontario Securi•• Ca Powder-coated Po aluminum grates to access openings ties Commission, which is called “comply resist corrosion res or explain.” The initiative aims to increase • Hold old open devices to lock the grates the number of women in high-ranking poOur experienced team provides a quick turnaround on quotes, in their full upright and open position sitions by requiring companies to disclose drawings and deliveries. Call us today 1.800.668.4533 • Ca Can be ret r rofitted into existing or email us at sales@engineeredpump.com their inclusion of women. OSPE has put “comply or explain” into practice and has access openings reaped the rewards. “We seek out women to run for the OSPE board,” Wojcinski ex1635 Industrial Ave. • Port Coquitlam, BC V3C 6M9 Phone: 604.552.7900 • Fax: 604.552.7901 plained. “We’ve got 50-50 on our OSPE sales@engineeredpump.com • www.engineeredpump.com Our experienced team provides a quick turnaround on quotes, board right now; we have gender parity.”
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February 2016 | 67
Infrastructure
Engineered structural wire mesh is a vital component of accelerated precast construction By David Metcalfe
A
ccelerated precast construction of culverts and small bridges is the use of innovative scheduling, delivery, design, manufacturing and construction methods to reduce on-site construction time and costs, while improving safety and reducing impacts on road users. The growing specification of accelerated precast construction (APC) in Canada by transportation planners and designers focuses on identifying efficient ways to build transportation-related structures in a time of increased public demand for infrastructure rehabilitation, expansion and replacement, along with the ongoing demand for skilled labour. The inclusion of engineered structural mesh in precast concrete structural design may provide immediate relief to limited municipal and provincial infrastructure budgets, while contributing to the resiliency of modern highway systems. Precast reinforced concrete boxes, arches and other three-sided spans are used not only for culverts and small bridges, but also for drainage and retention/detention components of stormwater management plans. Box and pipe culverts are in fact underground bridge structures. Simultaneous construction activity is possible using precast boxes
A slab on grade reinforced with engineered structural wire mesh and rebar. Photo courtesy of Numesh Inc.
and slabs for bridge deck applications. More than one structure on a project can be assembled at the same time, thereby speeding up project delivery. This lowers costs for local communities in several ways. Reduced project delivery time minimizes traffic delays, community disruption, and the land required for rights of way, temporary alignments and utility relocation. Shortened installation time re-
duces impacts on the environment and the possibility of weather-related delays. Accelerating the repetitive production of standard precast products with engineered structural wire mesh rather than with rebar contributes significantly to reduced project delivery time. Precast elements can be delivered to construction sites within schedules for stock piling or for just-in-time delivery.
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68 | February 2016
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Infrastructure Structural welded wire reinforcement (WWR) offers several other benefits over the use of traditional rebar: • WWR is made from higher yield strength steel, up to 550 MPa (80 Ksi) compared to regular 400 MPa (60 Ksi) rebar. • Steel content of a precast structure could be reduced by as much as 27%. • WWR is easier and faster to install, with reduced set-up time and smaller crews than for individual rebar placing and hand tying. Savings can be as much as 50% - 80%. • Smaller wire mats (more closely welded together and equally spaced) result in improved crack control in precast products. • WWR ensures proper positioning in mold forms with the added benefit of hassle-free inspections. • WWR can be bent and rolled to fit a wide range of precast and poured-in-place structures, including pipe and boxes. • Construction with mesh-reinforced products can be as much as 20% faster than projects that specify standard rebar reinforcement. • Using welded wire reinforcement makes the placing or assembly processes easier and thereby contributes to a safer workplace. There is a decrease in the risk of work-related accidents. • Deformed and welded bars create a solid anchor in concrete and there is no reinforcement shifting while concrete is being poured.
Typical rebar tying for poured in place bridge construction. Photo courtesy of Numesh Inc.
• WWR mats are generally available in widths up to 10 feet and lengths up to 39 feet. Much investment has been made into the technology of precast boxes for culverts in recent years. Not too long ago, the largest precast box was 3.75 m x 3.75 m. Some customers needed larger structures to accelerate construction schedules. Precasters responded with concrete boxes that are 6.25 m wide and 4.4 m high. Engineered structural wire mesh can accelerate installation time because less steel area is required for the same resistance. Full compliance with standards and codes is assured during installation. The health and safety of the travel-
ling public is of paramount interest to all involved in the construction of highway infrastructure. The speed of accelerated precast construction, facilitated by precast concrete elements produced with engineered structural wire mesh, not only ensures safe transportation systems, but ones that are resilient to natural and man-made disasters. Changing weather patterns are affecting the hydraulics of critical infrastructure systems, such as storm sewers, culverts and small bridges in many urban areas. David Metcalfe, C.E.T., is with Numesh Inc. Email: david.metcalfe@numesh.com
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www.greatario.com info@greatario.com 519-469-8169 February 2016 | 69
Monitoring Water level loggers typically incorporate built-in micro-processors, pressure sensors and battery power, inside a rugged enclosure designed for long-term underwater deployment. These enclosures can be set up and left unattended to record for months at a time, collecting water level data at user-set intervals and storing it digitally into the logger memory. By operating in a continuous monitoring mode, water level loggers eliminate many of the hassles of manual data collection and also facilitate monitoring of multiple locations. Additionally, water level loggers automate the process of archiving and reporting data. Hydrologists can simply offload logger data to a mobile device or computer and create detailed graphs or data files. The charts can then be printed for documentation purposes, while the electronic data can either be shared with other programs, or archived. While water level loggers have become the data collection instrument of choice for an increasing number of hydrologists, the myriad of product choices available can make it difficult to determine which product is right for any given application.
Hydrologists can simply offload logger data to a mobile device or computer and create detailed graphs or data files.
Key things to consider when choosing a water level logger By Stew Thompson
A
s the demand for water resources continues to grow, the ability to assess the impact of urban development and agriculture is more important than ever. To meet this growing demand,
70 | February 2016
water resource managers, engineers and hydrologists have a greater need to monitor groundwater and surface water levels with water level data loggers. This enables them to document baseline and changing water levels over time.
Barometric compensation There are two primary types of water level loggers – vented and non-vented. Vented loggers include a built-in vent tube that enables them to automatically
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Monitoring
Schematic of Bluetooth datalogger.
compensate for atmospheric pressure changes. By equalizing these changes on both sides of the pressure sensor, a welldesigned and maintained vented water level logger can provide high-accuracy water level data. Non-vented loggers do not use vent tubes, but can be barometrically
compensated using a barometric pressure logger and a simple software function to perform the mathematics. Barometric pressure values can also be obtained from weather stations within a 16 km radius. There is also a type of non-vented logger that incorporates both an in-water sensor and a barometric pressure sensor.
While vented loggers have the potential to provide the greatest accuracy, they also have a number of limitations that can result in bad data and/or data loss. These include: • They are bulkier than non-vented loggers, making them more difficult to transport and deploy. • Most require the use of desiccants for moisture protection. This increases the amount of maintenance required and therefore the total cost of ownership of the logger. Condensation buildup can lead to accuracy problems. • When monitoring water containing contaminants, vent tubes with contaminant-resistant material must be used. This adds to the cost of the logger, as does the decontamination process that is required before it can be redeployed. • Vented loggers lack flexibility when it comes to deployment at various depths. Cables cannot be lengthened without sending them back to the continued overleaf...
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Monitoring supplier, and shortening requires delicately coiling the cable without creating any kinks. • If the end of the vented logger cable is inundated by rising water, all subsequent data are compromised due to unknown pressure compensation dynamics during the flood event. Non-vented loggers are more compact, require minimal maintenance,
can be easily deployed in wells of varying depths, and are not affected by flood water. New non-vented loggers incorporate two sensors, offering the additional advantage of providing water level data directly, with no need for post-processing. A water level logger’s sensor and analog-to-digital (ADC) converter both contribute to error. In fact the error from
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the ADC can be just as significant as the sensor error. System level accuracy For non-vented loggers, system accuracy is the sum of the water level logger’s error, plus the barometric pressure logger’s error. The barometric pressure error is often overlooked, but needs to be included. On the other hand, vented water level loggers or sensors are measuring the differential pressure directly, so there is just the one sensor measurement error to include. Does the specified accuracy relate only to the logger’s sensor, or to the entire logger? You’ll want to confirm with the manufacturer that the specified accuracy refers to the entire measurement rather than just the sensor. For example, to realize a 0.01-foot water level resolution requires at least a 12-bit ADC with a 30 psi water level sensor. Likewise, you should make sure that the barometric logger’s accuracy specification includes all sources of error. Accuracy across the measurement range The accuracy that a water level logger can achieve at the high or low end of a given range may be much different from the accuracy at the middle of the range. For this reason, it is important to find out if the logger’s accuracy specification refers to a single point or the entire measurement range. Temperature variations Some water level loggers are not able to effectively compensate for temperature changes which cause incorrect pressure readings. For this reason, it is important to find out if error that results from temperature changes is included in the accuracy specification, or if there is a separate error term that must be added. Importance of drift The pressure sensors in water level loggers will drift over time. Whether or not you need to be concerned about drift depends on your application. Drift is important in cases when users need absolute pressure values, or when there are no recent reference level or depth measurements available. This may be the case if a water level logger is deployed for more than a year and no reference-level readings are taken during that deployment. Otherwise, drift is not a significant
72 | February 2016
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Monitoring factor, since it will be offset by regular manual reference-level readings. It is also important to be sure to ask if the logger’s accuracy has been verified or measured against National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) traceable standards, which verify accuracy. Software features Just as water level loggers can vary considerably from model to model, so too can the graphing and analysis software or app that accompanies them. It is a good idea to look for something that is highly intuitive so that the learning curve is minimal. You will also want to be able to quickly and easily perform tasks such as configuring loggers, and offloading, graphing and sharing data. Software features to consider depend on where it is being used. For field use, look for capabilities related to deploying loggers and offloading data. For software being used to analyse data in the office, look for more powerful analysis capabilities. If launching many loggers at once, look for software that allows configuration of all the logging parameters once and then uses those settings to configure all of the loggers for deployment. Not only does this save you time, it also helps to ensure that all loggers are configured the same. To convert a non-vented logger’s pressure readings to barometrically-corrected water level values, make sure the logger software has a barometric compensation utility. These tools typically allow you to enter reference level, water density and other values into a dialogue box, and then automatically perform the pressureto-water level conversion. When monitoring water levels at multiple sites, it is often advantageous to be able to view and analyze data from each water level logger on a single graph. Because water level data often needs to be incorporated into other software programs, such as spreadsheets or modeling programs, make sure data can be quickly and easily exported in a range of data formats. While the ability to save and recall projects may seem like a basic feature of any logger software package, many do not support this capability. Data analysis typically involves a number of steps, including merging multiple data files, converting pressure readings to water level units, and formatting charts. Thus, it is www.esemag.com
important that the logger’s software allows work to be saved for easy recall and additional data input. Connecting to the logger Data loggers with wireless connection to a mobile device offer you the convenience of not having to take a laptop into the field, while still being able to view data and change configuration settings in the field if needed. Wireless loggers with Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) technology provide the additional benefit of not having to physically access the logger to push a button to activate communication, as was the case with earlier versions of Bluetooth. Loggers that rely on mechanical plugin connectors can be damaged by water in the field and cause failures. Water level loggers with an optical interface that is completely sealed within the housing eliminate the possibility of water-related damage and/or failures. For loggers with an optical interface, an optical base station is needed to connect them to a computer. The best option for connecting to the
computer is a direct USB interface. Some older loggers use serial communications to the logger, and use a serial-to-USB converter to allow them to be connected to USB. Because the loggers still are using serial communications internally, their data offload speeds are limited to the slower serial speeds. They require special drivers to be installed on the computer. Buying vs. renting In the past, the relatively high price of water level loggers has prevented many hydrologists from purchasing their own. While renting can be a convenient option for short-term deployment, the price of water level loggers has decreased to the point where purchasing is more costeffective for many applications. Stew Thompson is with CAS Data Loggers. For more information, visit www.dataloggerinc.com Article used with the permission of Onset Computer Corp.
February 2016 | 73
Water Supply
Melaka gets tough on non revenue watermain loss By Brad Clarke
M
elaka is a relatively small state on the southwest side of the Malay Peninsula. Its capital, the City of Melaka, is so rich in history and beauty that it is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. With a population around 850,000, the Melaka Water Company Ltd. (SAMB) manages roughly 270,000 service connections for commercial and residential customers. In 2008, the City embarked on an aggressive plan to upgrade their water infrastructure in order to reduce non revenue water (NRW) loss. Leakage rates were at 33.9%, accounting for 152,000 cubic metres of water loss per day, i.e., 55.6 million cubic metres per year. The 4,800 km of ageing pipelines experienced some 3,000 pipe bursts a year. Each pipe burst compounded the water
74 | February 2016
loss problem, and maintenance teams were working constantly. It was clear the current situation needed to be fixed. However, SAMB’s long-term vision was equally important, so they implemented a massive overhaul that would not only fix the present problems, but provide a sustainable plan for population growth. Singer Valve Malaysia worked with the City’s NRW team to help select and give advice on a range of diaphragm operated automatic control valves to help implement their district metered area (DMA) plan. “Pipe bursts and leakage rates are directly affected by water pressure and selection of the necessary pilot operated control valves is a crucial part of any NRW plan,” said Anand Anandarajah, Director of Operations for Singer Valve
Malaysia “Using DMAs to reduce pressure is the most immediate and cost-effective approach to dealing with NRW losses.” After completing a water audit, it was determined that 168 DMAs needed to be established to manage the entire distribution system. These enabled the utility to measure overall flow in and out of a zone. With the help of calibrated meters, the team could then determine the zones that needed serious attention with infrastructure replacements. The second part was to manage the pressure in each zone to supply exactly the right amount that customers in each DMA required. For every one percent increase of pressure the leakage rate goes up by 1.15%, so maintaining the right pressure is crucial. It is also typical for demand to fluctuate between night and day, causing the pressure to fluctuate. A pressure reducing valve (PRV) is needed to accommodate this. SAMB put in a combination of 138 pressure reducing and altitude valves, that ranged in size from 100 mm to 200 mm, to provide a consistent flow in each DMA as required. The PRVs and their associated pilot system sense the downstream pressure through a connection at the valve outlet. When pressure changes, the downstream pressure set point remains constant. This controls the valve position by accurately controlling the chamber above the diaphragm. This ensures that the downstream pressure is maintained steady at the set point regardless of fluctuation in flow or upstream pressure. In numerous DMAs, where upstream pressures range between 3 to 4 Bar, the Singer 2 PR SC BT pressure reducing valve was used to reduce the required downstream pressure of 1.5 Bar in the day and 1 Bar at night. This was done by a simple switch between day and night, utilising a battery timer and two pressure set points. The battery timer, in conjunction with a latching solenoid, allows downstream pressure to be selected based on time requirements and utilization of two pressure reducing pilots. One controls night time pressure downstream of the valve (1 Bar), while the other controls day time pressure downstream of the valve (1.5 Bar). The units with the battery timers are typically used when more precise control is
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Water Supply
SAMB put in a combination of 138 pressure reducing and altitude valves.
required beyond that of a normal PRV. This can significantly reduce water loss by giving two pressure options instead of one. The units with the battery timers can also be retrofitted easily to an existing PRV, should requirements change. Melaka’s older style level valves had
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also become inaccurate and allowed reservoirs to overflow, wasting water and increasing NRW. They were replaced with altitude valves that are used to control the maximum reservoir levels and accurately control draw down before re-filling. Levels are now accurately
controlled with minimal maintenance. The end result is that pressure leakage has been reduced from 33.9% to 21.4 %, which is a total savings of US$5,232,857 per year. Pipe bursts are down by 93% from 3000 to 200 a year. Reservoirs are maintaining their desired levels of water without overflowing, which will help delay water rationing in the dry season. Melaka can now provide more connections and, with a 36% increase in revenues, upgrades to infrastructure are a manageable part of operations. The utility also updated their geographic information system and network modeling for monitoring the flow of the entire distribution system at all times. Crews are now able to schedule proactive maintenance. These cost savings and results were recognized by two federal government awards, one for green technology in reducing NRW loss and the other for the improvements to the entire system. Brad Clarke is with Singer Valve. For more information, visit www.singervalve.com
February 2016 | 75
Environmental Remediation
Orange peel waste helping to clean up mercury pollution
A
n inexpensive, non-toxic polymer that draws mercury out of water and soil has been developed by Dr. Justin Chalker from Flinders University in Australia. It is made from the industrial waste products sulfur and limonene. Citrus rinds, such as oranges and lemons, contain considerable amounts of limonene. Dr. Chalker says the new polymer is cheap to produce due to the global abundance of waste sulfur and limonene. That makes it affordable for use in large-scale environmental cleanups, to coat pipes carrying domestic water and wastewater, and even in removing mercury from large bodies of water. This has significant implications for human health as mercury exposure, whether through the skin or through ingestion, is proven to damage the central nervous system. It is particularly dangerous to pregnant women and children. “Mercury contamination plagues many areas of the world, affecting both food and water supplies and creating a serious need for an efficient and cost-effective method to trap it,” says Dr. Chalker. “Each year, some 60 to 70 million tonnes of waste sulfur are produced by the petroleum industry, and more than 70,000 tonnes of limonene by the citrus industry, mainly from orange peels. The chemical merger of these two industrial byproducts proved remarkably easy. The real surprise came when we studied its behaviour in metal binding. “Because the polymer has a high sulfur content, we anticipated it should have a high affinity for metals that bond to sulfur. This was indeed the case. We found it could remove more than 50% of the mercury from water after only a single treatment. “Preliminary studies indicate that the sulfur-limonene polysulphide (SLP) is not toxic. This is a critical finding if the polymer is to be used directly in natural ecosystems such as rivers, lakes and oceans. It can also be used as a mercury detector, because of the chemical reac-
76 | February 2016
Max Worthington (left) and Dr Justin Chalker (right) examining a sample of the sulfur-limonene polysulfide. (Photo Credit: Ashton Claridge, Flinders University
A block of the sulfur-limonene polysulfide, a polymer synthesised entirely from industrial byproducts.
tion which causes it to turn yellow. “To make the SLP polymer, we melt the sulfur, and add limonene to it and then can coat devices or make it into any shape we like,” said Dr. Chalker. By lining storage containers with SLP, Dr. Chalker and his colleagues have successfully removed mercury
from river and pond water, and soil. The material can reduce concentrations of mercury a thousand fold, from several parts per million down to several parts per billion. For more information, visit www.flinders.edu.au
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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The new gamma/ X solenoid diaphragm metering pump increases overall efficiencies, resulting in low ownership cost.
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X-cellent Reliability
• The clever electronics in gamma/ X offers more precise control. Airlocks, overpressure and negative pressure are all automatically detected and corrected –while eliminating complicated accessory devices. • Cutting-edge control technology with predictive intelligence, sensor-free pressure measurement, innovative solenoid control, and extremely low-wear drive are some key highlights of the new gamma/ X.
X-treme User-friendliness.
• The new click wheel programming interface of the gamma/ X takes the frustration out of operation. The intuitive menu format and easy-to-navigate sub menus allow quick commissioning right out of the box. Forget fumbling with the manuals and having to decipher key press sequences — gamma/ X makes it easy. • Upstanding wireless adjustment of pump information and programming via Bluetooth enabled Android devices.
Phosphorus removal
IntelliPro® Filtration Optimization System improves process efficiency while reducing cost. It is a PC based control system for Aqua-Aerobic® cloth media filters that uses real-time data to optimize chemical addition to meet phosphorus removal objectives. The system features automatic, optimal-dose selection for metal salts, polymer, and pH adjusting chemicals. It is an efficient and economical solution that assists plants in achieving low level phosphorus, while minimizing expense associated with costly chemicals.
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Polypropylene piping systems
Chemline polypropylene piping systems (pipe, fittings, valves) are superior to CPVC for ferric chloride and sodium hydroxide applications in sewage and water treatment plants. Temperature and pressure ranges are greater and they 78 | February 2016
• Highly visible warnings/alarms and large LCD display make in-the-field operation safer and easier.
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Chemline Plastics The Chem-Scale™ and Tote Bin Scale™ from Force Flow allow operators to accurately monitor chemicals such as sodium hypochlorite, polymer and fluoride, when stored and fed from day tanks and IBC type totes. Systems prevent over- and under-feed conditions and also enable the documentation of amount fed. Available with the Century® hydraulic dial, the advanced multi-channel Wizard 4000®, and other indicators.
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H2Flow Equipment
Chlorine emergency shutoff
The Gemini® Emergency Shutoff System adds a new level of safety to your gas chlorine feed system. Designed specifically for dual 150lb chlorine cylinder applications, the Gemini System, with its two Terminator® actuators, stops a chlorine leak within seconds of detection by automatically closing the cylinder valves. All Fire Codes recognize it as an acceptable alternative to a scrubber.
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Halogen Valve Systems
Stormwater treatment
Engineers specifying stormwater treatment systems will now have more sizing tool options available to them. Hydro International have released the First Defense® High Capacity and the Downstream Defender®, their newest sizing calculator for vortex stormwater separators to be used for the removal of trash and sediment from stormwater. This new tool will allow engineers to size, configure and generate drawings for treatment systems by entering site-specific information such as net annual rainfall, flow rate, and TSS size for removal.
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Hydro International
Stormwater management
The new Online Stormwater Design Software – PCSWMM for Stormceptor®, is the fastest way to determine the most appropriate size Stormceptor® for your site. This easy-to-
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Product & Service Showcase use online system is based on the U.S. EPA’s SWMM model which uses localized rainfall data, and allows for a quick turnaround. Start using the free PCSWMM for Stormceptor software today.
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Imbrium Systems
Suspended solids meter
Markland’s Suspended Solids Density Meter offers real-time knowledge of primary, secondary and return-activated sludge/silt concentrations in pipes, tanks and clarifiers. Its non-intrusive, ultrasonic sensor provides continuous percent SS readings, allowing users to program underflow pumps to shut off before sludge density becomes too thin, and to optimize dosing for preferred feed density and enhanced dewatering.
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Markland Specialty Engineering
Potable tank mixing
When tanks need mixing, the best solution is also the fastest one. Easy to install, simple to integrate, no tank entry required, the GridBee® GS Series complete floor-to-surface mixing creates uniform disinfectant distribution, which reduces disinfectant usage and saves you money. No more stagnation. No more short-circuiting. No more ice damage. GridBee GS Series Electric Mixers are always the right fit.
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Medora Corporation
Lake circulators
SolarBee® Lake Circulators add an important layer of proven protection against cyanobacteria (bluegreen algae) blooms and increase the overall health of your lake. Cyanobacteria blooms decrease available recreation days, create taste and odour issues, and can emit dangerous cyanotoxins without warning. Acre for acre, SolarBee Lake Circulators are the most affordable solution on the market.
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Medora Corporation
Resilient wedge gate valve
With a 350psi working pressure, the Mueller A-2361 resilient wedge gate valve is ready for the increasing demands of tomorrow’s water systems. It features dual purpose lifting lugs, a T-head bolt retention design and a unique ‘pressure assist’ wedge geometry.
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Mueller Canada
Rotary lobe pumps
Börger makes an extremely efficient, reliable and unbeatably easy to maintain pump. All spare and wear parts are durable and very cost-effective. The unique MIP (Maintenance in Place) system for Börger pumps makes it easy, since all wear parts can be replaced in situ without dismantling any pipe or drive systems.
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Screw blowers
Integrating the proven benefits of screw technology, Atlas Copco’s ZS Blower Range will cut your energy costs by an average of 30% compared to rotary lobe blowers. Delivered ready-for-use, and with the highest level of quality from Atlas Copco, the ZS screw blowers provide the utmost in proven reliability, performance and efficiency.
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Spill Management
High performance automation
The portable, electrically operated Hydrolift-2 actuator is perfect for purging and sampling 2” diameter monitoring wells, up to 150 to 200 feet deep, and is the ideal choice for the frequent user of Waterra’s inertial pumping system with moderate to extreme pumping requirements (standard, high and low flows).
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Waterra Pumps
Peristaltic pumps
The Spectra Field-Pro is a state-of-the-art peristaltic pump that features a heavy-duty, all-inclusive design. This means no external cables, chargers or batteries to worry about.
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Pro Aqua
Flow meter
The DulcoFlow flow meter from ProMinent provides accurate measurement of pulsating flow from metering pumps using ultrasonic technology. DulcoFlow measures the volume of
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Waterra Pumps
continued overleaf... February 2016 | 79
Product & Service Showcase Vapour sampling
The Waterra Vapour Sampling EcoPlug™ is a specialized well cap that uses a custom brass valve to allow you to extract a sample of the trapped headspace vapours. Pressure tested to 20 PSI, these well caps prevent the loss of well gasses to the atmosphere.
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Waterra Pumps
Water level indicator The new Waterra digital WS-2 Water Level Indicator is an improved version of the original WS-1. The WS-2 is available with either imperial or metric tapes and open or closed reel formats.
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Waterra Pumps
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Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
ES&E ’s 28th Annual Equipment Specifiers’ Guide May/June 2014
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Storage Tanks, Containment & Spills
Solving water hammer issues Recycling fracking wate r
Sonar mapping storage ponds Protecting surface waters from WWTP discharges
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Products & Services. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 A&A ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS INC. 16 Young St Woodstock ON N4S 3L4 519-266-4680 F: 519-266-3666 E: lcoghill@aaenvironmental.ca Contact: Dr Ali Rasoul
Contact: Ralph Wiech, Principal Consultant
AIRZONE ONE LTD.
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222 Matheson Blvd E Mississauga ON L4Z 1X1 905-890-6957 F: 905-890-8629 E: fdi-giovanni@airzoneone.com Contact: Franco DiGiovanni, Senior Air Quality Modeller
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Collingwood ON L0M 1P0 705-445-9657 E: office@allyenvironmental.ca Contact: Chris Hartley, Project Consultant
ACTIVATION LABORATORIES LTD.
41 Bittern St Ancaster ON L9G 4V5
ADI GROUP INC.
ALTECH ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTING LTD.
370 Wilsey Rd Fredericton NB E3B 6E9
12 Banigan Dr Toronto ON M4H 1E9 800-323-4937
AECOM CANADA LTD.
105 Commerce Valley Dr W Markham ON L3T 7W3 905-886-7022 F: 905-886-9494 (Full listing: Pg 104)
AEL ENVIRONMENT
3-1705 Argentia Rd Mississauga ON L5N
AMEC EARTH & ENVIRONMENTAL
160 Traders Blvd East Mississauga ON L4Z 3K7 Contact: Steve Lamming
AMEC FOSTER WHEELER
AERCOUSTICS ENGINEERING LTD.
165-50 Ronson Dr Toronto ON M9W 1B3 416-249-3361
3215 N Service Rd Burlington ON L7R 3G2 905-335-2353 Contact: Ron Scheckenberger
AET GROUP INC.
AN-GEO ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS LTD
531 Wellington St N Kitchener ON N2H 5L6 519-576-9723 Ext 305 Contact: Scott Freiburger
AGAT LABORATORIES
ANREP KRIEG DESILETS GRAVELLE
2910-12 St NE Calgary AB T2E 7P7
204-101 Worthington St E North Bay ON P1B 1G5
AIMS ENVIRONMENTAL
111-1020 Denison St Markham ON L3R 1B5
AINLEY GROUP
280 Pretty River Pkwy Collingwood ON L9Y 4J7 705-445-3451
AIR, EARTH & WATER ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS LTD. 423 Ireland Rd Simcoe ON N3Y 5J1
AIR, WATER & SOIL CONSULTANTS 9 Andersen Ct Westerly RI 02891 860-415-0017 E: awsconsult@gmail.com
www.esemag.com
204-8708, 48 Avenue Edmonton AB T6E 5L1 780-450-3377 F: 780-450-3232 E: angeo@sprynet.com Contact: Dr. David Ho
APEX ENGINEERING
4050 Fieldstone Crossing Missoula MT 59802 406-459-2776 E: mark@apexengineering.us Contact: Mark Reinsel, President
APLIN & MARTIN CONSULTANTS LTD.
12448 82 Ave Ste 201 Surrey BC V3W 3E9
APPLIED ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES 540 Avis Dr Ann Arbor MI 48108 734-904-8257 Contact: Saad Ghalib
AQUA TERRE SOLUTIONS INC.
909-5th Ave SW Calgary AB T2P 3G5
ARCADIS CANADA
11-121 Granton Dr Richmond Hill ON L4B 3N4
ASSOCIATED ENGINEERING
500-9888 Jasper Ave Edmonton AB T5J 5C6 780-451-7666 F: 780-454-7698 E: mahl@ae.ca www.ae.ca Contact: Lianna Mah, Vice President, Business Development Associated Engineering provides consulting services in the water, infrastructure, environmental, energy, asset management, buildings, and transportation sectors. Our services include assessments, planning, feasibility studies, design, construction, training, operational assistance, and project management. Recognized as an industry leader, we received the Canadian Consulting Engineers Schreyer Award two times, most recently for the West Edmonton Sanitary Sewer Tunnel project and, in 2006, for the Gold Bar Wastewater Treatment Plant Water Reuse Facility in Edmonton.
ATKINSON DAVIES INC.
60 Meg Dr London ON N6E 3T6
ATLANTIC ACOUSTICAL ASSOCIATES 5662 Fenwick St Halifax NS B3H 1R3
ATLANTIC ENVIRONMENTAL TRAINING & ON-SITE SERVICES INC.
4-2 Lakeside Park Dr Lakeside NS B3T 1L7
AUREUS SOLUTIONS INC.
398 Bagot St Kingston ON K7K 3B9 613-893-3680 E: info@aursi.ca Contact: Ted Bailey
AXOR EXPERTS-CONSEILS INC.
400-5101 rue Buchan Montréal QC H4P 1S4
BARENCO INC.
500-220 Commerce Valley Dr W Markham ON L3T 0A8
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Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories
BCI ACADEMY
2201-250 Yonge St Toronto ON M5B 2L7
CAMBIUM ABORIGINAL
BEASY NICOLL ENGINEERING LTD.
80 Eileen Stubbs Ave Dartmouth NS B3B 1Y6
1109 Mississauga St Curve Lake ON K0L 1R0 705-876-8523 F: 705-657-9231 E: mjacobs@cambiumaboriginal.com Contact: Michael Jacobs, General Manager
BERLIE TECHNOLOGIES INC.
CAMBIUM INC.
1245 Industrielle La Prairie QC J5R 2E4
BFC TECHNOLOGIES
960 Edgeley Blvd Vaughan ON L4K 4V4
52 Hunter St E/PO Box 325 Peterborough ON K9H 1G4 705-742-7900
CAMBRIDGE MATERIALS TESTING LTD.
13-6991 Millcreek Dr Mississauga ON L5N 6B9
CANADIAN CONCRETE PIPE & PRECAST ASSOCIATION
905-761-0599 Contact: Julio Alva
BIO-LIMNO RESEARCH & CONSULTING, INC. 29 Stone Gate Drive Halifax NS B3N 3J2 902-425-8989 F: 902-425-8989 E: magbeti@bio-limno.com www.bio-limno.com Contact: Michael Agbeti, PhD, President Bio-Limno Research & Consulting is an environmental consulting firm that provides a variety of services related to water quality. We specialize in algal analysis (including diatom algae), zooplankton analysis, interpretation of water quality data, and writing of scientific reports.
BIOTHERMICA
426 Sherbrooke Est Montréal QC H2L 1J6
BLACK & VEATCH CANADA
501-50 Minthorn Blvd Markham ON L3T 7X8 905-747-8506
BLANEY MCMURTRY LLP BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
1500-2 Queen St E Toronto ON M5C 3G5 416-593-1221
BLUMETRIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
CASSEN TESTING LABORATORIES
51 International Blvd Toronto ON M9W 6H3
BZ ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTING
102-2934 Baseline Rd Ottawa ON K2H 1B2 613-233-5300 F: 613-233-5501 E: cbrimley@cala.ca www.cala.ca Contact: Charlie Brimley, President & CEO Laboratory accreditation, proficiency testing and training services. Full international recognition worldwide through APLAC and ILAC.
82 | February 2016
CRANDALL ENGINEERING LTD.
400-1077 St George Blvd Moncton NB E1E 4C9
D.L. SERVICES INC.
D&G ENVIRO-GROUP
PO Box 20040 Saint John NB E2L 5B2
CCI GROUP
200-7900 Keele St Vaughan ON L4K 2A3 905-856-5200
C.C. TATHAM & ASSOCIATES LTD.
200-115 Sandford Fleming Dr Collingwood ON L9Y 5A6 E: info@cctatham.com
108-6710, rue Saint-Jacques Montreal QC H4B 1V8 514-932-1688, 888-932-1688 F: 514-932-1911 E: info@dgenviro.com
DARRYL M. ROBINS CONSULTING INC.
4844 Highway #6 Miller Lake ON N0H 1Z0
DBA ENGINEERING LTD.
401 Hanlan Rd Vaughan ON L4L 3T1
CETCON ENGINEERING SERVICES
17 Farmington Dr St Catharines ON L2S 3E8 301-40 Huron St Harbouredge Bldg Collingwood ON L9Y 4R3
CH2M
PO Box 608 Georgina ON L0E 1R0 905-722-6035
CHISHOLM FLEMING & ASSOCIATES
301-317 Renfrew Dr Markham ON L3R 9S8 905-474-1458 F: 905-474-1910 E: cfa@chisholmfleming.com Contact: R.G. Chisholm, P.Eng.
CHURCH & TROUGHT, A TRINITY CONSULTANTS COMPANY
106-885 Don Mills Rd Toronto ON M3C 1V9
DESJARDINS FINANCIAL SECURITY (DFSIN)
5070 Dixie Rd Mississauga ON L4W 1C9 905-366-4419 F: 905-276-4964 E: carol.smith@dfsin.ca Contact: Carol Smith, RIAC As a Certified Responsible Investment Advisor, I specialize in providing Responsible Investments to my clients who are professionals, small businesses owners and the family market. Unlike traditional mainstream investments, Responsible Investments provide an overlay, that scrutinizes the environmental, social and corporate governance impact of the businesses invested within the portfolios. I am happy to meet with you to help you align your money with your values.
DESSAU INC.
1060 University Montréal QC H3B 4V3
DILLON CONSULTING LIMITED
800-235 Yorkland Blvd Toronto ON M2J 4Y8 416-229-4646
C.C. TATHAM & ASSOCIATES LTD.
CALA
7750 Corporate Blvd Plain City OH 43064 614-526-2040
CBCL LIMITED
125-70C Mountjoy St N Timmins ON P4N 4V7 705-268-6220
200-115 Sandford Fleming Dr Collingwood ON L9Y 5A6 E: info@cctatham.com
PO Box 218 Shawinigan QC G9N 6T9
1221 - 8th St E Saskatoon SK S7H 3L3
CHEM SOLV
200-302 Wellman Lane Saskatoon SK S7T 0J1
70 Valleywood Dr Markham ON L3R 4T5 416-987-6161
PO Box 3014 - 120 County Rd 64 Brighton ON K0K 1H0 613-475-4155
BOLTON PHOTOSCIENCES INC.
BULLEE CONSULTING LTD.
COLE ENGINEERING GROUP LTD.
CATTERAL & WRIGHT LTD.
PO Box 1179 Mount Forest ON N0G 2L0
2-109 Vanderhoof Ave Toronto ON M4G 2H7
2222 30 Ave NE Calgary AB T2E 7K9
COX-COLVIN & ASSOCIATES INC.
248-675 Queen St. S. Kitchener ON N2M 1A1 519-745-5066 E: bob@caskanette.on.ca Contact: Bob Caskanette
400-245 Consumers Rd Toronto ON M2J 1R3 416-499-0090
BRUCE A. BROWN ASSOCIATES LIMITED
CLIFTON ASSOCIATES
CASKANETTE UDALL CONSULTING ENGINEERS
BM ROSS & ASSOCIATES
203-2621 Portage Ave Winnipeg MB R3J 0P7 204-889-5275
12 Twisted Oak St Brampton ON L6R 1T1 905-458-1883 Contact: Joe Mihelcic
CONSULTANTS MESAR INC.
CF CROZIER & ASSOCIATES
BOMA ENVIRONMENTAL & SAFETY INC.
CLEARVIEW GEOPHYSICS INC.
200-447 Frederick St Kitchener ON N2H 2P4 519-489-4488
3108 Carp Rd/PO Box 430 Ottawa ON K0A 1L0 613-839-3053 F: 613-839-5376 E: growth@blumetric.ca Contact: Gary Black
628 Cheviton Cr NW Edmonton AB T6R 2M5
expertise in environmental assessment, process optimization, water resources, sustainable development and LEED facilities design.
CIMA CANADA INC.
500-5935 Airport Rd Mississauga ON L4V 1W5 905-695-1005 F: 905-695-0525 E: troy.briggs@cima.ca www.cima.ca Contact: Troy Briggs, Director, Wastewater CIMA is a Canadian consulting engineering company with 2,000+ employees in offices across Canada and in Mississauga, Kitchener, Burlington, Bowmanville and Ottawa. CIMA’s Ontario offices specialize in planning, design and construction management for municipal water, wastewater and infrastructure facilities. We offer
DM WILLIS ASSOCIATES LTD.
150 Jamieson Dr Peterborough ON K9J 0B9
DML ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES LTD.
7516 Industrial St Niagara Falls ON L2H 1B1
DOWN 2 EARTH ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES INC.
50 Admiral Rd Kitchener ON N2M 1R1
DR. MIKE SHIRALIAN
38 Carluke Cres North York ON M2L 2J4 647-347-4517 E: mikex0123@gmail.com
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Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories DRAGUN CORPORATION
436 Elmstead Rd/RR 1 Windsor ON N8N 2L9 519-979-7300 E: cpare@dragun.com Contact: Christopher Pare, P. Geo
DST CONSULTING ENGINEERS INC.
Five decades of excellence in infrastructure planning & engineering
203-2150 Thurston Dr Ottawa ON K1G 5T9
EARTHFX INC.
3363 Yonge St Toronto ON M4N 2M6 416-410-4260 E: dirk@earthfx.com Contact: Dirk Kassenaar
EBA ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS LTD.
115-200 Rivercrest Dr SE Calgary AB T2C 2X5
Markham, ON 905-747-8506
ECO CANADA
200-308 – 11 Ave SE Calgary AB T2G 0Y2 403-233-0748 E: info@eco.ca Contact: Jennifer Schultz, Marketing Specialist
Vancouver, BC 604-251-5722 Edmonton, AB 780-455-4300
ECOCERN
2311-55 Harbour Square Toronto ON M5J 2L1 416-699-6045 E: DHL@ecocern.ca Contact: David Lewis, Owner
Consulting • Engineering • Construction • Operation
WeKnowWater@BV.com www.bv.com
ECOH
1-75 Courtneypark Dr W Mississauga ON L5W 0E3 Black&Veatch_ND.14_ProCard_TP.indd 905-795-2800 F: 905-795-2870 Contact: Catherine Mills
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Specialists in a comprehensive range of Municipal, Environmental, Structural, Building, Water Resources, Transportation and Municipal Engineering
EDA COLLABORATIVE INC.
10212 - 111 St Edmonton AB T5K 1K9
EFI GLOBAL
Collingwood
5-67 Frid St Hamilton ON L8P 4M3
Bracebridge
Email: info@cctatham.com
Orillia
Barrie
Web: www.cctatham.com
EMSL ANALYTICAL INC.
200 Route 130 North Cinnaminson NJ 8077
ENVIRON EC (CANADA) INC.
100-2400 Meadowpine Blvd Mississauga ON L5N 6S2
ENVIRONMENTAL BUSINESS CONSULTANTS 33 Wanita Road Mississauga ON L5G 1B3 905-271-2845 E: john.nicholson@ebccanada.com Contact: John Nicholson
ENVIRONMENTAL DYNAMICS INC.
301 George St Prince George BC V2L 1R4
ENVIROTECH ASSOCIATES LIMITED
1632-433 Norwich Ave Woodstock ON N4S 0A8 519-539-8129 Contact: Henry Vens
ENVIROWEST CONSULTANTS INC.
101-1515 Broadway St Port Coquitlam BC V3C 6M2
ERAMOSA ENGINEERING INC.
90 Woodlawn Road W. Guelph ON N1H 1B2 519-763-7774 F: 519-763-7757 E: david.chamberlain@eramosa.com www.eramosa.com Contact: David Chamberlain Since 1998 Eramosa has been providing our clients with specialists in the areas of SCADA, process control, instrumentation, automation, information technology, and networking. We have expertise in planning, project management, conceptual, preliminary, and detailed design, as well as in the implementation of technology solutions using both traditional and alternative delivery methods. Through dedicated attention to our clients we strive to develop long-lasting relationships based on trust, mutual respect, integrity, and technical excellence.
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Engineers and Environmental Consultants 1-800-265-9662 www.rjburnside.com
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Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories
ETCOS ENVIRONMENTAL
H.A. FRANCO & ASSOCIATES INC.
EXOVA
HATCH MOTT MACDONALD LTD.
96 Terrosa Rd Markham ON L3S 2N1 905-471-9890 Check form E: info@etcoscanada.com Contact: Ravi Sharma 2935 Speakman Dr Sheridan Pk Mississauga ON L5K 1B3
EXP SERVICES
301-56 Queen St E Brampton ON L6V 4M8
FIRST NATIONS ENGINEERING SERVICES LTD. 55 Parkside Dr Paris ON N3L 3S6
FRANZ ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
4005 Hickory Dr Mississauga ON L4W 1L1
FUNDY ENGINEERING & CONSULTING LTD.
Richmond Hill ON 647-468-1134 E: hafranco.associates@gmail.com Contact: Hector Franco
301-200 S Syndicate Ave Thunder Bay ON P7E 1C9
HATFIELD CONSULTANTS PARTNERSHIP
200-850 Harbourside Dr North Vancouver BC V7P 0A3 604-926-3261
HEALTHY ENVIRONMENTAL
1370 Wallace Rd. Unit 1 Oakville ON L6L2Y2 289-837-0444 E: info@healthyenvironmental.ca Contact: Henry Kwasniak
27 Wellington Row Saint John NB E2L 3H4
G3 CONSULTING LTD.
206-8501 162nd St Surrey BC V4N 1B2
GEOADVICE ENGINEERING INC.
203-2502 St Johns St Port Moody BC V3H 2B4 604-931-0550
GEOPAC INC.
101-12391 Horseshoe Way Richmond BC V7A 4X6 604-241-7151 F: 604-241-7119 E: wwong@geopac.ca Contact: Wendy Wong
GEOSYNTEC CONSULTANTS
2-130 Research Lane Guelph ON N1G 5G3
GHD
651 Colby Dr Waterloo ON N2V 1C2
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING 10312 N. Holly Road Holly MI 48442 231-360-3971 F: 810-238-9195 E: akorreck@globaleei.com Contact: Alaina Korreck
GLOBE 2016
578-999 Canada Pl World Trade Centre Vancouver BC V6C 3E1 604-695-5001
GM BLUEPLAN
650 Woodlawn Rd W Guelph ON N1K 1B8
GOLDER ASSOCIATES LTD.
100 Scotia Ct Whitby ON L1N 8Y6
GOOD HARBOUR LABORATORIES
2596 Dunwin Dr. Mississauga ON L5L 1J5 905-696-7276 E: gwilliams@goodharbourlabs.com Contact: Greg Williams
GREENWOOD & ASSOCIATES
280 Inglewood Dr Toronto ON M4T 1J1
GREER GALLOWAY GROUP
1620 Wallbridge-Loyalist Rd Belleville ON K8N 4Z5
GROUNDWATER ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SERVICES INC.
331 Rodinea Rd Maple ON L6A 4P5
HEMMERA ENVIROCHEM INC.
4730 Kingsway Floor 18 Burnaby BC V5H 0C6 604-669-0424 F: 604-669-0430 E: rwhyard@hemmera.com www.hemmera.com Contact: Rhoni Whyard, Director, Marketing & Communications Hemmera is a boutique environmental consultancy that has been making a difference across Canada and around the globe since 1994. Hemmera’s highly-respected, multi-disciplinary professionals are leaders in environmental and social sciences and engineering. For Hemmera, creating opportunities for clients and staff means going beyond technical services – Hemmera’s trusted advisors support project success by providing customized solutions for industry, First Nations, and government.
HEROLD ENGINEERING LTD.
3701 Shenton Rd Nanaimo BC V9T 2H1
HGC ENGINEERING
203-2000 Argentia Rd - Plaza 1 Mississauga ON L5N 1P7
HOULE CHEVIER ENGINEERING LTD.
32 Steacie Drive Ottawa ON K2K 2A9 613-836-1422
1601-1 James Street South Hamilton ON L8P 4R5 905-522-0012 ext 224 F: 905-522-0031 E: beres@hydromantis.com Contact: Robert P Beres, Executive VP
INTERNAT ENERGY SOLUTIONS CANADA
403A-425 Adelaide St W Toronto ON M5V 3C1 416-628-4658
INTERNATIONAL WATER CONSULTANTS LTD.
PO Box 310 - 342 Bayview Dr Barrie ON L4M 4T4 705-733-0111
ISL ENGINEERING
1-6325 12 St SE Calgary AB T2V 2K1
107, rue St Louis Saint-Eustache QC J7R 1X8
GSS ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS LTD. GUNNELL ENGINEERING LTD.
106-1110 Stellar Dr Newmarket ON L3Y 7B7 905-868-9400 F: 905-853-5734 E: liz@gunnellengineering.com Contact: Elizabeth Lew, Operations Manager
84 | February 2016
J.L. RICHARDS & ASSOCIATES LTD.
864 Lady Ellen Pl Ottawa ON K1Z 5M2 613-728-3571 F: 613-728-6012 www.jlrichards.ca Contact: Brian Hein P.Eng., Chief Environmental Engineer Providing a wide range of environmental services including water and wastewater treatment plants, environmental assessment and planning, solid waste management, water resources and stormwater management, sewer and watermain condition assessment and rehabilitation design and energy management. Offices also in Kingston, Sudbury, Timmins, North Bay, Hawkesbury and Guelph.
J.M. DAVIS AND ASSOCIATES LIMITED 50 Ann St Georgetown ON L7G 2V2
JFM ENVIRONMENTAL LTD.
1-318 Neptune Cr London ON N6G 5G6
KAVANAGH ASSOCIATES (A DIV. OF R.V. ANDERSON ASSOCIATES LTD.) 74 O’Leary Ave/P O Box 13039 Stn A St John’s NL A1B 3V8
KERR WOOD LEIDAL ASSOCIATES LTD.
200-4185A Still Creek Dr Burnaby BC V5C 6G9 604-294-2088
KLOHN CRIPPEN BERGER LTD.
500-2618 Hopewell Pl NE Calgary AB T1Y 7J7
KNIGHT PIESOLD LTD.
1400-750 Pender St W West Vancouver BC V6C 2T8
LABELLE, RYAN, GENIPRO INC.
436, rue de la Madone Mont-Laurier QC J9L 1S3
HYDROMANTIS ENVIRONMENTAL SOFTWARE SOLUTIONS, INC.
GROUPE CONSEIL BELLEFEUILLE
104D-1010 9th Ave W Owen Sound ON N4K 5R7 519-372-4828
development, monitoring, reclamation. Wastewater (municipal and industrial) collection, treatment, disposal. Organic sludges; aerobic and anaerobic treatment and disposal. Storm drainage, solid and liquid waste management. Water and wastewater treatment equipment fabrication and supply. Project design, tendering, construction supervision and management.
J.K. ENGINEERING LTD.
320-7930 Bowness Rd NW Calgary AB T3B 0H3 403-247-1777 F: 403-286-9895 E: jkeng@telus.net www.jkeng.ca Contact: Jan Korzeniowski, President Engineering consulting since 1987. Water supply, treatment, distribution. Groundwater
LEHDER ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
210-704 Mara Street Point Edward ON N7V 1X4 519-336-4101 F: 519-336-4311 E: mroehler@lehder.com www.lehder.com Contact: Mark Roehler, Principal LEHDER is one of the largest air quality management companies in Canada. All air quality aspects – source testing, emission inventories, air dispersion modeling, data interpretation and approval applications – are managed internally by our highly skilled, multidisciplinary teams located in Point Edward (Sarnia), Ontario and Edmonton, Alberta. LEHDER also provides regulatory training services which are available on-site or online. We provide integrated solutions for our clients to address complex problems – visit www.lehder.com for more information.
LPT ENVIRO INC.
404-540 boul de l’Hopital Gatineau QC J8V 3T2 819-243-5853
LUMINULTRA TECHNOLOGIES LTD.
520 King St Fredericton NB E3B 6G3 506-459-8777
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Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories LVM SENDEX LTD.
MSR SOLUTIONS INC.
NEWFOUNDLAND DESIGN ASSOCIATES LTD.
MAAT ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING CORP.
MTE CONSULTANTS INC.
NEXT ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
417 Exeter Rd London ON N6E 2Z3
888 Gladiola Ave Victoria BC V8Z 2T6
F2-1273 North Service Rd E Oakville ON L6H 1A7 905-829-1749
MALROZ ENGINEERING INC.
84 Beverley St Kingston ON K7L 3Y6
280 Torbay Rd St. John’s NL A1A 3W8
520 Bingemans Centre Dr Kitchener ON N2B 3X9 519-743-6500 E: BLawlor@mte85.com Contact: Bill Lawlor, Manager, Environmental
215-2550 Boundary Rd Burnaby BC V5M 3Z3
NOVUS ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
105-150 Research Lane Guelph ON N1G 4T2 226-706-8080
MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE GROUP
OHE CONSULTANTS
200-800 Dufferin St Vaughan ON L4K 0C5
311 Matheson Blvd E Mississauga ON L4Z 1X8 905-890-9000
MYM CONSULTING SERVICES
617 Fothergill Blvd Burlington ON L7L 6E3
OPUS DAYTON KNIGHT CONSULTANTS LTD.
NADINE INTERNATIONAL INC.
MANTECH INC.
5473 Highway 6 North Guelph ON N1H 6J2 519-763-4245 E: rmenegotto@mantech-inc.com www.mantech-inc.com Contact: Robert Menegotto MANTECH is a leading manufacturer of laboratory and online analyzers for water and soil quality. With >1,900 analyzers installed worldwide in 45 countries, 100,000s of samples are analyzed everyday by MANTECH systems. We employ Green and Fast methods, many regulatory approved, and the data generated is trusted by Governments and Industry. Products include the 15min PeCOD® Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) analyzer; pH, conductivity and alkalinity from a 15ml tube; automated Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) Analyzers; and ColdBlock rapid soil digesters, digest soil in 10min with <10ml of acid. MANTECH systems enable end-users to make impactful decisions that deliver profitability and sustainability while protecting the environment and public health.
210-2570 Matheson Blvd E Mississauga ON L4W 4Z3
210-889 Harbourside Dr North Vancouver BC V7P 3S1
NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL (NRC)
ORTECH ENVIRONMENTAL
4250 Wesbrook Mall Vancouver BC V6T 1W5 604-221-3157 F: 604-221-3001 E: Dann.Chow@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca Contact: Dann Chow
804 Southdown Rd Mississauga ON L5J 2Y4
PARIO ENGINEERING AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
B-553 Basaltic Road Concord ON L4K 4W8
MATRIX SOLUTIONS
150-13 Ave SW Ste #200 Calgary AB T2R 0V2
Environmental Science Engineering Ad - 2015 5/7/15 4.75” x 1.5”
MCELHANNEY CONSULTING SVCS LTD. 500-999 - 8th St Calgary AB T2R 1J5
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MCINTOSH PERRY
115 Walgreen Rd RR #3 Carp ON K0A 1L0
MMM GROUP LIMITED
100 Commerce Valley Dr W Thornhill ON L3T 0A1 905-882-1100 F: 905-882-0055 E: RupraiM@mmm.ca Contact: Mani Ruprai, Manager, Infrastructure and Environment
MORRISON ENVIRONMENTAL LTD.
1-1087 Meyerside Dr Mississauga ON L5T 1M5 905-564-8944
xcg.com
MORRISON HERSHFIELD LTD.
2440 Don Reid Dr Ottawa ON K1H 1E1
Municipal Infrastructure Water Resources
MPE ENGINEERING LTD.
Site Assessment
Solid Waste 300-714 - 5th Ave South Lethbridge AB T1J 0V1 403-329-3442 F: 403-329-9354 E: lethbridge@mpe.ca www.mpe.ca Contact: Tannis Day XCG_ES&E_4-5x1-5inches.indd MPE Engineering Ltd. is a multi-disciplinary engineering firm specializing in providing consulting services in municipal engineering, water resources and building services to varied clients in Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan. Established in 1983 and over the years has steadily grown to 200+ employees serving clients from seven offices: Lethbridge, Calgary, Edmonton, Medicine Hat, Red Deer, Brooks, and Saskatoon. Our growth over the years is proof of our ongoing commitment to serve our clients.
www.esemag.com
Wastewater & Water Treatment Remediation & Risk Assessment
Hazardous Materials Management Training & Operations
Since 1990
Oakville • Kitchener • Kingston • Edmonton
1
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Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories
PARSONS INC.
500-625 Cochrane Drive Markham ON L3R 9R9 905-943-0500 E: jacqueline.willick@parsons.com www.parsons.com Contact: Jacqueline (Jackie) Willick, Senior Administrator Engineering expertise for the entire water cycle, including: strategic reports and environmental assessment; watershed planning; system modeling; plant optimization; preliminary and detailed design; and contract administration.
engineering services to the municipal and industrial markets since 2001. Services include water and wastewater process design, process mechanical design, process controls, project management, environmental assessments and contract administration. We also have expertise in water and wastewater policy management, and sewer use bylaw administration.
SCHAEFFER & ASSOCIATES LTD.
R.J. BURNSIDE & ASSOCIATES LIMITED
SENES CONSULTANTS LTD.
15 Townline Orangeville ON L9W 3R4 519-941-5331
PETO MACCALLUM LTD.
R.V. ANDERSON ASSOCIATES LIMITED
PINCHIN LTD.
RED LEA ENVIRONMENTAL CORPORATION
462 Edison Ave Ottawa ON K2A 1T9
PILOT PERFORMANCE RESOURCES MANAGEMENT INC.
2470 Milltower Ct Mississauga ON L5N 7W5 905-363-0678
PINTER & ASSOCIATES LTD.
710A 48th St E Saskatoon SK S7K 5B4
PLANMAC ENGINEERING INC.
105 - 15 North Queen St Toronto ON M8Z 6Z1
PLURITEC LTEE.
1100 Place du Technoparc bur 200 Trois Rivières QC G9A 0A9 819-379-8010
14 Mintwood Court Brampton ON L6Z3K2 905-495-0926 E: kevin.ridley@redlea.ca Contact: Kevin Ridley
RESOURCE ENVIRONMENTAL ASSOCIATES LTD. 110-11 Allstate Pkwy Markham ON L3R 9T8
RICE ENGINEERING & OPERATING LTD.
34-147 Citation Dr Vaughan ON L4K 2P8
RISK CHECK ENVIRONMENTAL LTD.
1501-2235 Sheppard Ave E Toronto ON M2J 5B5 416-640-2444
RIVERCOURT ENGINEERING INC.
4 Beechwood Cres Toronto ON M4K 2K8 416-456-2319
POLLUTECH ENVIROQUATICS LIMITED
122-704 Mara St Point Edward ON N7V 1X4 519-339-8787 F: 519-336-6965 E: jgough@pollutechgroup.com www.pollutechgroup.com Contact: Jenny Gough, P.Eng., President Since 1969, Pollutech EnviroQuatics Limited has been a pioneer for environmental consulting. From soil, groundwater and sediment studies, diving and marine services, as well as a CALAaccredited aquatic toxicity testing laboratory, Pollutech is pleased to offer an innovative and flexible approach to problem-solving for clients in the industrial and municipal sectors, as well as government and private organizations.
POTTINGER GAHERTY ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS
1200-1185 Georgia St W Vancouver BC V6E 4E6
ROBINSON CONSULTANTS INC.
350 Palladium Drive Ottawa ON K2V 1A8 613-592-6060 ext 104 F: 613-592-5995 E: ajrobinson@rcii.com Contact: Andrew Robinson, Chairman
RWDI
650 Woodlawn Rd W Guelph ON N1K 1B8 519-823-1311 F: 519-823-1316 E: Elaine.Farrow@rwdi.com Contact: Elaine Farrow, Sr. Business Development Advisor
S2S ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
200-55 Cork St E Guelph ON N1H 2W7 519-767-2004 F: 519-767-2040 E: robert@repoisson.com www.repoisson.com Contact: Robert Poisson, P.Eng., President R.E. Poisson Engineering has been providing
86 | February 2016
321 Dufferin Ave London ON N6B 1Z3
12-121 Granton Dr Richmond Hill ON L4B 3N4
SKELTON, BRUMWELL & ASSOCIATES INC.
SNC-LAVALIN ENVIRONMENT
20 DeBoers Dr Ste #200 Toronto ON M3J 0H1
SOIL ENGINEERS LTD.
100 Nugget Ave Toronto ON M1S 3A7 416-754-8515
SOLINOV INC.
240-100 Rue Richelieu S Saint-Jean-surRichelieu QC J3B 6X3
SOLROC
4000 Griffith Montréal QC H4T 1A8
SPILL MANAGEMENT INC.
45 Upper Mount Albion Rd Stoney Creek ON L8J 2R9 905-578-9666 F: 905-578-6644 E: contact@spillmanagement.ca www.spillmanagement.ca Contact: Ruth Holland, General Manager Instructor Cliff Holland teaches emergency preparedness, planning and spill response on site, across Canada. The customized courses address geographical conditions while handling routine events or facing a worst-case scenario. The courses require samples of chemicals typically used on site. Other representative samples may be placed into individually “numerically coded” sample bottles for course exercises. Courses are 75% hands-on, 15% interactive and 10% orientation. Other topics include Incident Command, E R Planning, Testing, and Exercising.
SPL CONSULTANTS LIMITED
51 Constellation Court Toronto ON M9W 1K4
SPRIET ASSOCIATES LONDON LTD. 155 York St London ON N6A 1A8
SRK CONSULTING ENGINEERS
205-2100 Airport Dr Saskatoon SK S7L 6M6
260-1099 Kingston Rd Pickering ON L1V 1B5
SAFETECH ENVIRONMENTAL LIMITED
14-3045 Southcreek Rd Mississauga ON L4X 2X7 905-624-2722 F: 905-624-4306 E: pwarren@safetechenv.com Contact: Philip I. Warren, P.Eng (QP), PMP Manager, Environmental Services Group
SANEXEN ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES INC. R.E. POISSON ENGINEERING INC.
SCO-TERRA CONSULTING GROUP LTD.
1586 Ogilvie St Prince George BC V2N 1W9
PO Box 68584 25 Great Lakes Dr Brampton ON L6R 0J8 905-792-3130 E: jpilot@pilotims.com Contact: Jayne Pilot, President
PHITELOS SOLUTIONS INC.
12204 -145 St NW Edmonton AB T5L 4V7
SLR CONSULTING (CANADA) LTD. 400-2001 Sheppard Ave E Toronto ON M2J 4Z8 416-497-8600 F: 416-497-0342 E: toronto@rvanderson.com www.rvanderson.com Contact: Shawn Scott, Vincent Nazareth, Ken Campbell, Peter Langan Environmental and infrastructure specialists: planning and management, design and construction, operations and optimization services for water, wastewater, transportation and urban development. Branches: London, Niagara, Ottawa, Sudbury, Moncton, Fredericton, St. John’s and Mumbai, India.
165 Cartwright Ave Toronto ON M6A 1V5
SCHEFFER ANDREW LTD.
107-93 Bell Farm Rd Barrie ON L4M 5G1
PERMACON GROUP INC.
8140 rue Bombardier Anjou QC H1J 1A4
6 Ronrose Dr Concord ON L4K 4R3
200-9935, de Catania Ave, Entrance 1 Brossard QC J4Z 3V4 E: kcote@sanexen.com
SARAFINCHIN ASSOCIATES LTD.
238 Galaxy Blvd Toronto ON M9W 5R8 416-674-1770 F: 416-674-1997 E: geoeng@sarafinchin.com Contact: Murray Sarafinchin & Dr Myint Win Bo
STANTEC
200-325 25th St SE Calgary AB T2A 7H8 403-716-8000 F: 403-716-8039 E: gord.johnston@stantec.com www.stantec.com/water Contact: Gord Johnston, M.Eng., P.Eng., PMP, ENV SP, Executive Vice President, Infrastructure We design with community in mind. Through the life cycle of capture, use, reuse, and discharge, our team works to optimize every facet of a water system. We deliver creative solutions to conveyance, wastewater treatment, water treatment, and water resources projects that minimize cost and maximize the sustainability of the resource.
Search online or add your company at: esemag.com/ese-directory Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Consultants
Guide to Environmental Consultants & Laboratories STIRLING ENGINEERING INC.
PO Box 313 Ingleside ON K0C 1M0 613-362-7847
E: communications@tgcl.ca Contact: Jennifer Mills, Manager, Public Affairs & Community Engagement
STORY ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
TULLOCH ENGINEERING
L-1942 Regent St Sudbury ON P3E 5V5
332 Main St Haileybury ON P0J 1K0 705-672-3324
SUMMIT ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANTS 1609-39A Ave Vernon BC V1T 7S3
URBAN SYSTEMS LTD.
304-1353 Ellis St Kelowna BC V1Y 1Z9
335 Hampshire Crt N.W. Calgary AB T3A 4Y4 403-547-7281 F: 403-547-8261 E: aww@wpcsolutions.ca Contact: A. Warren Wilson, President & CEO
WSP GROUP
16e etage-1600 Boul. Rene-Levesque Montréal QC H3H 1P9
VERITEC CONSULTING INC.
TBT ENGINEERING LIMITED
12-1495 Bonhill Rd Mississauga ON L5T 1M2
1918 Yonge St Thunder Bay ON P7E 6T9
WALKERTON CLEAN WATER CENTRE
TERRAPEX ENVIRONMENTAL LTD.
90 Scarsdale Rd North York ON M3B 2P7
20 Ontario Rd/PO Box 160 Walkerton ON N0G 2V0
TERRAPROBE LTD.
XCG CONSULTING LTD.
25-220 Bayview Dr Barrie ON L4N 4Y8
TESTMARK LABORATORIES LTD. 7 Margaret St Garson ON P3L 1E1 705-693-1121 F: 705-693-1124 E: sylvia.rennie@testmark.ca Contact: Sylvia Rennie
WATER FOR PEOPLE – CANADA
TETRA TECH INC.
1055 Squires Beach Rd Pickering ON L1W 4A6
THURBER ENGINEERING LTD.
100-4396 W Saanich Rd Victoria BC V8Z 3E9
TIM LOTIMER & ASSOCIATES INC.
1-197 Bay St S Hamilton ON L8P 3H9
TORONTO INSPECTION LTD.
16-110 Konrad Cr Markham ON L3R 9X2
TRITON ENGINEERING SERVICES LIMITED 14-105 Queen St W Fergus ON N1M 1S6 519-843-3920
TRUE GRIT CONSULTING LIMITED
WPC SOLUTIONS INC.
1263 Innovation Dr Thunder Bay ON P7B 0A2 807-626-5640 F: 807-623-5690
400-245 Consumers Rd Toronto ON M2J 1R3 416-499-4042 www.waterforpeople.org Water For People - Canada is a charitable nonprofit international humanitarian organization dedicated to the development and delivery of clean, safe water and sanitation solutions in developing nations. It is the Canadian equivalent of the US based charity, Water For People (WFP). Canadian water industry professionals established Water For People - Canada in 1995, to support and promote WFP’s mission in Canada among the public and the water community.
WATERS ENVIRONMENTAL GEOSCIENCES LTD. PO Box 4341 Lively ON P3Y 1N3 705-692-0937 F: 705-692-0466 E: waters@on.aibn.com Contact: Peter Richards, President
300-2620 Bristol Cir Oakville ON L6H 6Z7 905-829-8880 F: 905-829-8890 E: toronto@xcg.com www.xcg.com Contact: Michele Grenier Since 1990, XCG has provided comprehensive environmental consulting services to clients from a wide range of industry sectors. With 80 professionals in 4 offices across Canada, XCG has established itself in the environmental industry. XCG is committed to providing the expert people that our clients have come to know and expect. At XCG, we will listen, provide advice and assist you in arriving at the optimum solution for your project.
ZEPHYR NORTH LTD.
20-850 Legion Rd Burlington ON L7S 1T5 905-335-9670
ZORIX ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
19-2861 Sherwood Heights Dr Oakville ON L6J 7K1 905-829-3939
BC WATER & WASTE ASSOCIATION 44th Annual Conference & Trade Show May 1 - 3, 2016 in Whistler, BC RESILIENT, RESOURCEFUL & READY
Register now at bcwwa.org/conference-registration
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February | 87 2/11/2016 2016 4:04:05 PM
JUNE 19–22, 2016 | CHICAGO, IL McCORMICK PLACE WWW.AWWA.ORG/ACE16
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN! MAXIMIZE YOUR SAVINGS— REGISTER BY APRIL 8! UNITING THE WORLD OF WATER
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Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
ES&E’s Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers NOTE: This guide is intended as a service for ES&E readers only. No claims are made that it is a comprehensive review. ES&E relies on information supplied by companies who returned questionnaires. A-MAPS ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
ACRISON, INC.
ABB INC.
ACUTE ENVIRONMENTAL & SAFETY SERVICES
32 Bon Echo Cr Ottawa ON K2M 2W6 613-270-9378
20 Empire Blvd Moonachie NJ 07074 USA 201-440-8300 F: 201-440-4939
3450 Harvester Rd Burlington ON L7N 3W5 905-333-7586 F: 905-333-7502 E: redir.a.obaji@ca.abb.com Contact: G.A. (Redir) Obaji
ACCESS INDUSTRIAL INC.
1218 Westover Rd RR1 Millgrove ON L0R 1V0
3-730 Bridge St Waterloo ON N2V 2J4
ADI SYSTEMS INC.
370 Wilsey Rd Fredericton NB E3B 6E9 506-452-7307 F: 506-452-7308 E: systems@adi.ca Contact: Shannon Grant
AERATION INDUSTRIES INTERNATIONAL 4100 Peavey Rd Chaska MN 55318 USA 952-448-6789 F: 952-448-7293 E: aii@aireo2.com
AERZEN CANADA
1995 Montée Labossière Vaudreuil-Dorion QC J7V 8P2 450-424-3966 x223 F: 450-424-3985 E: alaric.haerens@aerzen.ca Contact: Alaric Haerens
AGAPE WATER SOLUTIONS INC.
1567 Gehman Rd Harleysville PA 19438 USA 215-631-7035 F: 215-631-7034
ALBARRIE GEOCOMPOSITES
85 Morrow Rd Barrie ON L4N 3V7 705-737-0551
ALBERICI CONSTRUCTORS, LTD (CANADA) 1005 Skyview Dr Burlington ON L7P 5B1
ACG - ENVIROCAN
13-131 Whitmore Rd Woodbridge ON L4L 6E4 905-856-1414 F: 905-856-6401 E: sales@envirocan.ca www.acgtechnology.com Contact: Blake Tonogai or Greg Jackson Suppliers of water and wastewater treatment equipment for municipal and industrial applications, including headworks screens/ compactors, septage receiving systems, sewage/ sludge grinders, grit removal systems, fine and coarse bubble aeration systems, jet aeration and mixing, mechanical aerators, P.D., centrifugal and turbo type blowers, tertiary filters, DAF equipment, centrifuges, belt presses, ozone & UV disinfection, tank covers, hatches, chain and flight clarifiers, circular clarifiers, shaftless and shafted screw conveyors, odour control systems, iron & manganese removal systems, open channel and insertion magnetic flow meters & data loggers.
Now available in Canada! Tier 1 Hydro-Pneumatic Surge and Pressure Control Systems in both Bladder and Air over Water Solutions
AIR RELEASE/VACUUM BREAK VALVES FOR SEWAGE & WATER
ACI INSTRUMENTATION LIMITED
5-14 Gormley Industrial Ave Gormley ON L0H 1G0 905-888-0063 F: 905-888-6381 RGX
“ANTI-SURGE /ANTI-SHOCK” 10-YEAR WARRANTY • ALL STAINLESS
Reliant WQA
WQA WATER QUALITYReliant AERATOR for Lagoons and Aquaculture water quality aerator for lagoons and aquaculture
water quality aerator for lagoons and aquaculture
BUBBLETR
• Course & fine bubble aeration
ACLARUS OZONE WATER SYSTEMS
RBX
Large Air Bubble Mixing Te • Tames sludge buildup 900 Major Bennett Dr. Peterborough ON K9J 6X6 ✓ Coarse & fine bubble aeration ✓ Tames sludge buildup 888-705-8801 F: 705-745-3493 • Handles ✓upEliminates to 5 acres perstratification unit • Eliminates thermal stratification thermal Innovative, air burst driven mixing E: adoran@aclarus.ca ✓ Eliminates seasonal turnover • Efficient✓- Only Up to 15moves lbs O2/hr • Eliminates seasonal turnover Most 4 hp 9 MGDenergy-efficient mixing www.aclarus.ca ✓ Handles up to 5 No acresin-basin per unit moving parts Contact: Adam Doran ✓ Coarse & fine bubble • Low maintenance &toSimple! • Onlyaeration 4 hp moves 9 MGD ✓ Efficient: Up 15 lbs O /hr installation Aclarus designs & builds NSF-61 Certified ✓ Low maintenanceEasy & Simple! ✓ Tames sludge buildup Drin ozone systems for water & wastewater HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC. ✓ from Eliminates thermal stratification 4gpm-4000+gpm. Hundreds of systems are 762 Upper St. James St., Suite 250, Hamilton, ON L9C 3A2 • Ph: 905-777-9494 • Fax: 905-777-8678 ✓ Eliminates seasonal turnover info@hydrologic.ca www.hydrologic.ca in place across Canada & internationally for Only 4 hp moves 9 MGD residential, government (e.g. Ontario✓Parks), Large Bubble Mixing Technology Handles up to 5 acres per unit Large Air Bubble Mixing Technology engineering designs, industrial/food, ✓ academia Food process ✓ Efficient: & more. Aclarus on-demand ozone systems treatUp to 15 lbs O2/hr &aw Ideal mixing for: IDEAL Innovative, air burst driven mixing MIXING FOR: any source water to bottled quality. Complete ✓ Low maintenance & Simple! Anoxic Basins Most energy-efficient mixing • Innovative, air-burst driven mixing • Anoxic, Aeration & Swing Tanks 3-in-1 treatment: disinfection (bacteria, virus, Aeration Basins No in-basin moving parts HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONM cysts), oxidation sulphur), Mixing • Drinking water storage tanksINC. Sludge Easy installation ENVIRONMENTAL HYDRO-LOGIC •762 Energy-efficient, upSuite to 50% power Large(iron/metals, Air Bubblelead, Mixing Technology Upper St. James St., 250,less Hamilton, ON L9C 3A2 • Ph: 9 Drinking water storage tank mixing & aesthetic (tannin/color, taste, smell) in a 762 Upper St. James St., Suite•250, Hamilton, 3A2 •Mixing Ph: 905-777-9494 • Fax:pump 905-777-8678 Sludge TanksON • L9C Channel Applications Sewage station grease info@hydrologic.ca www.hyd • No in-basin moving parts compact, practical & affordable design. Our • Sewage pump station grease cap busting & odor control cap busting & odor control info@hydrologic.ca www.hydrologic.ca Ideal mixing for: Innovative, air burst driven mixingstudy showed the system’s McGill University Industrial Applications • Easy installation • Industrial and Food Processing Applications. . . and more! Anoxic Basins Most energy-efficient mixingto treat emerging contaminants: Food processing applications, liquor blending unique ability & a wide range of mixing applications Aeration Basins No in-basin R/X, moving parts pesticides, hormones, drugs & THMs, Sludge Mixing Easy installation more. HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC. Drinking water storage tank mixing 2
HYDRO-PULSE BUBBLETRON
BUBBLETRON
ACO SYSTEMS, LTD.
HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC. 762 Upper St. James St., Suite 250, Hamilton, ON L9C 3A2 • Ph: 905-777-9494 • Fax: 905-777-8678
Sewage pump station grease T: 905-777-9494 • F: 905-777-8678 • info@hydrologic.ca • www.hydrologic.ca info@hydrologic.ca www.hydrologic.ca cap busting & odor control 1-2880 Brighton Rd Oakville ON L6H 5S3 762 Applications Upper St. James Street, Suite 250, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L9C 3A2 Industrial Food processing applications, liquor blending & a wide range of mixing applications
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HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
February 2016 | 89
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers Gravity, Pressure, Traveling Bridge and others. Removal, Disposal, Supply and Installation. Anthracite Filter Media, Filter Sands and Gravels, Garnet, Greensand, Activated Carbon, etc. Quality, Efficiency, Customer Satisfaction.
101 Milner Avenue Scarborough ON M1S 4S6 416-299-6101 F: 416-299-5476 E: anup.jagadeesh@alfalaval.com www.alfalaval.ca Contact: Anup Jagadeesh or Marc Hunt Alfa Laval helps reduce the environmental footprint from water and waste streams, by maximizing reuse of water, by turning waste to value, and by minimizing energy consumption and waste. We offer a complete spectrum of equipment for wastewater treatment, filtration and sludge treatment that helps produce clean effluent for discharge or water reuse, recover heat and reduce the amount of sludge for disposal. Supplier of decanter centrifuge, rotary drum thickener, tertiary filters, belt presses, screw press, filter press, Sluice Gate, Sequencing batch reactors, Aeration, spiral heat exchangers, tube in tube Heat exchanger, MBR.
ALLTORK ACTUATION
212 Wyecroft Road, Unit 23 Oakville ON L6K 3T9 905-842-0244 F: 905-845-3009 E: jcarney@alltork.com Contact: John Carney
4210 South Service Rd Burlington ON L7l 4X5 905-766-3333 F: 905-766-3330 6 Iron Bridge Dr Collegeville PA 19456 USA
APEX ENGINEERING
4050 Fieldstone Crossing Missoula MT 59802 USA
APG-NEUROS
ATLAS DEWATERING CORPORATION
1270 Michele-Bohec Blainville QC J7C 5S4 450-939-0799 F: 450-939-2115
111 Ortona Crt Concord ON L4K 3M3 905-669-6825 F: 905-669-4036 E: info@atlasdewatering.com www.atlasdewatering.com Contact: Jason Bunston, Sales Manager Atlas Dewatering Corporation, established in 1946, has well over sixty years of experience in construction dewatering and environmental groundwater/surface water management. Atlas also specializes in bypass pumping systems, providing full turn-key services, pump rentals, sales and service. Atlas is your local dealer for Godwin Dri-Prime pumps and Flygt dewatering submersibles and Aqua-Barrier Dams.
APPLIED ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES 540 Avis Dr Ann Arbor MI 48108 USA
AQUA TECHNICAL SALES INC.
124 Macnab St S Hamilton ON L8P 3C3 905-528-3807 F: 905-528-3428 Contact: Brian Gage, President
AQUA-AEROBIC SYSTEMS
6306 N Alpine Rd Loves Park IL 61111 USA
AVENSYS SOLUTIONS
700 Huyler St Teterboro NJ 07608 USA 800-939-2558 F: 201-288-4479 12 Banigan Dr Toronto ON M4H 1E9 416-467-5555
AMERICAN PUBLIC UNIVERSITY
111 W Congress St Charles Town West Virginia 25414 USA 877-777-9081 E: info@apus.edu www.StudyatAPU.com/ese American Public University offers more than 180 affordable online degrees and certificate programs in a wide variety of specialties including environmental science. Our tuition is far less than other top online universities. Classes start monthly and are 100% online. Learn more about one of the best values in online education at www.StudyatAPU.com/ese.
AMS, INC.
105 Harrison St American Falls ID 83211 USA 208-226-2017
ANACHEM LTEE/LTD
255 Norman Lachine QC H8R 1A3 514-481-8010 F: 514-481-6340 E: info@anachem.ca Contact: Jason Zieba or Andre Dionne
AQUABLAST CORP.
20 Sharp Rd Brantford ON N3T 5L8 519-751-1080 F: 519-751-0617 E: swildey@anthrafilter.net www.anthrafilter.net Contact: Steve Wildey Filter Media Replacement across North America since 1976. Service to all types of filters including:
90 | February 2016
422 Consumers Rd Toronto ON M2J 1P8 416-499-4421 F: 416-499-0816 E: info@avensyssolutions.com Contact: Jennifer Loeffler; Anup Jain
77 Orchard Rd Ajax ON L1S 6K9 905-619-3009 Ext 215 F: 905-619-3638 E: john@aquablast.ca www.aquablast.ca Contact: John Eecloo, President/General Manager Cleaning reactors, silos. Heat exchangers, sewers, tanks, process piping, equipment, buildings using high pressure waterjetting services to 40,000 psi. Cold cutting steel tanks and piping, 3D self rotating cleaning head and teleboom for safe tank cleaning, turbo vacuum pumping for liquids, sludges and dry products. Hydro excavation. Dry ice blasting.
AQUAFY WATER TECHNOLOGIES INC.
AWI (ANTHRATECH WESTERN INC.)
4450-46 Ave SE Calgary AB T2B 3N7 403-255-7377 F: 403-255-3129 E: soniab@awifilter.com Contact: Sonia Braganza, Marketing Assistant
AWT TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
#322, 16 Midlake Blvd SE Calgary AB T2X 2X7 403-453-2298 F: 403-770-8694 E: info@awt-technologies.com Contact: Nigel Slater
AYSIX TECHNOLOGIES
2-2595 Dunwin Dr Mississauga ON L5L 3N9
116 Glebemount Avenue Toronto ON M4C 3S1 416-487-2898 E: max.rao@aquafy-wt.com Contact: Max Rao
AQUANOX WATER CONTROL PRODUCTS 26 Silverthorn Court Ottawa ON K2J 4Y2 613-692-5959 E: michael.lawrence@iseaquanox.com Contact: Michael Lawrence
AQUATIC SENTRY CONTROLS INC.
145-23012 Twp Rd. 521 Sherwood Park AB T8B 1K2 780-628-5400 Contact: Ron Wagner
ARCHER SEPARATION PROCESS INC.
211-3030 Lincoln Ave Coquitlam BC V3B 6B4 604-484-4516 F: 604-464-4122
ARIZONA INSTRUMENT LLC
ANTHRAFILTER MEDIA & COAL LTD.
ATLAS COPCO COMPRESSORS CANADA
ANALYTICAL TECHNOLOGY INC.
ALLU GROUP INC.
ALTECH TECHNOLOGY SYSTEMS INC.
300 N Taylor Rd Garrett IN 46738 888-357-3181 F: 888-826-5329
30 Montrose Dollard-des-Ormeaux QC H9B 3J9 800-513-3782 E: compressors.canada@ca.atlascopco.com Contact: Marie-Josee Quessy
ANAERGIA INC.
ALFA LAVAL INC.
ASSMAN CORPORATION OF AMERICA
3375 N. Delaware St. Chandler AZ 85225 800-528-7411 F: 602-281-1745 E: sales@azic.com Contact: Rick Ervin
ARMTEC LIMITED
B.N.W. VALVE MANUFACTURING LTD.
524 6th Concession Rd W/PO Box 47 Millgrove ON L0R 1V0 905-689-4713 F: 905-689-7402 E: sales@bnwvalve.ca www.bnwvalve.ca Contact: Harry Rodzoniak For over 30 years BNW has manufactured essential components for water and wastewater infrastructures which continue to provide reliable, leak tight service throughout Ontario. BNW’s stainless steel sluice gates & other valve products have a unique property in that they simply do not leak, allowing municipalities to conserve one of life’s most precious natural resources and save millions of dollars during the products’ service life.
BADGER METER, INC.
370 Speedvale Ave W Guelph ON N1H 6P2
4545 W Brown Deer Rd Milwaukee WI 53224 USA
ASL ROTEQ LTD.
BAKERCORP
12-253 Summerlea Rd Brampton ON L6T 5A8 905-791-2406 Contact: Jeff Johnson
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450 Sherman Ave N Hamilton ON L8L 8J6
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers BASF CANADA, INC.
100 Milverton Dr 5th Fl Mississauga ON L5R 4H1
BDP INDUSTRIES
PO Box 118 Greenwich NY 12834 USA
BELZONA GREAT LAKES HOLDINGS LTD.
588 Edward Avenue, Unit 51 Richmond Hill ON L4C 9Y6 905-737-1515 E: lmendrek@belzona.com Contact: Laura Mendrek
BENTLEY SYSTEMS INC.
685 Stockton Drive Exton PA 19341 USA
BETTER BUILDINGS PARTNERSHIP
Fl2-55 John St Metro Hall Toronto ON M5V 3C6
BI PURE WATER, INC.
#2 - 9790 190th Street Surrey BC V4N 3M9 604-882-6650 F: 604-882-6659 E: deannem@bipurewater.com www.bipurewater.ca Contact: Deanne Mould Award-winning designer and manufacturer of containerized and skid-mounted water and waste treatment plants and skid-mounted systems. Custom-engineered treatment systems are designed to specific water analyses and budgets and shipped anywhere from the Surrey, B.C. factory. They are in use at hundreds of federal, provincial and municipal government sites, in industries, by private landowners, resorts and First Nations communities. Package water and waste treatment plants are cost-effective. They can be built and tested in the factory by highly skilled and experienced staff. Components and parts are readily available and the treatment system can be leak and flow tested.
BIO SOLVE COMPANY
329 Massachusetts Ave Lexington MA 02420 USA 781-482-7900 F: 781-482-7909
BIO-MICROBICS, INC.
8450 Cole Pkwy Shawnee KS 66227 USA 913-422-0707
BIODISK CORPORATION
426 Royal York Rd Toronto ON M8Y 2R9
Continuous Clean Energy Power Plant We retrofit Transfer Stations by providing Baling & Bagging Greey EnWaste™ Equipment to Guarantee unit of Greey CTS Inc. Diversion of all Organic Waste from Landfill. email: greey.enwaste@rogers.com www.greeyenwaste.ca
Insitu Groundwater Contractors • • • • • P: 519-763-0700 F: 519-763-6684 • 48 Dawson Road Guelph, ON N1H 5V1
Dewatering systems Mobile groundwater treatment systems Well and pump installation and maintenance Pump, filter, generator rentals Sediment tank rentals Insitu groundwater remediation systems
www.insitucontractors.com
BLUE-WHITE INDUSTRIES
5300 Business Dr Huntington Beach CA 92649 USA 714-893-8529 F: 714-894-9492 E: sales@blue-white.com www.blue-white.com Contact: Jean Hendrickson BLUE-WHITE® INDUSTRIES, located in Huntington Beach, California, USA is in its 59th year as a leading manufacturer of quality products used in: municipal and industrial water and wastewater treatment; processing industries; rural water systems; agriculture and many others. Products lines include: CHEM-FEED® and Chem-Pro® Diaphragm Metering Injector Pumps, Flex-Pro®, Proseries-M® and FLEXFLO® Peristaltic type Chemical Metering Pumps; and Ultrasonic, Variable Area and Digital Flowmeters, Proportional Feed Systems and Skid Systems. Blue-White products are sold worldwide.
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INTERPROVINCIAL CORROSION CONTROL Leaders in the Cathodic Protection Industry…Since 1957 CORROSION CONTROL PRODUCTS Burlington, Ontario Canada Regional Offices: Montreal, Calgary Lewiston, New York, USA
Tel: 905-634-7751 • Fax: 905-333-4313 www.Rustrol.com
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February 2016 | 91
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
BIOFORM SEWAGE MINING
5572-53 Ave SE Calgary AB T2C 5G8 403-774-1396 F: 888-317-4640 E: jean@bioform.ca Contact: Jean Navert
BROOKS CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
4101 Boul Industriel Laval QC H7L 6G9 888-332-4012 F: 866-825-2221
BIOMAXX WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS INC. 1-7163 Vantage Way Delta BC V4G 1N1 855-940-5556 F: 604-940-5557 Contact: Chris Haley
BIOTEQ ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES
1000-1050 West Pender St Vancouver BC V6E 3S7 604-685-1243 F: 604-685-7778 E: aconsigny@bioteq.ca Contact: Alain Consigny
BISHOP WATER TECHNOLOGIES
220 Carswell St Renfrew ON K7V 2G4
BLUE-ZONE TECHNOLOGIES LTD.
14-84 Citation Dr Concord ON L4K 3C1 905-761-1224 F: 905-761-3371 E: dfilipovic@blue-zone.ca www.blue-zone.ca Contact: Dusanka Filipovic, President Immediate and measurable, sustainable air emission reduction from hospitals’ operating rooms. Through the use of Deltasorb® or Centralsorb® Anesthetic Collection Service, hospitals prevent the routine venting of destructive halogenated anesthetics into the environment and their neighborhoods; protect public health; reduce carbon footprint and facilitate a new raw material supply source for valuable medically essential anesthetics.
BMP SUPPLIES
3147 Underhill Ave Burnaby BC V5A 3C8 Contact: Mark Lindemulder
BOERGER, LLC
2860 Water Tower Place Chanhassen MN 55317 USA 612-435-7300 F: 612-435-7301 E: america@boerger.com www.boerger.com Contact: Jeff Seaton Boerger specializes in reliable and cost-effective Rotary Lobe Pumps and Macerating Technology for the conveyance of low to high viscous and abrasive materials. Boerger’s core product is the patented Rotary Lobe Pump, which is a selfpriming, valveless, positive displacement pump available in 20 different models with flows up to 5,000 gpm. All wear parts can be easily replaced without the removal of pipe or drive systems.
BOWRIO WATER TECHNOLOGIES INC.
C&M ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES INC.
207-48 Alliance Blvd Barrie ON L4M 5K3 705-725-9377 F: 705-725-8279 E: info@cmeti.com www.cmeti.com Contact: Tonia Van Dyk Representative and distributor of water and wastewater treatment equipment including: screens, grit management/removal, screenings washers/compactors, circular/rectangular clarifiers, clarifier covers, launder covers, lagoon liners and covers, chain and flight collectors, fine/coarse bubble and mechanical aeration, IFAS systems, lagoon systems, tertiary filters, filter underdrain systems, digester covers/ mixers, screw conveyors, live bottom bins, silos, sludge thickeners, package treatment plants, tablet chlorinators, tube settlers, slide and sluice gates, FRP weirs and baffles, dewatering and centrifuge systems.
CAMBIUM ABORIGINAL
1109 Mississauga Street Curve Lake ON K0L1R0 705-876-8523 F: 705-657-9231 E: m.jacobs@cambiumaboriginal.com Contact: Michael Jacobs, General Manager
CAMERON INSTRUMENTS INC.
173 Woolwich St., Unit 103 Guelph ON N1H 3V4 519-824-7111 E: sonja@cameroninstruments.com Contact: Sonja Bosshard
CAN-AM INSTRUMENTS LTD.
209-88 10th St New Westminster BC V3M 6H8
92 | February 2016
114-2465 Cawthra Rd Mississauga ON L5A 3P2 800-265-0182 F: 905-272-1866 E: ross@cdnsafety.com www.cdnsafety.com Contact: Ross Humphry Canadian Safety Equipment specializes in confined space entry and rescue equipment including fall protection, gas detection, communication systems and respiratory protection. In addition, we offer the GRACE Lone Worker Monitoring Systems used to monitor lone workers, and in the event that they are hurt or rendered unconscious, will immediately call for assistance. Systems are available for water or wastewater treatment plant monitoring, pumping stations, and can also monitor mobile workers.
CANADIANPOND.CA PRODUCTS LTD.
513 Knowlton Road Lac-Brome QC J0E1V0 866-249-0976 F: 450-243-0976 E: info@canadianpond.ca Contact: Patrick Holmes
CANEX TECHNOLOGIES INC.
CAMBRIDGE BRASS
CANCOPPAS LIMITED
154 Richmond St Richmond Hill ON L4C 3Y4 905-884-4388 F: 905-884-4291
140 Orion Place, PO Box 249 Cambridge ON N1R 5V1 519-621-5520 F: 519-621-8038 E: cbsales@cbrass.com www.cambridgebrass.com Contact: Terri Mand With over 100 years of experience in the industry, Cambridge Brass is one of North America’s leading designers, manufacturers and distributors of municipal waterworks products. Our Cambridge facility incorporates foundry, machining and assembly under one roof which allows us to control quality, design and delivery to meet customer needs in a timely and efficient manner. Our goal is to continuously lead and innovate to meet the changing needs of the water works industry.
2-2595 Dunwin Dr Mississauga ON L5L 3N9 905-569-6246 F: 905-569-6244 E: controls@cancoppas.com www.cancoppas.com Contact: Jack Alaica Marketing, sales and service of process control and environmental instrumentation throughout Canada. Specializing in technologies for flow, level, pressure, temperature and on-line analysis for water and wastewater processes. By focusing on products that employ leading edge and unique technologies, Cancoppas is able to provide solutions to problems where other suppliers fall short.
CB AUTOMATION INC.
BRENTWOOD INDUSTRIES, INC.
BRITISH COLUMBIA BUILDING TRADES
CANADIAN SAFETY EQUIPMENT INC.
2851 Brighton Rd Oakville ON L6H 6C9 905-829-0030 Contact: Mark Reeves, President
13488-63 Ave Surrey BC V3X 1J9 604-592-2464 F: 604-592-2465 E: mblair@bowriowater.ca Contact: Murray Blair, Managing Partner 500 Spring Ridge Dr Reading PA 19610 USA 610-374-5109 F: 610-685-0127
E: info@canada-unlimited.com www.canada-unlimited.com Contact: Neeta Correa May 30 - June 3, 2016. World’s Leading Trade Fair for Water, Sewage, Waste and Raw Materials Management. Innovative. Global. Future oriented. Experience environmental technologies. Discover the potential of future-oriented strategies, products and services. Come along to the world’s leading trade fair for environmental technologies and experience exciting live demonstrations for yourself of complex processes and applications, machinery, systems and vehicles. Future-proof technology, up-close and practical.
CANADA UNLIMITED INC. (MESSE MUENCHEN)
9-6975 Meadowvale Town Centre Circle Suite 418 Mississauga ON L5N 2V7 905-813-1051 F: 905-824-5067
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2-110 Snow Blvd Vaughan ON L4K 4B8 905-760-9399 F: 905-760-9319 E: sales@cbautomation.com www.cbautomation.com Contact: Larry McLean CB Automation Inc. has been in business for over 30 years supplying the best-in-class products, application support and services from high
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers profile manufacturers of process control and field instrumentation. Our automation products include HMI/SCADA solutions, configuration services and training. Municipal services also include associated products for Inflow and Infiltration (I&I) detection, local monitoring via Wi-Fi enabled sensors and advanced analytics for charts, graphs and reports.
COLE-PARMER CANADA INC.
CANTEST LIMITED
CONCEPT CONTROLS INC.
CAPITAL H20 SYSTEMS
12315 - 17 St W Calgary AB T2W 4A1
#1 2315-30 Avenue Calgary AB 888-207-2212 F: 403-250-1011 E: abelp@conceptcontrols.com Contact: Birkley Elliot
www.cspi.ca Contact: Raymond J. Wilcock Join CSPI In The Trenches and Make a Difference. Whether you operate a backhoe, perform technical analyses, or design new products - regardless of your expertise, title, or mandate, if you work in water/soil management, we are all in this together! CSPI’s news magazine, In The Trenches was created as an online industry news and learning resource, with which we can all share and learn about relevant news, information and innovations affecting our industry, our environment and our livelihoods. See the latest issue on our website.
CD GENOMICS
CONSOLIDATED GIROUX ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
COX-COLVIN & ASSOCIATES INC.
Unit D-675 Barrie St Winnipeg MB R3H 1A7
45-1 Ramsey Road Shirley NY 11967 USA 631-626-9181 E: contact@cd-genomics.com Contact: Linna Green
CEMATRIX (CANADA) INC.
18075 Hurontario St Caledon ON L0N 1C0 647-459-5564 E: robert.lee@cematrix.com Contact: Robert Lee
CENTURY GROUP INC.
1106 W Napoleon St Sulphur LA 70663 USA 337-527-5266 F: 337-527-8028
210-5101 Rue Buchan Montreal QC H4P 2R9
COMPREVAC INC.
3067 Jarrow Ave Mississauga ON L4X 2C6 905-624-4096 F: 905-624-4099 E: sales@compevac.com Contact: Margit Schwarz
CO/PO Box 2043 11 Reid St Charlo NB E8E 2W8 506-684-5821
CONTECH ENGINEERED SOLUTIONS
400-9025 Centre Point Dr West Chester OH 45069 USA
CONTINENTAL CARBON GROUP
1100 South Service Rd Suite 321 Stoney Creek ON L8E 0C5 905-643-7615 F: 905-643-5403 E: sales@continental-carbon.com Contact: Andy Lombardi, P.Eng.
CORIX WATER PRODUCTS
19900-84 Ave Langley BC V2Y 3C2
7750 Corporate Blvd Plain City OH 43064 USA
CRANE PUMPS & SYSTEMS
83 West Dr Brampton ON L6T 2J6
CRETEX SPECIALTY PRODUCTS
2002 S West Ave Waukesha WI 53189 USA
CRISPIN VALVES
600 Fowler Ave Berwick PA 18603 USA
CSI INCENDIE ET SECURITE
5990 Vanden Abeele St Laurent QC H4S 1R9 866-737-2280 F: 514-737-2751
DANFOSS WATER & WASTEWATER TECHNOLOGIES 8800 W Bradley Rd Milwaukee WI 53224 USA
DAVIS CONTROLS LTD.
corrugated
CHEMLINE PLASTICS LTD.
55 Guardsman Rd Thornhill ON L3T 6L2 800-930-2436 F: 905-889-8553 E: request@chemline.com www.chemline.com Contact: Ryan Bissoon, Inside Sales Supervisor Chemline stocks manual and actuated valves, strainers, flow meters and controls, all made of corrosion resistant solid thermoplastics; PP, PVDF and ECTFE pipe, fittings, and fusion equipment. Many products are NSF/ANSI Standard 61 certified for drinking water. Our ChemFlare™ connections solve failure problems on PVC threaded/solvent welds on sodium hypochlorite dosing panels. Systems include PFA flare fittings and tubing. Flow meters are variable area, insertion paddlewheel and magmeters. Application areas include waste and water treatment plants, landfills, etc.
steel pipe institute
CORRUGATED STEEL PIPE INSTITUTE
2A-652 Bishop St N Cambridge ON N3H 4V6 519-591-1260 F: 519-650-8081 E: rjwilcock@cspi.ca
2200 Bristol Circle Oakville ON L6H 5R3 905-829-2000 E: bsmith@daviscontrols.com Contact: Barbara Smith
DDI HEAT EXCHANGERS INC.
305 Baffin St Dollard-des-Ormeaux QC H9A 3G4 514-696-7961 F: 514-696-8344
CHLORINATORS INC.
1044 SE Dixie Cutoff Rd Stuart FL 34994 772-288-4854 F: 772-287-3238 E: regal@regalchlorinators.com Contact: Chris Myers
CHRYSALIS SCIENTIFIC TECHNOLOGIES INC. 386 Spring Blossom Cr Oakville ON L6H 0C2 647-402-4145 F: 866-533-1436
CLARO ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES & EQUIPMENT 4721 Louis-B.-Mayer Laval QC H7P 6G5 514-562-4575 Contact: Peter Lipert Jr.
14132 summalogoPMS 467.pdf
CLEARTECH
1500 Quebec Ave Saskatoon SK S7K 1V7
CLOW CANADA
1757 Burlington St E Hamilton ON L8N 3R5 800-561-9931 F: 905-547-0113
COASTAL ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS, INC. 820 First Ave S Seattle WA 98134 206-682-6048 F: 206-682-5658 E: marketing@coastalenvironmental.com Contact: Kevin North, Vice President Sales & Marketing
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“A leader in providing innovative automation solutions to our customers” We offer a complete range of products & services in the areas of: System Integration • Process Instrumentation • Control Panels • Chemical Packages • Programmable Logic Controllers Celebrating • HMI/SCADA • Computer/Network Services • Service
Summa Engineering Limited 6423 Northam Drive, Mississauga, ON L4V 1J2 T: 905-678-3388 • F: 905-678-0444 • E: info@summaeng.com • www.summaeng.com
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years 1980 - 2015
of Customer Service
February 2016 | 93
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
DECAST LTD.
8807 County Road 56 Utopia ON L0M 1T0 705-734-2892x2250 F: 705-734-2920 E: darcher@decastltd.com Contact: David Archer, P.Eng.
DELPRO AUTOMATION INC.
#213 - 669 Ridley Place Delta BC V3M 6Y9 604-517-5599 F: 604-517-5598 E: kristinaj@delpro.net
Contact: Stephen Huza, Manager Sales & Business Development Drain-All Ltd. environmental service company, providing industrial wet/dry vacuuming, high pressure blasting and vacuum excavation. Emergency spill response and First Responder containment, removal and remediation; for truck rollovers or train derailments. Hazardous waste (liquid or solid) removal. Flush and camerasewers-process and leachate lines. Confined space entry and cleaning.
DUPERON CORPORATION
1200 Leon Scott Court Saginaw MI 48601 USA 800-383-8479 Contact: Steve Aiken
DENSO NORTH AMERICA INC.
12-90 Ironside Cr Toronto ON M1X 1M3 416-559-7459 F: 416-291-0898 E: stuart@densona-ca.com www.densona.com Contact: Stuart Reece, Sales Manager Denso - the global leader in corrosion prevention for over 130 years. Denso offers the highest quality, most economical, long-term corrosion protection for all above and below ground metal surfaces. The Denso petrolatum tape system consists of Denso paste as an initial corrosion inhibitor; Denso mastic fillers to eliminate localized corrosion cells; Denso petrolatum tape as the long-term corrosion barrier.
DEVINE & ASSOCIATES LTD.
375 Steelcase Rd E Markham ON L3R 1G3 905-479-2130 F: 905-479-9870 E: sales@devineassoc.com Contact: Peter Sucharda
DEWIND ONE PASS TRENCHING LLC
9150 96th Ave Zeeland MI 49464 USA 616-875-7580 F: 616-875-7334 E: steve@dewindonepass.com Contact: Steve McCullick
DWG PROCESS SUPPLY LTD.
44 Riel Dr, Bay # 110 St Albert AB T8N 4L5 780-460-8433 F: 780-418-2227 E: don.burgess@dwg-process-supply.com Contact: Don Burgess
DWYER INSTRUMENTS INC.
PO Box 373 102 Indiana Hwy 212 Michigan City IN 46361 USA
DYNABLAST
2625 Meadowpine Blvd Mississauga ON L5N 1T1 888-811-6667 F: 800-350-5666
DYNAMIC INDUSTRIAL SERVICES INC.
335 Townline Rd Niagara-on-the-Lake ON L0S 1J0
EARTH FX
ELEMENTAL CONTROLS LIMITED
3230 Wharton Way Mississauga ON L4X 2C1 866-544-9974 F: 905-282-9519 E: sales@elementalcontrols.com www.elementalcontrols.com Contact: Keith Grattan CANADIAN SALES AND RENTALS OF XRF ANALYZERS FOR 20+ YRS. Elemental Controls provides portable and benchtop analyzers from Thermo Scientific for lead paint, heavy metals in soil for remediation, and dust and air filters for occupational hygiene. Our new x-ray tube based XRF analyzers are required for lower lead levels found in new lead paint legislation. We also provide radiation protection systems from Radcomm Systems, which include both portable gamma detection and spectrometers for industrial and medical isotopes, vehicle and area radiation monitors for site and personnel protection. We provide the technical expertise your company requires, in both our rental and purchase or lease programs.
ELMRIDGE ENGINEERING INC.
15 Allaura Boulevard Aurora ON L4G 3N2 905-726-7730 F: 905-726-2500 E: sales@elmridge.ca Contact: Strachan Bowen
ELSTER METERING
3363 Yonge St Toronto ON M4N 2M6
101-1100 Walker’s Line Burlington ON L7N 2G3
EBBA IRON SALES INC.
EMCO CORPORATION
PO Box 857 Eastland TX 76448 USA
1834 Drew Rd Mississauga ON L5S 1J6
ECHELON ENVIRONMENTAL
ENDETEC/VEOLIA WATER
26-505 Hood Rd Markham ON L3R 5V6 905-948-0000 F: 905-948-0577 E: info@echelonenvironmental.ca Contact: Rob Rainford, General Manager
4697-116 Barrie Street Kingston ON K7L 3N6
ENTECH ENVIRONMENTAL
3187 Thompson Pl West Vancouver BC V7V 3E3
ECHOLOGICS
6295 Northam Dr Unit #1 Mississauga ON L4V 1W8
ECKEL OF AMERICA
155 Fawcett St Cambridge MA 02138 USA
DIRECTRIK INC.
405 Industrial Dr Units #18&19 Milton ON L9T 5B1 905-565-9606 F: 905-565-1358 E: sales@directrik.com www.directrik.com Contact: Josie Morales Directrik Inc. has successfully designed, supplied and serviced water and wastewater equipment in municipal, industrial and food processing industries. With thousands of installations across Ontario from pumps, heat exchangers, gas compressors, screw conveyors, valves, Sludge and Scum Collection System and more - our relationship with you is the measure of our success!
DN TANKS
PO Box 696 El Cajon CA 92022-0696 USA 619-440-8181 F: 619-440-8653 E: info@dntanks.com Contact: Galit Ryan
DRAIN-ALL LTD.
1161 Liverpool Crt Ottawa ON K1B 4L1 613-327-5906 E: stephen.huza@drainall.com www.drainall.com
94 | February 2016
ECOFLUID SYSTEMS INC.
ENDRESS + HAUSER CANADA LTD.
Suite 1800 - 200 Granville St. Vancouver BC V6C 1S4 604-662-4544 F: 604-662-4564 E: jhebner@ecofluid.com Contact: Justin Hebner
EHS CANADA INC.
2964 South Grimbsy Rd 18 Smithville ON L0R 2A0 905-643-3343 F: 905-643-3211 E: info@ehscanada.ca www.ehscanada.ca Contact: Bill Abbott, Manager EHS Canada Inc. provides industry leading and cost-effective industrial standby rescue and occupational health and safety training services. Our professional confined space and high angle rescue teams are second to none. Comprised of highly trained and experienced rescue personnel, EHS Canada Inc. can supply your company with fully equipped and professional rescue teams.
ELECTRO RENT CORPORATION
210 Brunel Rd Units #1&2 Mississauga ON L4Z 1T5
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1075 Sutton Dr Burlington ON L7L 5Z8 905-681-9272 F: 905-681-9444 E: info@ca.endress.com www.ca.endress.com Contact: Scott Whitehouse Endress+Hauser - a global provider of complete solutions for industrial measurement technology and automation. The company supplies and services instruments and systems which acquire, transmit, control and record process information. Products include sensors, devices, systems, solutions and services for level, flow, pressure, temperature measurement and liquid analysis.
ENGINEERED PUMP SYSTEMS LTD.
1635 Industrial Ave Port Coquitlam BC V3C 6M9 604-552-7900 F: 604-552-7901 E: sales@engineeredpump.com www.engineeredpump.com Contact: Earl Masse, Manager Engineered Pump Systems Ltd. specializes in the supply of water and wastewater conveyance, treatment and disposal products. Submersible pumps, chopper pumps, access hatches, valves
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers and controls, to name a few. Equipment can be supplied in complete factory built packages or as components for on-site installation.
EVOQUA WATER TECHNOLOGIES LLC
ENV TREATMENT SYSTEMS INC.
70 High St Etobicoke ON M8Y 3N9 416-503-7639 F: 416-503-8925 E: envinc@interlog.com www.env-inc.ca Contact: Edward M. Pikovnik, Sales Manager; Lee Williams, Project Management Aeration (aspirating, submerged turbine, fine bubble); polymer feeders; hi-speed turbo blowers; clarifiers (rectangular/circular); U.V. disinfection; belt presses, centrifuges; SBR package plants; biofilters; plunger pumps; FRP covers; continuous sand and disk filters; ozonation systems; access hatches; Archimedes screw pumps; digester covers and mixers; monolithic floor underdrains; PD blowers; traveling water screens; RBCs and package plants; oil grit separators, storm chambers; membrane dome and tube, fine and coarse aeration sytems; rectangular clarifiers; hosepumps; GAC odour control; flumes; bar screens, fine plate or perforated sceens; shaftless compactors and conveyors; scum troughs and submerged grit screws; septage receiving stations; vortex grit removal.
ENVIRONETICS INC.
1201 Commerce St Lockport IL 60441 USA 815-838-8331 F: 815-838-8336
ENVIRONMENT ONE CORPORATION
2773 Balltown Rd Niskayuna NY 12309-1090 USA
EOS REMEDIATION
1101 Nowell Rd Raleigh NC 27607 USA 919-873-2204 F: 919-873-1074
500 Horizon Dr, Suite 503 Chalfont PA 18914 215-712-0280 F: 215-822-0389 E: screening@evoqua.com www.evoqua.com/intake Contact: Mike Stock For over 100 years Evoqua has been installing intake systems under such names as USFilter®, FMC®, Rex®, Link-Belt® and Envirex®. No one knows more about intake systems and traveling water screens than Evoqua. We probably installed your system! We also make OEM parts for and service all brands of assemblies including Siemens. Now offering fish-friendly 316(b) fine mesh screens installed on site, on top of existing screens! It’s a product protecting fish larvae, keeping industry environmentally-friendly.
FLOTTWEG SEPARATION TECHNOLOGY CANADA, ULC
4-470 North Rivermede Rd Concord ON L4K 3R8 905-550-5774 E: fscriver@flottweg.net www.flottweg.net Contact: Frank Scriver, Environmental Industry Manager Flottweg Separation Technology is a leading manufacturer of high solids thickening and dewatering centrifuges. Flottweg is known for high quality manufacturing, innovative features, state-of-the-art efficient drive systems and unparalleled customer service. Flottweg’s C Series decanter centrifuge is designed specifically for cost effective thickening and dewatering of municipal water and wastewater residuals and biosolids.
FLUIDYNE CORPORATION FCI - FLUID COMPONENTS INTERNATIONAL
1755 La Costa Meadows Dr San Marcos CA 92078 USA 760-744-6950 F: 760-736-6250 E: fcimarcom@fluidcomponents.com www.fluidcomponents.com Contact: Mary Pund, Marketing Communications Manager FCI is a world leading manufacturer of air/gas flow meters, flow switches and level switches used in industrial and commercial applications. Rugged designs, international approvals and certifications, FCI products are ideal for industry’s most demanding processes and environmental measurements. FCI products are calibrated in our NIST traceable flow laboratory to your exact specifications and conditions. Our products are installed and supported worldwide.
FER-PAL INFRASTRUCTURE
169 Fenmar Dr Toronto ON M9L 1M6
FERRO CANADA INC.
14685 Woodbine Ave Gormley ON L0H 1G0
Suite D-5436 Nordic Dr Cedar Falls IA 50613 USA 319-266-9967 F: 319-227-6034 E: fluidyne@fluidynecorp.com Contact: Erick Mandt
FOCUS ENVIRONMENTAL GROUP INC.
3-35 Stone Church Rd Ste #369 Ancaster ON L9K 1S5 905-690-7638 F: 905-690-7639 E: focusenv@on.aibn.com Contact: Robert Freeman, President Focus Environmental Group Inc. provides clientele with professional, full service environmental contracting services to suit site-specific project needs, including: General contracting and full site remediation services, TSSA certified tank removal and disposal, in situ soil/groundwater remediation expertise; site/ plant-facility decommissioning; demolition and site restoration services. Please call for a free estimate.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING MAGAZINE
30-220 Industrial Parkway S., Aurora ON L4G 3V6 905-727-4666 F: 905-841-7271 E: steve@esemag.com www.esemag.com Contact: Steve Davey, Publisher Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine (ES&E) has covered Canada’s multi-billion dollar a year water, wastewater and environmental protection sectors since 1988. In both print and online, ES&E is vitally important to some 19,000 readers and thousands of web visitors responsible for the design, construction and operation of water treatment and distribution systems, sewerage systems, and industrial and hazardous waste management systems. ES&E also organizes the annual Canadian Environmental Conference and Tradeshow (CANECT).
EPCOR WATER SERVICES, INC.
2000-10423 101 St NW Edmonton AB T5H 0E8
ESRI CANADA LTD.
900-12 Concorde Pl Toronto ON M3C 3R8
EVANS UTILITY - MUNICIPAL PRODUCTS SUPPLY LTD. 338 Neptune Cr London ON N6M 1A1
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FIRESTONE BUILDING PRODUCTS CANADA
5770 Hurontario St, Suite 400 Mississauga ON L5R 3G5 888-292-6265 E: lining@firestonebp.ca www.firestonebp.ca/geogard Contact: Dominic Petruzzi Firestone Building Products is a part of the Bridgestone Corporation, the largest rubber company in the world. With over 40 years of experience in the lining industry, Firestone’s GeoGard™ EPDM has proven itself as a durable solution for a variety of agricultural, industrial, and commercial lining applications. For your next project, count on GeoGard™ EPDM for an effective lining solution.
FLOATING ISLAND INTERNATIONAL, INC. PO Box 252 Shepherd MT 59079 USA 406-373-5200
FLUID METERING, INC.
5 Aerial Way, Suite 500 Syosset NY 11791 USA 516-922-6050 F: 516-624-8261 E: Herb.Werner@fmipump.com Contact: Herb Werner
FORCE FLOW
2430 Stanwell Dr Concord CA 94520 USA 925-686-6700 F: 925-686-6713 E: info@forceflow.com www.forceflow.com Contact: Christina Rumbel, Marketing Coordinator Force Flow is the leading manufacturer of scales for monitoring water treatment chemicals. Accurately track feed rate, amount used and remaining amount. See real-time chemical status locally at the vessel and remotely from your PLC or SCADA. Digital and hydraulic systems for day tanks, bulk storage tanks volumetric feeders, ton containers and 150 lb cylinders. Automatic on-site chemical dilution systems, automatic dry tank refill systems.
FORD HALL COMPANY INC.
PO Box 2110 Richmond KY 40476 USA
FRANKLIN EMPIRE INC.
900 Major Bennett Dr Peterborough ON K9J 6X6 Contact: Todd Rogers
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Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
G.E.T. INDUSTRIES INC.
33 Cedar Dr Caledon ON L7K 1H5 905-451-9900 F: 519-927-9315 E: get@grindhog.com Contact: Tina Harrison
GARDNER DENVER
845-2425 Matheson Blvd E Mississauga ON L4W 5K4
GASMET TECHNOLOGIES INC.
956A The Queensway Toronto ON M8Z 1P5 E: mirja.maja@gasmet.com Contact: Mirja Maja
GENEQ INC.
10700 Secant St Montreal QC H1J 1S5 514-354-2511 F: 514-354-6948 E: info@geneq.com www.geneq.com Contact: Rene Parise, VP Sales & Marketing GENEQ has been a Canadian Distributor of Environmental Instruments since 1972. We offer a wide range of products for air, water and soil sampling/monitoring/measuring. Also we sell Precision GPS systems and General Laboratory products. So, if you are looking for Weather Stations, Telemetry Systems, Water Quality Instruments, GENEQ is the place to go.
H2FLOW EQUIPMENT INC.
GOSLYN ENVIRONMENTAL GREASE INTERCEPTORS
1-155 Edward St Aurora ON L4G 1W3 905-841-0990 F: 905-248-5222 E: angelo@goslyn.ca www.goslyn.ca Contact: Angelo Mikrogiannakis Goslyn GRD Grease Interceptor delivers pollution prevention & wastewater sustainability for the foodservice sector. Municipalities are strengthening their position on wastewater effluent discharge limits. Foodservice operators must meet compliance or face paying fines and surcharges. The innovative Goslyn surpasses compliance; it delivers the highest efficiencies in grease & waste removal. Rated the best “GREASE TRAP SYSTEM” by foodservice operators! Easy to maintain, delivers significant cost savings. Specify Goslyn for your clients. NSF Certified CSA B481.
GRANDE WATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS INC. 3950 Montee Masson Laval QC H7B 1C4 450-315-1115 F: 450-315-1355
H2FLOW TANKS & SYSTEMS INC.
GEOADVICE ENGINEERING INC.
204-2502 St Johns St Port Moody BC V3H 2B4
GEOMEMBRANE TECHNOLOGIES INC. (GTI)
GREATARIO ENGINEERED STORAGE SYSTEMS
2882 Dow Ave Tustin CA 92780 USA
PO Box 399 Innerkip ON N0J 1M0 519-469-8169 F: 519-469-8157 E: sburn@greatario.com www.greatario.com Contact: Scott Burn Greatario Engineered Storage Systems supply and construct Aquastore® glass-fused-to-steel storage tanks, Temcor® aluminum domes and covers, Columbian TecTanks & mixing systems.
GLOBAL RISK INNOVATIONS
GREEY ENWASTE
370 Wilsey Rd Fredericton NB E3B 6E9 506-452-7304 F: 506-452-6625 E: covers@gticovers.com Contact: Victor Cormier
GEORG FISCHER PIPING SYSTEMS
87 Law Dr Guelph ON N1E 7J7
501C-211 St. Patrick St Toronto ON M5T 2Y9 416-959-0535 Contact: David Greey
2207 Simcoe Rd 93 Barrie ON L4M 4Y8 705-726-3921 F: 705-721-1599 E: ron@goldenenviro.ca www.goldenenviro.ca Contact: Ron Trivett, President Remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater of various contaminants. Provide in-situ and ex-situ on-site remediation. Bio-piling using chemical oxidation and microbes. Provide specialty products for emergency services (i.e., Highway cleanup due to fuel spill). Excavate, including underpinning of buildings. Provide mould and asbestos remediation services and mobile Certificate of Approval.
GORMAN-RUPP CANADA
70 Burwell Road St. Thomas ON N5P 3R7 519-631-2870 F: 519-631-4624 E: rfurneaux@grcanada.com Contact: Robert Furneaux
GOWLING LAFLEUR HENDERSON LLP
1 First Canadian Place 1500-100 King St W Toronto ON M5X 1G5
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6-470 North Rivermede Rd Vaughan ON L4K 3R8 905-660-0649 F: 905-660-9744 E: info@h2flow.com www.h2flowtanks.com Contact: Darrin Hopper, General Manager Sales and installation of PERMASTORE Glass-Fused-to-Steel tanks, typically used as anaerobic digesters, water tanks, water towers for wastewater, sludge & leachate storage, clarifiers. Custom engineered tanks with Published Quality Standards and Zero Defects. Stainless steel or powder coated steel material also available. Tank covers in aluminum, stainless & glass fused to steel. Complete treatment systems such as SBR, MBBR, MBRs, mixing and aeration systems integrated within tanks. PAX mixers to prevent ice formation in cold weather.
HACH COMPANY
5600 Lindbergh Dr PO Box 389 Loveland CO 80539 USA
GREYLINE INSTRUMENTS INC. GOLDEN ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES INC.
7-470 North Rivermede Rd Concord ON L4K 3R8 905-660-9775 F: 905-660-9744 E: info@h2flow.com www.h2flow.com Contact: Michael Albanese, President H2Flow provides water & wastewater treatment equipment for industrial & municipal applications with start-up assistance, service, and spare parts. Equipment includes: grinders, screens, conveyors, grit removal, aerators, diffusers, blowers, clarifiers, sludge presses, centrifuges, digesters, mixers, thickeners, tertiary treatment, gravity and pressure filters, package plants, UV disinfection, drinking water plants, filters, underdrains, strainers, dissolved air floatation (DAFs), CSO, odour control biofilters, oil/water separators. Specialized in biological treatment with SBR, MBBR and MBRs. Containerized and remote treatment plants.
16456 Sixsmith Dr Long Sault ON K0C 1P0 613-938-8956 Contact: Marlene Quenneville
HALLIDAY PRODUCTS INC.
6401 Edgewater Dr Orlando FL 32810 USA 800-298-1027 Contact: Armond Bordeau
GRUNDFOS CANADA INC.
2941 Brighton Rd Oakville ON L6H 6C9 905-829-9533 F: 905-829-9512 E: mpresement@grundfos.com www.grundfos.com Contact: Michael Presement, Business Development Manager Founded in 1945, Grundfos, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of pumps and pumping systems, focuses on innovation and sustainability. Serving a wide variety of pumping applications, Grundfos’ Water Utility Products cover the complete water cycle from Raw Water Supply, Water Treatment, Water Distribution, Wastewater Transport and Wastewater Treatment in municipal and industrial processes. Supported by a Global Network of Sales and Service Partners, Grundfos meets the needs of all your pumping requirements.
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HALOGEN VALVE SYSTEMS
2430 Stanwell Drive Concord CA 94520 USA 925-686-6700 F: 925-686-6713 E: info@halogenvalve.com www.halogenvalve.com Contact: Christina Rumbel Halogen Valve Systems manufacturers hazardous gas shutoff systems and distributes toxic gas detectors for all types of water, wastewater and manufacturing facilities. All of our systems are powered by 12 Volt DC batteries with internal computer controlled charges that provide protection even when local power systems fail. These systems are rugged and reliable because they are built for use in hazardous gas environments to give our customers years of worry free service.
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers HAMILTON KENT INC.
77 Carlingview Dr Toronto ON M9W 5E6 800-268-8479 F: 416-674-6960
HANDY PIPES INC.
43 Lorne Ave Brampton ON L6X 1L2 647-974-4846 F: 416-699-9989
screening, grit, and sludge handling processes and is an original source manufacturer specializing in stainless steel. Huber is the inventor and original manufacturer for the renowned ROTAMAT® products and STEP SCREEN® and has over 25,000 installations worldwide.
HM PIPE PRODUCTS INC.
HANNA INSTRUMENTS CANADA, INC.
129 Exeter Rd London ON N6L 1A4
3156 Industriel Laval QC H7L 4P7 800-842-6629 F: 450-629-3335
HOBAS PIPE USA
HANNAH ENVIRONMENTAL EQUIPMENT INC.
1413 E Richey Rd Houston TX 77073 USA
cascade of hydroxyl free radicals and oxidants that eliminate most types of odours, organic and inorganic contaminants, bacteria, virus, and even mold in the air, through porous contents and on surfaces. Working at a distance, Odorox® atmospheric hydroxyls react with treatment space contamination, water vapor and other volatized chemicals such as H2S, NH3, NH2CI, by example, completing the oxidation process until they yield O2, CO2, H2O, in the same concentrations as found in nature.
HYDROVISION GMBH
Gewerbestrasse 61a Kaufbeuren Bayern 87600 +49 8341 9662180 F: +49 8341 9666030 E: flowmeter@hydrovision.de
200-144 Wescar Lane Carp ON K0A 1L0 613-254-7475 F: 613-963-9653
HANSON BUILDING PRODUCTS
ICR WATER TECHNOLOGIES INC.
RR2 Cambridge ON L4A 7X3 888-497-7660
3-200 Memorial Ave Ste 101 Orillia ON L3V 5X6 705-325-0025 F: 888-281-7774
HARMSCO FILTRATION PRODUCTS
PO Box 14066 North Palm Beach FL 33408 USA
HAWKEYE BIRD & ANIMAL CONTROL
5048 Erin First Line Acton ON L7J 2L9 416-429-5393 F: 866-281-5281 E: hawkeye@hawkeye.ca Contact: Dan Frankian
HAYWARD FLOW CONTROL CANADA
2880 Plymouth Dr Oakville ON L6H 5R4
HAYWARD GORDON ULC
5 Brigden Gate Halton Hills ON L7G 0A3 905-693-8595 F: 905-693-1452 E: info@haywardgordon.com Contact: Brent McConomy
HEADWORKS USA
11000 Brittmoore Park Dr Houston TX 77041 USA
HERON INSTRUMENTS INC.
447 Moxley Rd SS 106 Dundas ON L9H 5E2 800-331-2032 Contact: Terri Kernaghan
HYDRO INTERNATIONAL
2925 NW Aloclek Suite 140 Hillsboro OR 97124 USA 866-615-8130 F: 503-601-0850 E: WWInquiryUS@hydro-int.com www.hydro-int.com Contact: Ben Paetel Hydro International supplies environmentally sustainable products that control and treat wastewater, stormwater, and combined sewer overflows, using advanced vortex and complementary technologies. Hydro International is the leading provider of municipal grit removal and CSO/wet weather management products to control flows within collection systems and wastewater treatment plants. Wastewater: Eutek HeadCell, TeaCup, SlurryCup, Grit Snail, GritCup, SpiraSnail, Hydro-Sludge-Screen, Hydro MicroScreen, and Grit King. Wet-Weather: Storm King, Reg-UFlo, Hydro-Vortex-Drop-Shaft and a number of wet weather/CSO screens.
IMBRIUM SYSTEMS INC.
407 Fairview Dr Whitby ON L1N 3A9 416-960-9900 E: info@imbriumsystems.com www.imbriumsystems.com Contact: Scott Perry Imbrium Systems is an engineered stormwater treatment company that designs and manufactures stormwater treatment solutions to protect water resources from harmful pollutants. Our portfolio of performance proven technologies (Stormceptor, the Jellyfish Filter, Sorbtive Media, and Filterra) address the long-term impact of urban runoff, can provide LEED credits, and ensures our clients’ projects are compliant with water quality regulations.
HYDRO-LOGIC ENVIRONMENTAL INC. HOSKIN SCIENTIFIC LTD.
3735 Myrtle Street Burnaby BC V5C 4E7 604-296-5453 F: 604-872-7081 E: ppare@hoskin.ca www.hoskin.ca Contact: Peter Pare For over fifty years, Hoskin Scientific has been a supplier of testing and monitoring instrumentation to the Canadian market. We have offices in Vancouver, Burlington, and Montreal. Our Environmental Department provides solutions for monitoring and sampling biological and chemical parameters in the environment. Specific areas include: water quality, water quantity, soil moisture, plant science, weather stations, indoor air quality, aquatic sampling, and oceanography.
250-762 Upper James St Hamilton ON L9C 3A2 905-777-9494 F: 905-777-8678 E: george@hydrologic.ca www.hydrologic.ca Contact: George S. Pastoric Canadian Distributors for: VENT-O-MAT “Anti-Shock/Anti-Surge” Air Release Vacuum Break Valves – Industry Leading Performance and Design - robust stainless valves, lowest maintenance & 10 year warranty - ONLY VENT-O-MAT! RELIANT Lagoon Master™ Water Quality Aerators for lagoons – improves aeration, moves and tames sludge, defers/ eliminates need for dredging! PHI Pulsed Hydraulics “Hydro-Pulse™” Mixing Systems – most energy & cost-effective and no in-basin moving parts. PULSCO – Tier 1 Supplier of Hydro-pneumatic Surge and Pressure Control Systems and more.
INDACHEM INC.
1040 Martin Grove Rd Unit #3 Toronto ON M9W 4W4 416-743-3751 F: 416-743-2038 E: nick.pecoskie@indachem.com www.indachem.com Contact: Nicholas Pecoskie UGSI Chemfeed PolyBlend dry/liquid polymer feed systems; Halogen Valve Systems emergency valve closure systems for toxic gases; Westfalia dewatering/thickening centrifuges; PSI MicrOclor onsite sodium hypochlorite generation; PSI Tank Shark tank mixing system; FTC FRP panel type water tanks; Enpro Technologies dry/ liquid chemical feed systems; Evoqua Water Champ gas/liquid chemical induction and mixing systems; Steltec ORP chlorination/dechlorination controllers; ADI International arsenic removal; Muddy River oil/water separators.
INGU SOLUTIONS
HUBER TECHNOLOGY, INC.
9735 Northcross Center Crt Ste A Huntersville NC 28078 USA 704-990-2053 F: 704-949-1020 E: marketing@hhusa.net www.huber-technology.com Contact: Wayne Grooms, Business Development Specialist Experts in liquid/solid separation technologies, Huber offers virtually the complete chain of
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HYDROXYL ENVIRONMENTAL, INC.
21 Industry St, Unit 4 Aurora ON L4G 1X6 416-580-1244 E: mslepkov@sympatico.ca www.hydroxylenvironmental.com Contact: Martin Slepkov, President Odorox® air purification technology uses the same UV irradiation process as the Sun to transform water vapor and oxygen into a natural
Communitech Hub Suite 122, 151 Charles Street West Kitchener ON N2G 1H6 226-336-8360 E: yvonne@ingu-solutions.com Contact: Yvonne van den Berg
INSITU CONTRACTORS INC.
48 Dawson Rd Guelph ON N1H 5V1 519-763-0700 F: 519-763-6684 E: general@insitucontractors.com Contact: Harry Oussoren, P.Eng.
INSITUFORM TECHNOLOGIES LTD.
5743 - 68th Ave NW Edmonton AB T6B 3P8
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February 2016 | 97
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers offer the best expertise at every stage of water management. Our inorganic product portfolio consists of a variety of aluminum and iron coagulants, cationic, anionic and non-ionic polymers.
KELLER AMERICA INTERNATIONAL WATER SUPPLY LTD.
342 Bayview Dr/PO Box 310 Barrie ON L4M 4T5 705-733-0111 F: 705-721-0138 E: iws@iws.ca www.iws.ca Contact: John A Harris, President Complete Groundwater Engineering and Hydrogeologic services which include: Well Design, large diameter, high capacity Well Construction and Testing, Performance Testing of wells and pumps, Well Rehabilitation and re-development programs, Well Video inspection, and supply, installation and maintenance of lineshaft and submersible Pumps. Groundwater resource assessments and exploration programs.
INTERPROVINCIAL CORROSION CONTROL 930 Sheldon Ct Burlington ON L7L 5K6 Contact: Ray Thoroski, Manager, Customer Service
IPEC - JWC ENVIRONMENTAL
2889 Norland Ave Burnaby BC V5B 3A9 604-291-7150 F: 604-291-7190 E: sales@ipec.ca Contact: Chuck Frappier
IPEX INC.
6810 Invader Cr Mississauga ON L5T 2B6 905-670-7676
ITECH ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
73 Sinclair Blvd Brantford ON N3S 7X6 877-324-4402
ITRON
KUSTERS WATER, DIVISION OF KUSTERS ZIMA CORP.
120-813 Diligence Dr Newport News VA 23606 USA
KG SERVICES
PO Box 5001 Brantford ON N3T 6J7 855-378-3015 F: 888-245-5220 E: info@kgservices.ca Contact: Kristofer Gaal, President & General Manager
KGO GROUP LTD.
52-1200 Speers Rd Oakville ON L6L 2X4 905-847-1544 F: 905-847-1699 E: garry@kgogroup.com www.kgogroup.com Contact: Garry O’Donnell, President Liquid and Dry Polymer Systems, Mineral Wetting and Dissolving Systems, Tank, Mixers and Agitators, Progressive Cavity, Rotary Lobe, Hose, Mechanical and Hydraulic, Metering, Magnetic Drive Centrifugal, and Air Operated Diaphragm Pumps, Specialty and Custom Packaged Systems, Controls and Instrumentation. Products represented Roto, EMEC, PAN World, DOSEURO, Verder, SSP, Plas-Tanks.
KROHNE INC.
432 McCormick Boulevard Columbus OH 15001 215-546-3900 x226 E: becky.sexton@jacobi.net Contact: Becky Sexton
JOHN BROOKS COMPANY LIMITED
2625 Meadowpine Blvd Mississauga ON L5N 1T1 877-624-5757
JWC ENVIRONMENTAL
290 Paularino Ave Costa Mesa CA 92626 USA 515-557-2008 E: jeanh@2rm.com Contact: Jean Hiller
6 - 60 Bathurst Dr Waterloo ON N2V 2A9 519-746-5995
LAKESIDE EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
1022 E Devon Ave PO Box 8448 Bartlett IL 60103 USA
LAKESIDE PROCESS CONTROLS LTD.
5250 Orbitor Dr Mississauga ON L4W 5G7 905-629-9340 17720-129th Ave Edmonton AB T5V 0C4
LEMNA TECHNOLOGIES INC.
J & S VALVE
JACOBI CARBONS, INC.
LAKES ENVIRONMENTAL SOFTWARE
LAYFIELD CANADA LTD.
559 Oakwood Ave Toronto ON M6E 2X4
North 211 Molter Rd Liberty Lake WA 99019 USA 2323 1st St Huffman TX 77336 USA 281-324-3990 F: 281-324-4595
101 Zima Park Dr Spartanburg SC 29301 USA 800-264-7005 E: jim.weidler@kusterszima.com www.kusterswater.com Contact: Jim Weidler Kusters Water, a division of Kusters Zima Corporation, is an industry leader, offering superior product technologies for clarification, headworks, biological, biosolids, odour control and thickening. In-house fabrication, UL listed controls and product assembly, combined with our ISO 9001:2008 Quality Management System, ensure our customers receive the very best service and products. Our diverse product offering enables Kusters Water to provide complete treatment solutions, including: ProTechtor™ headworks products; LA-EDI energy dissipating inlet; Type H - hydraulic clarifier and thickener drive systems; Screw Press, for dewatering; and Terminodour™ ionization odour control system.
2445 Park Ave Minneapolis MN 55404 USA
LIME GREEN EQUIPMENT INC.
KISTERS NORTH AMERICA
209-7777 Greenback Lane Citrus Heights CA 95610 USA 916-723-1441 F: 916-723-1626 E: kna@kisters.net www.kisters.net Contact: Steve Elgie WISKI 7 and the KISTERS Time Series Management server (KiTSM) are the result of more than 20 years of experience in the global water industry. Our software and hardware telemetry systems are used globally for managing, analyzing and reporting surface water, groundwater, stormwater, wastewater, water quality, ecological and meteorological data.
KAESER COMPRESSORS CANADA INC.
1183 Barton St E / PO Box 47629 Hamilton ON L8H 7S7
LINKON TECHNOLOGY INC.
25 Southvale Dr. Vaughan ON L6A 0X2 647-724-6799 E: davidkim@linkontechnology.com Contact: David Kim
LORADAY ENVIRONMENTAL PRODUCTS LTD. 1-142 Commerce Park Dr Barrie ON L4N 8W8
LUMINOR ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
290 Southgate Drive, Unit 2 Guelph ON N1G 4P5 519-837-3800 F: 519-837-3808 E: mlupal@luminoruv.com Contact: Myron Lupal, President
3760 la Verendrye Boisbriand QC J7H 1R5
KSB PUMPS INC. KEMIRA
3405 Marie-Victorin Blvd Varennes QC J3X 1P7 800-465-6171 F: 450-652-7343 E: water@kemira.com www.kemira.com Contact: Serge Chouinard At Kemira, we enable municipalities and water-intensive industries to improve their water treatment efficiency by supplying them with high-performing products and value adding application support. Our comprehensive understanding of the water cycle enables us to
98 | February 2016
5205 Tomken Rd Mississauga ON L4W 3N8 905-568-9200 F: 905-568-3740 E: ksbcanada@ksbcanada.com www.ksb.ca Contact: Emily Kishtamma KSB Pumps Inc. is a member of the KSB Group, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of pumps, valves and systems. KSB’s history dates back to 1871 in Germany, where the company’s global HQ is still located. KSB’s giant product portfolio consists of thousands of engineered and customized solutions. Water and wastewater pumps, submersible, dry, centrifugal, vertical, vertical turbine and submersible mixers (2002500 mm).
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MAKE-WAY ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY INC.
365 Andrew St Exeter ON N0M 1S7 866-625-3929 F: (519) 235-0570 E: bert@makeaway.ca www.makeway.ca Contact: Bert Knip, President Make-Way Environmental Technologies Inc., has been offering on-site wastewater treatment solutions for residential, commercial and communal applications since 1996. Our systems are very easy to design, install, and maintain and they are versatile and modular. The add-on unit for the reduction of Total Nitrogen is very simple, proven and efficient. We have a complete
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers S.T.E.P. system for your next communal project; Collection, Wastewater Treatment and Dispersal, Single source with single responsibility at a competitive price.
MANTECH INC.
5473 Highway 6 N Guelph ON N1H 6J2 519-763-4245 E: rmenegotto@mantech-inc.com Contact: Robert Menegotto
MAPLE REINDERS GROUP LTD.
2660 Argentia Rd Mississauga ON L5N 5V4
MARKLAND SPECIALTY ENGINEERING LTD.
9-305 Armstrong Ave Georgetown ON L7G 4X6 855-873-7791 E: markland@sludgecontrols.com www.sludgecontrols.com Contact: Scott Langstaff Designing + manufacturing instrumentation for municipal/industrial plants to measure, monitor & automate control of water/wastewater treatment and process slurries, since 1967. The Sludge Gun® helps provide sludge level profiles, eliminate unnecessary pumping/dredging, prevent carryover. Automatic Sludge Blanket Level Detectors program de-sludge pumps, help prevent carryover, optimize feed density. Suspended Solids Density Meters program underflow pumps, help optimize dosing and concentrations. Automatic Duckbill Composite Sampling Systems facilitate environmental regulatory compliance monitoring, even over high lifts/long runs.
MARK IT LOCATES INC.
1-4042 Mainway Burlington ON L7M 4B9
Medora Corporation, Dickinson, N.D., whose brands include GridBee® and SolarBee®, provides solutions for difficult water quality problems. Medora’s award-winning and patented longdistance circulation technology can prevent and control blue-green algae in lakes, raw water reservoirs and stormwater ponds; provide energy savings, process improvement and odor control in wastewater; and completely mix potable water tanks, eliminating stratification. For more information, call 866-437-8076 or visit www.medoraco.com.
MEGADOME BUILDINGS
1044 Principale St Saint-Thomas QC J0K 3L0 866-610-0370 F: 450-756-8389 E: info@harnois.com www.megadomebuildings.com Contact: Norm Bolduc, Business Development Manager MegaDome is the tension fabric building solution to protect materials and activities from the elements. Engineered with safety and function in mind, MegaDome® structures provide a clear span working space for composting, waste management, recycling and hazardous waste management facilities. They come with a range of heavy-duty options to sustain years of use even in corrosive environments. Designed and manufactured by a Canadian company, pioneer in fabric covered steel structures. National Building Code compliant, ISO 9001, CSA A660 & CWB certified. 50 years of experience in steel structure design/build. To find your local MegaDome representative, visit www.megadomebuildings.com under Contact Us.
MINOTAUR STORMWATER SERVICES
566 Lynden Rd RR#8 Brantford ON N3T 5M1 519-647-3729 F: 519-647-3198 E: service@minotaurltd.com www.minotaurltd.com Contact: Aaron Shaver, CEO Stormwater Quality Services. Minotaur provides a customized inspection and monitoring program for Stormceptor units & Jellyfish Filters in Ontario and Quebec. Minotaur provides the Ministry of the Environment compliance inspections. If you have a Stormwater issue, we’ll solve it. Simplify Your Responsibility!
MONITARIO TECHNICAL SERVICES INC.
10 Alpine Ct Cambridge ON N1R 5S5 519-748-8024 E: randy@monitario.com www.monitario.com Contact: Randy McLean, President MONITARIO has been supplying flow metering systems for over 25 years. By paying close attention to the prescribed requirements of the primary element MONITARIO can supply a device to match the needs. A billing meter or a compliance meter - MONITARIO can fulfill your metering needs from concept to guaranteed accuracy.
MEMBRANE SPECIALISTS
2 Rowe Court Hamilton OH 45015 USA 513-860-9490
MEMPORE ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES 2426 Georgina Dr Ottawa ON K2B 7M7
MEP DRIVES LIMITED
MASTER METER CANADA
1500-4 Robert Speck Parkway Mississauga ON L4Z 1S1 905-896-5956 F: 450-461-3720 E: rderer@mastermeter.com www.mastermeter.ca Contact: Rob Derer Master Meter Canada is a leading manufacturer of AWWA standard municipal water meters, AMR/AMI data collection systems and data management software. Our product line includes the market leading Octave ultrasonic water meter with no moving parts, zero maintenance and unmatched low flow accuracy. Master Meter products will help your utility to Measure, Collect and Manage your customer’s water consumption accurately, maximizing your revenues and providing enhanced customer service via our data management tools.
MCCROMETER
3255 W Stetson Ave Hemet CA 92545 USA
MEDORA CORPORATION
3225 Highway 22 Dickinson ND 58601 USA 701-225-4495 F: 701-225-0002 E: info@medoraco.com www.medoraco.com Contact: Joel Bleth, President & CEO
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3-2831 Bristol Circle Oakville ON L6H 6X5 905-829-1020 F: 905-829-8155
METAFLO TECHNOLOGIES
1630 Sismet Road, Unit 4 Mississauga ON L4W 1R5 888-862-4011 E: michael@metaflo.ca Contact: Michael MacDonald
METCON SALES & ENGINEERING LIMITED
3-15 Connie Cr Concord ON L4K 1L3 905-738-2355 F: 905-738-5520 www.metconeng.com Contact: Matthew Nicolak Disinfection systems (C12,NaOC1, NH3, SO3, ClO2, O3, UV, KMnO4); chemical feed systems (dry, liquid, gas, polymer, lime); flow meters (magnetic, mass, DP, VA); metering pumps, analyzers, turbidity, ozone generators, odour control scrubbers; reservoir mixing; filtration systems, screen filters, filtration plants, SBRs, septage receiving, aeration and mixing, centrifuges, chemical induction mixing, bulk water filling systems.
METTLER TOLEDO PROCESS ANALYTICS
6-2915 Argentia Rd Mississauga ON L5N 8G6
MSU MISSISSAUGA LTD.
2222 S. Sheridan Way, Building 3, Unit 300 Mississauga ON L5J 2M4 800-268-5336 F: 888-220-2213 E: paul@msumississauga.com www.msumississauga.com Contact: Paul Grassa MSU is Canada’s premier manufacturer of access hatches, climbing rungs, ladders, railing systems, stairways and specialty hardware for the water and wastewater industries. Founded in 1977 MSU has an almost 40 year history of supplying quality products and services.
MUELLER CANADA
82 Hooper Rd Barrie ON L4N 8Z9 705-719-9965 F: 705-719-4959 E: more-info@muellercanada.com www.muellercanada.com Contact: Ed Dylewski Since 1857, the Mueller® name has been associated with dependable water distribution products around the globe. With a foundation of solid core values and a clear mission, Mueller Canada serves as an extension of Mueller Company and its affiliates. Mueller Canada’s flow control and fire protection products include: hydrants, fire hydrant security, valves & valve boxes, service brass, drilling & tapping machines, pipe repair materials, automated flushing systems, indicator posts, and more.
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February 2016 | 99
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
MONTECO LTD.
OZONATOR INDUSTRIES LIMITED
2100-2 St Clair Ave W Toronto ON M4V 1L5 416-960-9968
1850 Industrial Dr/PO Box 26030 Regina SK S4R 8R7 306-791-0900 F: 306-791-0905 E: pklaptchuk@ozonatorindustries.com Contact: Peter J. Klaptchuk, President & CEO
MYRON L. COMPANY
2450 Impala Dr Carlsbad CA 92008-7226 USA
NAPIER-REID LTD.
2-10 Alden Rd Markham ON L3R 2S1 905-475-1545 F: 905-475-2021 E: info@napier-reid.com Contact: Frank Li, Vice President
NELSON ENVIRONMENTAL INC.
5 Burks Way Winnipeg MB R2J 3R8 204-949-7500 F: 204-237-0660 E: mhildebrand@nelsonenvironmental.com Contact: Martin Hildebrand
NEO VALVES
2-51 Terecar Dr Vaughan ON L4L 0B5
NEPTUNE TECHNOLOGY GROUP (CANADA) LTD. 7275 West Credit Ave Mississauga ON L5N 5M9 905-858-7480 F: 905-858-0428 E: rmassey@neptunetg.com Contact: Ruth Massey
ONTARIO CLEAN WATER AGENCY
PACE DEWATERING SYSTEMS (CANADA) LTD.
1700-1 Yonge St Toronto ON M5E 1E5 416-775-0543 E: mpontone@ocwa.com www.ocwa.com Contact: Massimo Pontone OCWA provides a full range of water and wastewater services to municipalities, First Nation communities, institutions and private sector companies across Ontario. We are a “Total Solutions Provider” offering a complete range of services, including operations and maintenance engineering; and other technical and advisory expertise. Our certified team of experts have the skills and knowledge to support you at every stage of the asset lifecycle, ensuring the longterm sustainability of your water and wastewater infrastructure. If your business is water, you need to know OCWA.
9402-31 Ave Edmonton AB T6N 1C4 Contact: Bob Niedzienski
PACK-A-CONE (MINDSPACE INC.)
16-270 Esna Park Dr Markham ON l3R 1H3 905-284-1000
PALL CANADA
6-3450 Ridgeway Dr Mississauga ON L5L 0A2
PARKSON CORPORATION
ONTARIO ONSITE WASTEWATER ASSOCIATION
198 Sophia St PO Box 2336 Peterborough ON K9J 7Y8 855-905-6692 F: 705-742-7907
NETZSCH CANADA INC.
500 Welham Road Barrie ON L4N 8Z7 705-797-8426 F: 705-797-8427 E: ntc@netzsch.com www.pumps.netzsch.com Contact: George Balcerczyk NETZSCH, the world’s largest manufacturer of Progressive Cavity Pumps offers a complete range of P.C. Pumps, Metering Pumps and Rotary Lobe Pumps. Netzsch Canada specializes in Progressive Cavity retrofit parts for most manufacturers’ pumps.
NEW LEAF BIOLOGICS, INC.
PO Box 246 Île-des-Chênes MB R0A 0T0 204-803-5728 E: natasha.klaponski@newleafbio.ca Contact: Natasha Klaponski
NEWALTA CORPORATION
211 11 Ave SW Calgary AB T2R 0C6 403-806-7000 F: 403-806-7348
NORDITECH PTY. LTD.
Unit 36/70 Holbeche Rd Arndell Park Sydney NSW 2148 Australia 61+2 9622 6327 F: 61+2 9622 6340 E: info@norditech.com.au Contact: Bruno Nourdine
ORIVAL WATER FILTERS
213 S Van Brunt St Englewood NJ 07631 201-568-3311 F: 201-568-1916 E: filters@orival.com www.orival.com Contact: Cila Schwartz Providing automatic self-cleaning filtration systems for the removal of suspended solids from water is more than a job for Orival - it’s a way of life. For over 30 years, Orival has supplied thousands of filtration units for a wide variety of customers in over 40 countries around the world. Single units, flange-to-flange systems, complete skid mounted or containerized packages, and specifically fabricated filters are all common products for Orival.
OSPREY SCIENTIFIC INC.
NOVA FILTRATION TECHNOLOGIES INC.
1367 Osprey Drive Ancaster ON L9G 4V5 905-304-8157 E: info@novafiltrationtech.com Contact: Matt Scruton
NUNA INNOVATIONS INC.
104 - 39149 Discovery Way Squamish BC V8B 0E6 604-815-4385 E: randonac@nunainnovations.com Contact: Randona Conrad
860 Harbour Way South Richmond CA 94804 USA
PENCON EQUIPMENT COMPANY
F2-109 Thomas St Oakville ON L6J 3A7 905-845-1727 F: 905-845-1792 E: jpenny@pencon.ca Contact: Brian Penny
PENINSULA PLASTICS LIMITED
620 Industrial Dr Fort Erie ON L2A 5M4 905-871-4766 4-490 Pinebush Rd Cambridge ON N1T 0A5
PIPE SPECIALTIES CANADA
661 Justus Dr Kingston ON K0K 1N0 613-384-2500 F: 613-384-2900 E: psc@pipespecialties.com Contact: Gillian Carr
PIPELINE SAFETY TRUST
Suite 415 - 55 Water Street Vancouver BC V6B 1A1 E: misha@northernani.com 94 Maple St East Longmeadow MA 01028 USA
PAX WATER TECHNOLOGIES INC.
PENTAIR CANADA
18130 - 105 Avenue Ste #100 Edmonton AB T5S 2T4 800-560-4402 F: 877-820-9667 E: sales@ospreyscientific.com Contact: George Ruddock
NORTHERN ANI SOLUTIONS NORTHSTAR RECYCLING
1401 W. Cypress Creek Road Fort Lauderdale FL 33309 USA 514-636-4618 F: 514-636-9718 E: jgrenier@parkson.com www.parkson.com Contact: Jean Grenier Parkson is a supplier of equipment and solutions for potable water, process water, and industrial and municipal wastewater applications. Parkson designs, engineers and assembles products that provide customers with advanced screening, biological, filtration, biosolids and disinfection solutions. Parkson also has a highly trained field service team capable of completely rebuilding aging equipment or retrofitting equipment to include the latest technology advancements.
300 N. Commercial, Suite B Bellingham WA 98225 USA
OVIVO USA, LLC
2404 Rutland Dr Austin TX 78758 USA 512-834-6000 F: 512-834-6039 E: info.us@ovivowater.com www.ovivowater.com Contact: Elena Bailey Ovivo is a world leader in equipment and solutions applicable to the treatment of water and wastewater. We bring together some of the world’s most established brands with an amalgamated heritage of over 200 years of experience. Ovivo designs and manufactures screening, clarifiers, aerobic digestion, anaerobic digestion, MBR systems, and aeration equipment. See it all at www.ovivowater.com. Email: info.us@ovivowater.com.
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PREMIER TECH AQUA
1 Avenue Premier Rivière-du-Loup QC G5R 6C1 418-867-8883 F: 418-862-6642 E: masp2@premiertech.com www.premiertechaqua.com Contact: Philippe Masuy Decentralized wastewater treatment solutions for the Municipal and Industrial sectors. Specialists in SBR technology.
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers PRAXAIR
1200-1 City Centre Dr Mississauga ON L5B 1M2
stage centrifugal blower’s volumes of 4000 CFM pressures to 4.5 PSI.
E: derek@scicorp.net Contact: Derek Maat
RACO MANUFACTURING & ENGINEERING CO INC.
SEALOGIC INNOVATIONS CORP.
1400 62nd St Emeryville CA 94608 USA
SEEPEX, INC.
PRO AQUA INC.
7-264 Bronte St S Milton ON L9T 5A3 905-864-9311 F: 905-864-8469 E: scott@proaquasales.com www.proaquasales.com Contact: Scott Lenhardt Archimedes screw pumps; screens, washer compactors, conveyors, grit removal, anoxic mixers, blowers, aeration diffusers, gas cleaning, mixers, clarifiers, tank components, SBR, RBC, MBR, oxidation ditches, tertiary filters, disk filters, UV, thickening, dewatering, rotary lobe pumps, grinders, polymer systems, sludge transport/storage, sludge dryers, alkaline stabilization, odour control, stormwater, biogas conditioning, siloxane removal, septage receiving, weir washing, launder covers, tipping buckets, flushing gates, aluminum covers, travelling water screens, floc mixers, underdrains, troughs, membranes, MF, UF, RO, IX, TOC analyzers, UV, blowers, truck fill stations, chlorine scrubbers, chlorine gas containment.
511 Speedway Dr Enon OH 45323 USA
SEI INDUSTRIES RITTAL SYSTEMS LTD.
6485 Ordan Dr Mississauga ON L5T 1X2 905-795-0777 F: 905-795-9548 www.rittal.ca Contact: Sandy McGale Rittal is the world’s leading supplier of enclosures, power distribution, and climate control for electrical, process and IT applications. Customers from all sectors of industry, from water treatment to oil and gas, as well as the IT and telecom markets are making use of system solutions from Rittal.
RUDI KOVACKO & ASSOCIATES INC.
SENSAPHONE
7A Taymall Ave Toronto ON M8Z 3Y8 416-253-6990
ROYAL PIPE COMPANY
PROTECTOLITE COMPOSITES INC.
84 Railside Rd Toronto ON M3A 1A3 416-444-4484 F: 416-444-4485 E: kszasz@protectolite.com Contact: Karl Szasz
1197 Fewster Dr Unit A Mississauga ON L4W 1A2
RUNNALLS INDUSTRIES
1275 Cardiff Blvd. Mississauga ON L5S 1R1 905-453-4220 X 229 E: lcooke@runnalls.com Contact: Linda Cooke
SAFE DRAIN
®
628 Hi Tech Parkway #D Oakdale CA 95361 USA 800-764-5220 F: 408-273-6000 E: merissa@safedrainusa.com Contact: Merissa Lowe
SERPENTIX
9085 Marshall Court Westminster CO 80031 USA
SERVICE FILTRATION OF CANADA LTD.
12-4141 Sladeview Cr Mississauga ON L5L 5T1
SEW-EURODRIVE COMPANY OF CANADA LTD.
2120 Hartley Ave Coquitlam BC V3K 6W5
3-10 Kenmore Ave Stoney Creek ON L8E 5N1 905-388-4444
300-8601 Six Fords Rd Raleigh NC 27615 USA
SANDALE UTILITY PRODUCTS INC. SANITHERM INC.
QUANTUM MURRAY LP
SENSUS METERING SYSTEMS
SEVERN TRENT SERVICES
66 Adams Blvd Brantford ON N3S 7V2
PO Box 1520 Crestwood KY 40014 USA 877-QUANICS
901 Tryens Road Aston PA 19014 USA 877-373-2700 E: dbreisac@sensaphone.com Contact: Dave Breisacher
SAI GLOBAL ASSURANCE SERVICES
200-20 Carlson Ct Toronto ON M9W 7K6
QUANICS INC.
SENTRIMAX CENTRIFUGES INC.
131 Regalcrest Crt Woodbridge ON L4L 8P3
ROADPOST INC.
4-2850 Argentia Rd Mississauga ON L5N 8G4 Contact: Bill Barnett
490 Southgate Dr Guelph ON N1G 4P5 888-709-9933 F: 519-836-5226 E: sales@prominent.ca www.prominent.ca Contact: Garth deBruyn, Vice President ProMinent is your trusted advisor in water treatment and chemical feed, and is a world leader in manufacturing components and systems for chemical fluid handling. Our innovative products, services and industry-specific solutions provide best-in-class efficiency and safety for our customers the world over.
7400 Wilson Ave Delta BC V4G 1H3
9440-60th Avenue Edmonton AB T6E 0C1 780-434-1718 F: 780-434-1620 E: tim.maxwell@sentrimax.com www.sentrimax.com Contact: Tim Maxwell At Sentrimax, we’re proud of our solid history and vast experience in the service and repair of municipal decanter centrifuges. Our vertically integrated machine shop operations in both Canada and the U.S. provide a complete, inhouse range of services that is second to none, and every aspect of a centrifuge repair is executed with the utmost regard for quality and reliability. This is what our customers continually expect and this is what Sentrimax consistently delivers.
ROTORK CONTROLS
PROMINENT FLUID CONTROLS LTD.
PO Box 23809 Belleville ON K8P 5J3 613-966-4567 F: 613-966-9854 E: eng@seal-ogic.com Contact: Kevin Drumm
SAXE LAW OFFICE
204-720 Bathurst St Toronto ON M5S 2R4
SCENTROID
220 Gibraltar Rd Horsham PA 19044 USA 210 Walker Dr Bramalea ON L6T 3W1 905-791-1553
SHERIDAN ELECTRIC SERVICES LTD
966 Pantera Dr, Unit 34 Mississauga ON L4W 2S1 905-625-0265 F: 905-625-0268 E: ginaf@sheridanelectric.ca Contact: Gina Fitz-Andrews
431 Alden Road Markham ON L3R 3L4 416-479-0078 E: sales@idescanada.com www.scentroid.com
R.E. MORRISON EQUIPMENT INC.
21-3615 Laird Rd Mississauga ON L5L 5Z8 905-828-6301 F: 905-828-3674 E: info@remequipm.com www.remequip.com Contact: Ray Ralph, Owner Canadian national distributor of Becker and Republic blowers, compressors and vacuum pumps. The company provides engineering, sales and service, inventory of parts, pumps with unique size and pressure capability. Becker rotary vane blowers and compressors work in small to mid-size aeration projects. Regenerative blower compact, quiet and dependable. Three stage units for up to 15 PSI. Compact high speed single
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SCG INDUSTRIES LTD.
250 King William Rd Saint John NB E2M 5Y5 506-674-1081 F: 506-674-1082 E: rkerr@scgindustries.com Contact: Russell Kerr
SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC
48 Steacie Dr Kanata ON K2K 2A9
SCHREIBER
100 Schreiber Dr Trussville AL 35173 USA
SCICORP INTERNATIONAL INC.
15-220 Bayview Ave. Barrie ON L4N 4Y8 705-733-2626
SMITH & LOVELESS, INC.
14040 Santa Fe Trail Dr Lenexa Kansas 66215 USA 913-888-5201 F: 913-888-2173 www.smithandloveless.com Contact: William Flores, Vice President Municipal Division Smith & Loveless Inc. is a global leader in the design and manufacture of a complete line of preengineered water and wastewater treatment and pumping systems. With sales offices throughout Canada, and numerous installations over 40 years, we feature treatment plants, grit removal systems, pump stations and filtration systems.
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February 2016 | 101
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
SULZER PUMPS (CANADA) INC.
101 Prospect Ave NW Cleveland OH 44115 USA
1401 Meyerside Drive, Unit#2 Mississauga ON L5T 1G8 905-670-4677 F: 416-881-1572 E: landy.lu@sulzer.com Contact: Landy Lu
SINGER VALVE
12850 - 87th Avenue Surrey BC V3W 3H9 604.594.5404 F: 604.594.8845 E: singer@singervalve.com Contact: Mark Gimson
SNF CANADA LTD.
5 Blueking Cr West Hill ON M1C 4V3 416-286-4617 F: 416-286-6324 E: msimpson@snfcanada.com www.snf-canada.com Contact: Mark Simpson, Regional Manager SNF is the world’s largest manufacturer of organic coagulants and flocculants. SNF Canada specializes in providing flocculants and coagulants to the municipal water and wastewater treatment industry. Typical polymer applications include sludge dewatering, sludge thickening and primary/secondary clarification. SNF Canada’s Equipment Division offers end-users dry and/or emulsion polymer preparation systems, solution tanks and feed pump packages.
SOLAR ONTARIO LTD.
1290 Speers Road Unit 14 Oakville ON L6L 2X4 905-845-2433 E: info@solarontario.com Contact: Andrew McKegney
SOLINST CANADA LTD.
35 Todd Road Georgetown ON L7G 4R8 905-873-2255 F: 905-873-1992 E: chris.batt@solinst.com Contact: Chris Batt
SPILL MANAGEMENT INC.
45 Upper Mount Albion Rd Stoney Creek ON L8J 2R9 905-578-9666 F: 905-578-6644 E: contact@spillmanagement.ca www.spillmanagement.ca Contact: Ruth Holland, General Manager Instructor Cliff Holland teaches emergency preparedness, planning and spill response on site, across Canada. The customized courses address geographical conditions while handling routine events or facing a worst-case scenario. The courses require samples of chemicals typically used on site. Other representative samples may be placed into individually “numerically coded” sample bottles for course exercises. Courses are 75% hands-on, 15% interactive and 10% orientation. Other topics include Incident Command, E R Planning, Testing, and Exercising.
SPILLFIX/AMERICAN GREEN VENTURES 47 Eliot St South Natick MA 01760 USA
SUMMA ENGINEERING LIMITED
6423 Northam Dr Mississauga ON L4V 1J2 905-678-3388 F: 905-678-0444 E: drubino@summaeng.com www.summaeng.com Contact: Diana Rubino In-depth knowledge of water and wastewater processes and extensive experience with instrumentation and SCADA projects have allowed Summa Engineering Limited to provide quality goods and services to Canadian Industrial and municipal markets continuously for over 32 years.
SUPPORTING ONTARIO INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS & LANDS (SOIIL)
25 North Rivermede Rd Vaughan ON L4K 5V4 905-581-3498
SRP CONTROL SYSTEMS LTD.
19-5155 Spectrum Way Mississauga ON L4W 5A1
SWOFFER INSTRUMENTS, INC.
1048 Industry Dr Seattle WA 98188 USA
ST. LAWRENCE COUNTY INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
19 Commerce Ln Suite 1 Canton NY 13617 USA 315-379-9806
STANMECH TECHNOLOGIES INC.
SYNAGRO
1000-1800 Bering Dr Houston TX 77057 USA
SYNTEC PROCESS EQUIPMENT LTD.
77 Pillsworth Rd Unit #12 Bolton ON L7E 4G4 905-951-8000 F: 905-951-8002 E: roger@syntecpe.com Contact: Roger Sinclair, President
944 Zelco Drive Burlington ON L7L 4Y3 905-631-6161 F: 905-631-1852 E: info@stanmech.com
STAR PIPE CANADA
1144 Industrial Rd Cambridge ON N3H 4W4
STEALTH VALVE & CONTROLS LTD.
F6-1273 North Service Rd E Oakville ON L6H 1A7
SONIC SOIL SAMPLING INC.
668 Millway Ave Units #15&16 Concord ON L4K 3V2 905-660-0501 F: 905-660-7143 E: sonic@sonicsoil.com www.sonicsoil.com Contact: Alan Archibald, VP Administration Sonic Soil Sampling Inc. is celebrating their 34th Anniversary. We have been providing contract services since 1981 to the Environmental, Geotechnical and Mining sectors throughout the world, offering a portable solution to your sampling and geotechnical needs. Our reputation for quality, workmanship and a willingness to help our customers has been our best promotional tool.
STEEL TANK INSTITUTE/STEEL PLATE FABRICATORS ASSOCIATION (STI/SPFA) STERLING POWER SYSTEMS INC.
799 Rennie St Hamilton ON L8H 3R5 800-809-0330 F: 905-547-2381
SUDBURY LIME LTD.
PO Box 670 Stn B Sudbury ON P3E 4R6 705-479-1056 Contact: Matt Haggis
SUEZ
SPD SALES LIMITED
6415 Northam Dr Mississauga ON L4V 1J2 905-678-2882 F: 905-293-9774 E: sales@spdsales.com www.spdsales.com Contact: Frank Farkas SPD Sales Limited proudly sells products and services to Canada’s wastewater treatment facilities. SPD Sales Limited provides solutions for our customers’ applications in process control, chemical feed and process equipment.
T. HARRIS ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT INC.
944 Donata Ct Lake Zurich IL 60047 USA
8007 Discovery Drive Richmond VA 23229 USA 804-756-7600 F: 804-756-7643 E: sylvie.roy@suez-na.com www.suez-na.com Contact: Sylvie Roy SUEZ provides engineering design, equipment supply and commissioning services in four primary business sectors: wastewater, drinking water, biosolids treatment and industrial water by specializing in technologies such as headworks, high-rate clarification, filtration, disinfection, biological treatment and biosolids management for both the industrial and municipal markets. As full-treatment line specialists, we supply primary, secondary, and tertiary treatment technologies and are involved in all project stages, from process design to equipment supply to operations training.
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93 Skyway Ave Suite 101 Toronto ON M9W 6N6 416-679-8914 F: 416-679-8915 E: rsingh@tharris.ca www.tharris.ca Contact: Raj Singh T.Harris Environmental Management Inc. (THEM) is a diverse group of Engineering, Scientific, Technical, and Industrial Hygiene Professionals providing Consulting Services on Hazardous Materials (Asbestos, Lead, Mould, etc.), Occupational Hygiene, and Environmental matters since 1979. THEM is committed to providing our clients with high quality services at cost-effective prices, and in a time-efficient manner. We are proud to be celebrating over 35 years of treating our clients as friends, because you never let a friend down.
TANK CONNECTION
3609 N. 16th St. Parsons KS 67357 USA 620-423-3010 F: 620-423-3999 E: sales@tankconnection.com Contact: Bransie Qualls
TANK TEK ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES LTD. 970 Third Concession Rd Pickering ON L1V 2P8 877-789-6224 F: 905-839-6600
TELOG INSTRUMENTS INC.
830 Canning Pkwy Victor NY 14564 USA 585-742-3000 F: 585-742-3006
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers TROY-ONTOR INC.
121 Commerce Park Dr Units H-K Barrie ON L4N 8X1 705-721-8246 F: 705-721-5851
UNIQAIR TECHNOLOGIES TEAM-1 ACADEMY INC.
19-760 Pacific Rd Oakville ON L6L 6M5 905-827-0007 F: 905-827-0049 E: brian@team1academy.com www.team1academy.com Contact: Brian Kovalcik Leader for Professional Safety Training, Consulting, Equipment Sales, Service, Inspections, Standby Rescue, Wind Industry Services for the last 20 years.
TENCATE
365 South Holland Dr Pendergrass GA 30567 USA
TERMINAL CITY IRON WORKS LTD.
35993 Eaglecrest Pl Abbotsford BC V3G 1E7 604-854-5628 F: 604-854-5620
UNITED MANUFACTURING INTERNATIONAL 2000 820 Kimball Road, Ste. 1002 Red Bluff CA 96080-4586 530-528-1361 F: 530-528-1361 E: activecarbon@jps.net Contact: Laurence D’Alberti
UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO - CO-OP EDUCATION & CAREER ACTION
200 University Ave W Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 519-888-4567
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
2-9494 - 198th St Surrey BC V1M 3C8
TERRATEC ENVIRONMENTAL LTD.
200 Eastport Blvd Hamilton ON L8H 7S4 905-544-0444 F: 905-544-0266 Contact: Jeff Newman
432 N Lake St Madison WI 53706 800-462-0876 F: 608-263-3160 E: custserv@epd.wisc.edu Contact: Philip O’Leary
URECON PRE-INSULATED PIPE
PO Box 210 Calmar AB T0C 0V0
US PEROXIDE
900 Circle 75 Pkwy Suite 1330 Atlanta GA 30339 USA 404-352-6070 F: 404-352-6077
thickener mechanisms, chain & flight collectors, fine bubble diffusers, surface aerators & mixers, Bio-Wheel™, MBBRs, MBRs, SBRs, lagoons, SAGR® nitrification system, blowers, air control valves, tertiary sand filters, phosphorus removal systems, membrane filters, UV disinfection, digester covers & mixers, heat exchangers, centrifuges, belt presses, sludge dryers, aluminum covers, bolted steel tanks, TwinOxide® disinfection system, centrifugal pumps.
VEOLIA WATER TECHNOLOGIES CANADA INC. 4105 Sartelon Saint Laurent QC H4S 2B3 514-334-7230 F: 905-286-4846 E: nadine.mourad@veolia.com www.veoliawatertechnologies.ca Contact: Nadine Mourad, Marketing Team Leader Veolia Water Technologies Canada has helped Canadian municipalities and industries solve water, wastewater and sludge treatment challenges since 1948. We design, manufacture and service over 350 proprietary technologies, offering solutions ranging from mobile and urgent temporary plants, to treatment equipment, to integrated systems delivered under a wide range of procurement methods, including Design Build. By delivering solutions that minimize resource consumption and maximize resource recovery we help customers achieve their sustainability targets.
TERRAPURE ENVIRONMENTAL
1100 Burloak Dr, Ste. 500 Burlington ON L7L 6B2 905-315-6300 E: info@terrapureenv.com www.terrapureenv.com Contact: General Inquiries Terrapure Environmental is a leading Canadian provider of innovative, cost-effective environmental services and recycling solutions that help address industry’s most complex environmental challenges. With an unwavering focus on health and safety excellence, the company provides services that minimize waste and maximize the recovery or recycling of valuable industrial by-products through a coastto-coast facility network and on customer sites.
TERVITA CORPORATION - ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES & WASTE MANAGEMENT 5045 North Service Rd Burlington ON L7L 5H6 905-383-5550 F: 905-315-7110
THE FORD METER BOX COMPANY INC.
777 Manchester Ave PO Box 443 Wabash IN 46992 USA
THOMPSON PUMP & MANUFACTURING COMPANY, INC.
USABLUEBOOK
PO Box 9006 Gurnee IL 60031 USA 800-548-1234 F: 847-377-5160 E: export@usabluebook.com www.usabluebook.com Contact: Dan Mantilla, International Sales Manager USABlueBook is the water and wastewater industry’s primary source for equipment and supplies. With over 64,000 products available, it’s easy to see why thousands of industrial, private and municipal operations rely on USABlueBook each year. Call 1-800-548-1234 Monday through Friday, 6 am to 7 pm CST, to speak with a live customer service representative who can answer your questions, place your order, quote pricing or track your shipment. Request your FREE 1,760page catalog today! 3200 West 84th St Hialeah FL 33018 USA
VAL-MATIC VALVE & MANUFACTURING CORP.
TITAN ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAINMENT LTD.
VAUGHAN CO. INC.
905 Riverside Dr Elmhurst IL 60126 USA
364 Monte-Elma Rd Montesano WA 98563 USA
TRANS ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS INC.
1363 Wimbledon Way Charlottesville VA 22901 434-975-2872 F: 434-975-2872 E: rambishop1@gmail.com Contact: Merrill Bishop
TRI-PHASE GROUP
446 Hazelhurst Rd Mississauga ON L5J 2Z7 905-823-7965 F: 905-823-7932
TROJAN TECHNOLOGIES
3020 Gore Rd London ON N5V 4T7 519-457-3400 E: info@trojanuv.com Contact: Tania Testa
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2 - 15700 Robins Hill Rd London ON N5V 0A4 877-818-3653 F: 519-659-6941 E: sales@vfoldinc.com www.vfoldinc.com Contact: Mark Thomas Manufacturer of Sludge Dewatering Systems for Industrial & Municipal. Specializing in small mid sized applications with equipment built for simplicity, low maintenance & cost-effectiveness. Dewatering systems capable of handling sludge produced from: Clarifier underflow, DAF float, Biological Treatment, MBRs, Lagoons. Manufacturer of VFold Folding Belt Press; Rotating Drum Thickner; Polymer Make-down Systems.
USF FABRICATION
4620 City Center Dr Port Orange FL 32129 USA 386-767-7310 F: 386-761-0362 777 Quest Blvd PO Box 9 Île-des-Chênes MB R0A 0T0
VFOLD INC.
VECTOR PROCESS EQUIPMENT INC.
5889 Summerside Dr Mississauga ON L5M 6L1 416-527-4396, 905-979-8660 F: 905-567-8590 E: info@vectorprocess.com www.vectorprocess.com Contact: André Osborne, Dale Sanchez Pumps, strainers, water control gates, multirake & perforated screens, screw conveyors, compactors, grit collectors, clarifier & sludge
VICTAULIC
123 Newkirk Rd Richmond Hill ON L4C 3G5 905-884-7444 www.victaulic.com Contact: Rhys Jardine Victaulic is the world’s leading producer of mechanical pipe joining solutions, including grooved fittings and couplings. Victaulic piping systems, technologies and services put people to work faster, increase safety, help ensure reliability and maximize efficiency. With piping solutions at work in more than 140 countries, Victaulic supports diverse business lines in oil and gas, chemical, mining, power generation, water and wastewater treatment, maritime, as well as commercial building and fire protection. Learn more at www.victaulic.com.
VL MOTION SYSTEMS INC.
212 Wyecroft Road, Unit 23 Oakville ON L6K 3T9 905-842-0244 F: 905-845-3009 E: jcarney@vlmotion.com Contact: John Carney
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February 2016 | 103
Suppliers
VISSERS SALES CORP.
20 - 220 Industrial Pkwy S Aurora ON L4G 3V6 905-841-4073 F: 905-841-4018 E: greg@vissers.on.ca www.VissersSales.com Contact: Greg Vissers Vissers Sales Corp. serves a wide variety of industrial, municipal, power, oil & gas, and OEM customers. Focusing on liquid handling applications, our process specialists have years of experience in assisting our customers in making: Manufacturing processes operate more efficiently; Drinking water safe; Wastewater safe for discharge; Boilers and cooling towers scalefree; Buildings more energy efficient; Buildings more water efficient; Commercial swimming pools clean and crystal clear.
WACHS CANADA LTD.
1250 Journey’s End Circle Newmarket ON L3Y 0B9
WALKER ENVIRONMENTAL GROUP INC.
2800 Thorold Townline Rd Niagara Falls ON L2E 6S4 905-227-4142 F: 905-680-1916 E: contactweg@walkerind.com Contact: Robert Crane
WALKERTON CLEAN WATER CENTRE
20 Ontario Road, Box 160 Walkerton ON N0G 2V0 519-881-2003 F: 519-881-4947 E: inquiry@wcwc.ca
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers fully scalable from house to school to truck stop to subdivision flows. Advantages include low maintenance, low energy, small footprint, high quality effluent, and no aerobic sludge management. Proven high-nitrogen removal, and reuse for irrigation or toilets. Phosphorus removal for new and retrofit installations; fast and simple with no excavation required.
WATERMARK SOLUTIONS LTD.
20-169 Dufferin St S Alliston ON L9R 1E6 855-293-5325 F: 705-435-5054 E: sales@watermarksolutions.ca www.watermark.ca Contact: Gary Fricke Watermark provides the most current methods of water resource loss mitigation. These methods include system wide water leak detection surveys, DMA’s, flow and pressure monitoring, hydrant flow testing, “C” factor testing and specialized equipment sales and service. We represent ABB Aquamaster III and UL approved Fire Service Meters; HWM – Water Leak Detection Equipment, Acoustic, Correlators and Sound Loggers; Schonstedt Pipe Locators; TSI Hydrant Flow Meters. Visit us at www.Watermark.ca, sales@watermarksolutions.ca or Call 1-855-2935325.
WATERRA PUMPS LIMITED WASTECORP PUMPS CANADA INC.
55 Six Point Rd Toronto ON M8Z 2X3 416-233-3000 F: 416-233-2300 E: info@wastecorp.com www.wastecorp.com Wastecorp Pumps, an ISO 9001 certified company, is known worldwide for manufacturing high quality and heavy duty, high performance fluid process pumps in the areas of construction, municipal, industrial, chemical, food process, mining, oil and gas, refineries, environmental remediation and marine industries. Designs include a full range of positive displacement and Kinetic pumps. Designs: Plunger, Diaphragm, Centrifugal, and Disc pumps ranging in size from 2” - 12”. Power Sources: Electric, Engine, Hydraulic, Pneumatic Mounting: Mobile & Stationary.
WATERLOO BARRIER INC.
PO Box 385 Rockwood ON N0B 2K0 519-856-1352 F: 519-856-0759 E: info@waterloo-barrier.com Contact: Robin Jowett, Manager
5200 Dixie Rd, Unit #44 Mississauga ON L4W 1E4 905-238-5242 F: 905-238-5704 E: sales@waterra.com www.waterra.com Contact: John Newall Waterra has been providing simple, affordable technology for environmental groundwater monitoring applications around the world for over 25 years. Our product line includes everything from the ubiquitous inertial pump to stainless steel submersible pumps. We are the leading manufacturer of groundwater filters and our product line now also includes multiparameter water quality meters.
WESTECH ENGINEERING INC.
3665 S West Temple Salt Lake City UT 84115 USA 801-265-1000 F: 801-265-1080 E: info@westech-inc.com www.westech-inc.com Contact: Jim Hanson WesTech Engineering Inc. is a recognized leader in the manufacture of liquid-solids separation equipment for industrial and municipal process applications. Surface waters, groundwater, water reuse, drinking water, wastewater treatment and industrial and mineral process equipment built to meet customer specifications, and exceed performance criteria. WesTech is employeeowned and ISO 9001:2008 certified.
WESTECH INDUSTRIAL INC.
300-1201 West Pender St Vancouver BC V6E 2V2
WATSON-MARLOW PUMPS GROUP
WESTEEL
WATERTAP
20 Adelaide St E 13th Fl Toronto ON M5C 2T6
WATERTRAX
37 Upton Dr Wilmington MA 01887 USA
WATTS WATER TECHNOLOGIES
125 Lincoln Dr Sarver PA 16055 USA 4305 Luna Course Liverpool NY 13090 USA 315-569-9974 E: rsettembre@gmail.com Contact: Rich Settembre
PO Box 400 - 143 Dennis St Rockwood ON N0B 2K0 519-856-0757 F: 519-856-0759 E: info@waterloo-biofilter.com www.waterloo-biofilter.com Contact: Geanine Hastings Waterloo Biofilter® for on-site treatment of residential, commercial and communal sewage;
15700 Robins Hill Rd Unit #2 London ON N5V 0A4 866-952-6523, 519-659-6523 F: 519-659-6941 E: info@wes-cor.ca www.wes-cor.ca Supplier of industrial and municipal wastewater treatment systems. Manufacturing innovative technologies to achieve compliance. All systems are designed for ease of operation, maintenance and durability, including: Industrial pretreatment systems - continuous and batch, sludge dewatering equipment, clarifiers, dissolved air flotation, indexing filters, multimedia filters, customized chemical treatment programs.
#1 - 2830 Argentia Rd Mississauga ON L5N 8G4 905-812-3993 F: 905-812-3995 E: jerry@westech-ind.com www.westech-canada.ca Contact: Jerry D’Ortenzio, Product Specialist Varec digester/landfill gas flame arresters, relief valves, enclosed burners, regulators, sediment/ drip traps, manholes, hatches. Westech emission/ effluent pollution monitoring systems.
WAY COOL PRODUCT CO. LLC
WATERLOO BIOFILTER SYSTEMS INC.
WESCOR WASTEWATER & ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS
WEIR CANADA
2360 Millrace Ct Mississauga ON L5N 1W2 905-813-8190 F: 905-813-8170 Contact: Tom Scott
PO Box 792 Winnipeg MB R3C 2N5 204-233-7133 F: 204-235-0796
WIKA INSTRUMENTS LTD.
1-2679 Bristol Circle Oakville ON L6H 6Z8 905-337-1611 F: 905-337-2716
WILDCAT WATER TECHNOLOGIES LTD.
2933-26 Ave SE Suite # 411 Calgary AB T2B 0N5 403-774-1396 F: 888-317-4640 E: jean.navert@wildcatwater.com Contact: Jean Navert
WILO CANADA INC.
WELCO EXPEDITING LTD.
211-3030 Lincoln Ave Coquitlam BC V3B 6B4
Bay 8, 925-30th Street NE Calgary AB T2A 5L7 403-276-9456 F: 403-277-9456 E: info@wilo-canada.com Contact: Steffen Werner
WESSUC INC.
WISE ENVIRONMENTAL SOLUTIONS INC.
1693 Colborne St E Brantford ON N3T 5L4
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1115 Cathcart Blvd Sarnia ON N7S 2H4
Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
Suppliers
Guide to Environmental Equipment & Service Suppliers
ADDENDUM WORLD WATER OPERATOR TRAINING COMPANY INC. (WWOTC)
3665 Wyandotte St E Windsor ON N9A 5T7 866-622-6535 F: 519-974-9603 E: info@wwotc.ca www.wwotc.ca Contact: Patti Melo WWOTC is considered a leader when it comes to water and wastewater operational training. With nearly 150 accredited courses in our library, we can bring them to your site or you can come to one of our famous hands-on centres in Windsor or Hamilton. We have assembled an impressive roster of highly skilled instructors that can handle any training or coaching needs you might have. The right choice for many since 2001.
AECOM CANADA LTD.
105 Commerce Valley Dr W Markham ON L3T 7W3 905-886-7022 F: 905-886-9494 www.aecom.ca AECOM provides comprehensive solutions for our clients and are experts in water, wastewater, water resources, watershed concepts and wet weather, as well as creating innovative, sustainable and integrated water systems. We offer integrated services for total project delivery, covering everything from initial environmental planning studies to detailed design, construction management and operations and maintenance training.
WTP EQUIPMENT CORP.
83 Nuggett Ct Brampton ON L6T 5A9 905-799-3403 F: 905-799-6638 E: sales@wtpcorp.com www.wtpcorp.com Contact: Ken Argyle, Engineering Manager Canadian manufacturer of wastewater headworks equipment, including: mechanical bar screens, heavy duty deep well bar screens, continuously cleaned fine (to 1 mm) filter belt and perforated plate screens, conveyor screens, septage screens, screenings presses, screw conveyors, aerated tank and vortex chamber grit collectors and grit classifiers. Customer service is provided from our Brampton, Ontario, facility.
GREYLINE INSTRUMENTS INC.
16456 Sixsmith Dr Long Sault ON K0C 1P0 613-938-8956 F: 613-938-4857 E: info@greyline.com www.greyline.com Contact: Marlene Quenneville Greyline Instruments develops and manufactures flow and level monitoring instruments including ultrasonic level transmitters, non-contacting flow meters and open channel flow meters. Our instruments are widely used in water and wastewater collection and treatment systems. Industrial customers are in heavy industry including chemicals, oil and gas, mining, textile, pulp and paper, steel and food processing.
XYLEM
14125 South Bridge Circle Charlotte NC 28273 USA 704-409-9750 E: sara.bonham@xyleminc.com www.xylemwatersolutions.com/ca Contact: Sarah J. Bonham. NA Marketing Communications Manager Xylem is a global water leader involved in every state of the cycle of water, transporting, treating, testing and analyzing, then returning it to the environment. With 12 offices across Canada, Xylem offers the Flygt brand of submersible pumps, mixers, dewatering pumps and accessories, monitoring and controls, and aftermarket services. Xylem water and wastewater treatment solutions include biological treatment, filtration and clarification. UV disinfection and ozone oxidation under the brands Sanitaire, Wedeco, and Leopold.
IPEX INC.
6810 Invader Cres Mississauga ON L5T 2B6 905-670-7676 www.ipexna.com Contact: Bill Hawke, Marketing Manager IPEX Inc. offers the world’s most comprehensive range of thermoplastic piping systems for the municipal, industrial, mechanical and plumbing markets. Backed by more than 50 years experience and with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities and distribution centers across North America, IPEX has established a reputation for product innovation, quality, enduser focus, and performance.
XYPEX
13731 Mayfield Place Richmond BC V6V 2G9
YASKAWA CANADA INC.
3-3530 Laird Rd Mississauga ON L5L 5Z7 Contact: Roy Lieun-Kie-Song
YORK FLUID CONTROLS LTD.
2 Westwyn Ct Brampton ON L6T 4T5 905-454-4013 F: 905-454-8423
ZOELLER PUMP COMPANY
3649 Cane Run Rd Louisville KY 40211 USA
www.esemag.com
Hamilton, Barrie, Trenton and Ottawa, Ontario, and Saint John, New Brunswick, LimeGREEN specializes in storage tanks, filtration equipment, pumps, berms and flow meters, etc. Whether your application is industrial services, construction, remediation, pipeline, municipal, mining or emergency response, LimeGREEN’s experience has you covered. Contact us to see how we can work with you, to help save you time, and money.
LIMEGREEN EQUIPMENT INC.
1183 Barton St E, PO Box 47629, Hamilton ON L8H 7S7 844-444-2100 F: 613-955-1005 E: kbailey@limegreeninc.com www.limegreeninc.com Contact: Kevin Bailey Canadian owned and operated, environmental equipment rental house. With equipment yards in
MANTECH INC.
5473 Highway 6 North Guelph ON N1H 6J2 519-763-4245 E: rmenegotto@mantech-inc.com www.mantech-inc.com Contact: Robert Menegotto MANTECH is a leading manufacturer of laboratory and online analyzers for water and soil quality. With >1,900 analyzers installed worldwide in 45 countries, 100,000s of samples are analyzed everyday by MANTECH systems. We employ Green and Fast methods, many regulatory approved, and the data generated is trusted by Governments and Industry. Products include the 15min PeCOD® Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) analyzer; pH, conductivity and alkalinity from a 15ml tube; automated Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) Analyzers; and ColdBlock rapid soil digesters, digest soil in 10min with <10ml of acid. MANTECH systems enable end-users to make impactful decisions that deliver profitability and sustainability while protecting the environment and public health.
SEI INDUSTRIES LTD.
7400 Wilson Ave Delta BC V4G 1H3 604-946-3131 E: seisales@sei-ind.com www.sei-ind.com Contact: Paul Reichard Using proprietary materials, SEI’s ArcticShield Insta-Berms are the first to be certified to Canada’s new national CAN/ULC-S668-12 standard. Arctic-Shield material is purposeengineered for secondary containment in arctic climates and can be deployed in temperatures as low as -46C. Many operators working in remote, extreme conditions (including mining, construction and exploration companies), use these amazing climate-specific berms.
CLARO ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGIES & EQUIPMENT
4721 Louis-B.-Mayer Laval QC H7P 6G5 (514) 562-4575 Fax: (450) 688-8847 E-mail: info@claroglobal.com Web site: www.claroglobal.com Contact: Peter Lipert Jr, General Manager Complete system design/equipment: screening and grit removal (fine screens, septage stations, washpresses, baggers, aerated grit extraction screws, classifiers, vortex); anaerobic digestion systems (Big Bubble Gun™ gas mixers, Cannon retrofits, modular sludge heat exchangers, heat recovery, biogas compressors); solids handling (shaftless spiral conveyors, automated outloading, live-bottoms, challenging applications); 30+ years experience, OEM.
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February 2016 | 105
Guide to Environmental Products & Services Products ES&E’s Guide to Environmental Products & Services See “Suppliers” Section (pg. 88) for address, etc., of any company listed in this section Access Hatches ACG - Envirocan BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Can-Am Instruments Engineered Pump Systems ENV Treatment Systems Geomembrane Technologies Halliday Products MSU Mississauga Pro Aqua Westech Industrial Activated Carbon Adsorbents Anthrafilter Media & Coal BI Pure Water BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies Continental Carbon Group ENV Treatment Systems Jacobi Carbons Service Filtration Of Canada United Manufacturing Int. 2000 Veolia Water Technologies WESCOR Actuators ABB Alltork Actuation Avensys Solutions Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Chemline Plastics Delpro Automation ENV Treatment Systems Halogen Valve Systems Rotork Controls VL Motion Systems Adsorbents/Absorbents Blue-Zone Technologies Continental Carbon Group Drain-All EHS Canada ENV Treatment Systems Golden Environmental Services Loraday Environmental Minotaur Stormwater Services Safe Drain Spill Management Aeration Systems ACG - Envirocan Aeration Industries Int. Alfa Laval Aqua Technical Sales AWT Technologies Inc Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Canadianpond.ca Products Directrik Elmridge Engineering ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation H2Flow Equipment Hydro-Logic Environmental KSB Pumps Medora Corporation Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Nelson Environmental Parkson Corporation Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless Sulzer Pumps (Canada) USABluebook Vector Process Equipment Way Cool Product Co. WesTech Engineering
Aerobic Digestion ACG - Envirocan ADI Systems Aeration Industries Int. Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental CEMATRIX (Canada) ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation Greatario H2Flow Equipment KSB Pumps Napier-Reid Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Air Emissions Testing Avensys Solutions Cancoppas Limited ENV Treatment Systems Gasmet Technologies Gasmet Technologies Norditech T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Air Filters Blue-Zone Technologies Comprevac ENV Treatment Systems Pencon Equipment Company R.E. Morrison Equipment Rittal Systems WESCOR Air Pollution Control Equipment Aquafy Water Technologies Can-Am Instruments Continental Carbon Group Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Fluid Components Int. Gasmet Technologies Geomembrane Technologies H2Flow Equipment Hydroxyl Environmental Indachem Kusters Water Norditech Northern ANI Solutions Scentroid Sudbury Lime United Manufacturing Int. 2000 Veolia Water Technologies Westech Industrial Air Strippers Avensys Solutions Blue-Zone Technologies ENV Treatment Systems Metcon Sales & Engineering SCG Industries ADI Systems Anaerobic Digesters ADI Systems Aqua Technical Sales Atlas Dewatering Corporation Bio-Microbics BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Claro Environmental Tech. ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation H2Flow Tanks & Systems KSB Pumps New Leaf Biologics Ovivo USA Pro Aqua
Smith & Loveless SUEZ Tank Connection Vector Process Equipment Veolia Water Technologies WesTech Engineering
Asbestos Removal Drain-All EHS Canada Healthy Environmental Itech Environmental Services T. Harris Environmental Mgmt.
Analytical Equipment ABB Arizona Instrument LLC Avensys Solutions Cameron Instruments Can-Am Instruments Coastal Environmental Systems Delpro Automation Endress + Hauser Canada Franklin Empire Gasmet Technologies Geneq Hoskin Scientific Kisters North America Mantech Markland Specialty Engineering Metcon Sales & Engineering Norditech Northern ANI Solutions Osprey Scientific Service Filtration Of Canada Sheridan Electric Services SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Westech Industrial
Backflow Prevention Aquanox Cameron Instruments Chemline Plastics Drain-All Ipex Veolia Water Technologies
Analyzers ABB Aquafy Water Technologies Arizona Instrument LLC Avensys Solutions BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited Concept Controls Davis Controls Elemental Controls Limited Endress + Hauser Canada Franklin Empire Gasmet Technologies Hoskin Scientific Indachem KGO Group Mantech Markland Specialty Engineering Metcon Sales & Engineering Norditech Northern ANI Solutions Osprey Scientific ProMinent Fluid Controls SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Westech Industrial Arsenic Removal ACG - Envirocan Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Aqua Technical Sales BI Pure Water BioteQ Environmental Tech. C&M Environmental Chlorinators Continental Carbon Group Drain-All H2Flow Equipment Indachem Metcon Sales & Engineering SUEZ Veolia Water Technologies
Bacteria Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Avensys Solutions Canadianpond.ca Products Echelon Environmental Golden Environmental Services International Water Supply LUMINOR Environmental New Leaf Biologics USABluebook Biodegradable Products Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Golden Environmental Services New Leaf Biologics SciCorp International Biofilters ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales Aquafy Water Technologies BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental CEMATRIX (Canada) Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment Imbrium Systems Premier Tech Aqua Pro Aqua USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Waterloo Biofilter Systems Biological Treatment Processes ADI Systems Aeration Industries Int. Alfa Laval Aqua Technical Sales AWT Technologies, Inc Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental ECOfluid Systems ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation H2Flow Equipment KSB Pumps Kusters Water Nelson Environmental New Leaf Biologics Ovivo USA Premier Tech Aqua Pro Aqua SciCorp International Smith & Loveless SUEZ Vector Process Equipment Veolia Water Technologies WesTech Engineering
Bioreactor ADI Systems AWT Technologies, Inc Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental CEMATRIX (Canada) ENV Treatment Systems Greatario KSB Pumps Metcon Sales & Engineering Premier Tech Aqua Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless Veolia Water Technologies Bioremediation BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Focus Environmental Group Golden Environmental Services KG Services New Leaf Biologics Smith & Loveless Solinst Canada Terrapure Environmental Biosolids Management Bio-Microbics Bioform Sewage Mining BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation Golden Environmental Services H2Flow Tanks & Systems Hydro International Kusters Water Markland Specialty Engineering MetaFLO Technologies Metcon Sales & Engineering Pace Dewatering Systems Parkson Corporation Pro Aqua Terratec Environmental Veolia Water Technologies Walker Environmental Group Wessuc Blowers Aerzen Canada Atlas Copco Compressors Canada BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies Canadian Safety Equipment Comprevac Directrik ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment Metcon Sales & Engineering Pencon Equipment Company Pro Aqua R.E. Morrison Equipment SCG Industries STANMECH Technologies Sulzer Pumps (Canada) USABluebook Vector Process Equipment Borehole Clearing Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation International Water Supply Catch Basin Components Aquablast Corp. CB Automation DECAST ENV Treatment Systems Imbrium Systems Ipex
106 | February 2016 Search online or add your company at: esemag.com/ese-directory Environmental Science & Engineering Magazine
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Guide to Environmental Products & Services Safe Drain Veolia Water Technologies Centrifuges ACG - Envirocan Alfa Laval Atlas Copco Compressors Canada BowRio Water Technologies ENV Treatment Systems Flottweg Separation Technology Hoskin Scientific Indachem John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Pace Dewatering Systems Sentrimax Centrifuges USABluebook Vector Process Equipment Chemical Mixers Aquafy Water Technologies ASL Roteq Directrik Echelon Environmental Elmridge Engineering Hayward Gordon Indachem John Brooks Company Limited KGO Group KSB Pumps Metcon Sales & Engineering Service Filtration Of Canada Vissers Sales Corp. WESCOR Chemicals Aclarus Ozone Water Systems BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Bishop Water Technologies C&M Environmental DWG Process Supply Kemira KSB Pumps MetaFLO Technologies Scicorp International Corp. Service Filtration Of Canada SNF Canada Sudbury Lime Trojan Technologies USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies VFold WESCOR Chlorination Systems Aquafy Water Technologies Bio-Microbics Blue-White Industries C&M Environmental Cancoppas Limited Chemline Plastics Chlorinators ENV Treatment Systems Fluid Metering Grundfos Canada KGO Group Medora Corporation Metcon Sales & Engineering SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Vissers Sales Corp. Clarifiers ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation Bio-Microbics BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Greatario H2Flow Equipment Kusters Water Markland Specialty Engineering Napier-Reid
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Pro Aqua Protectolite Composites Smith & Loveless SUEZ Vector Process Equipment Veolia Water Technologies WESCOR Wessuc WesTech Engineering Clearwell Equipment Aquanox H2Flow Tanks & Systems Coagulation Systems BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Tanks & Systems KSB Pumps Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Veolia Water Technologies WESCOR Coatings Aquablast Corp. Belzona Great Lakes CEMATRIX (Canada) Denso North America Interprovincial Corrosion Control Collectors Atlas Dewatering Corporation BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental ENV Treatment Systems KSB Pumps Kusters Water Pro Aqua Combined Sewer Overflow Equipment Atlas Dewatering Corporation BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Can-Am Instruments Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Huber Technology Hydro International Ipex KSB Pumps Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless SPD Sales Limited SUEZ Veolia Water Technologies WesTech Engineering Comminutors/Grinders C&M Environmental Directrik ENV Treatment Systems G.E.T. Industries Grundfos Canada H2Flow Equipment JWC Environmental Napier-Reid Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless USABluebook Communications Can-Am Instruments Canadian Safety Equipment Cancoppas Limited Kisters North America Master Meter Canada Monitario Technical Services Norditech Compressed Gases Concept Controls ENV Treatment Systems KSB Pumps
Compressors Aerzen Canada Atlas Copco Compressors Canada Canadian Safety Equipment Claro Environmental Tech. Comprevac Directrik ENV Treatment Systems Pencon Equipment Company R.E. Morrison Equipment Sheridan Electric Services USABluebook Computers & Control Systems Cancoppas Limited CB Automation ENV Treatment Systems Kisters North America Norditech Sensaphone Summa Engineering Limited USABluebook Containment Walls CEMATRIX (Canada) DeWind One Pass Trenching Nuna Innovations Waterloo Barrier Contracting Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation Focus Environmental Group Golden Environmental Services Insitu Contractors International Water Supply KG Services Sheridan Electric Services Sonic Soil Sampling Control Equipment ABB Aquafy Water Technologies Aquanox Avensys Solutions AWT Technologies, Inc Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Chemline Plastics Davis Controls Delpro Automation ENV Treatment Systems Fluid Components Int. Franklin Empire Greyline Instruments Kemira Markland Specialty Engineering Norditech SCG Industries Sensaphone Sew-Eurodrive Sheridan Electric Services Smith & Loveless SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Weir Canada Westech Industrial Control Panels ASL Roteq Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Engineered Pump Systems ENV Treatment Systems Franklin Empire Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Norditech Rittal Systems Rotork Controls SCG Industries Sheridan Electric Services Summa Engineering Limited Vissers Sales Corp.
Corrosion Prevention Belzona Great Lakes Chemline Plastics Denso North America Interprovincial Corrosion Control Ipex Covers/Enclosures (Digester, Etc.) ACG - Envirocan C&M Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Geomembrane Technologies H2Flow Tanks & Systems Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Protectolite Composites Rittal Systems Sheridan Electric Services Tank Connection Vector Process Equipment Westech Industrial Culverts Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation CEMATRIX (Canada) Corrugated Steel Pipe Institute DECAST ENV Treatment Systems Titan Environmental Containment Custom Metal Fabricating DECAST ENV Treatment Systems Loraday Environmental Monitario Technical Services MSU Mississauga WESCOR Custom Plastic Fabricating Chemline Plastics ENV Treatment Systems Ipex Protectolite Composites Data ACG - Envirocan Avensys Solutions Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Endress + Hauser Canada Franklin Empire Geneq Heron Instruments Kisters North America Master Meter Canada Norditech Osprey Scientific SCG Industries Sensaphone SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Watermark Solutions Dechlorinators C&M Environmental Chlorinators ENV Treatment Systems Metcon Sales & Engineering ProMinent Fluid Controls SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Decommissioning Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation CEMATRIX (Canada) Focus Environmental Group International Water Supply KG Services KSB Pumps Degritters Aqua Technical Sales BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Claro Environmental Tech.
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Directrik ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation Huber Technology Hydro International Napier-Reid Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless Vector Process Equipment Veolia Water Technologies WTP Equipment Corp. Demineralizers C&M Environmental Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless Demolition CEMATRIX (Canada) Focus Environmental Group Itech Environmental Services KG Services T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Dewatering Services Atlas Dewatering Corporation Bioform Sewage Mining Bishop Water Technologies DeWind One Pass Trenching Drain-All ENV Treatment Systems Golden Environmental Services Grundfos Canada Insitu Contractors KSB Pumps Kusters Water MetaFLO Technologies Minotaur Stormwater Services Pace Dewatering Systems SCG Industries Terrapure Environmental Trojan Technologies VFold WESCOR Wessuc Dialers Avensys Solutions Can-Am Instruments Franklin Empire Metcon Sales & Engineering SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Digesters ADI Systems Atlas Dewatering Corporation BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Claro Environmental Tech. ENV Treatment Systems Greatario H2Flow Tanks & Systems KSB Pumps Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless SUEZ Tank Connection Veolia Water Technologies Wessuc WesTech Engineering Disinfection Equipment ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales Aquafy Water Technologies Bio-Microbics Blue-White Industries BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Chlorinators ENV Treatment Systems Fluid Metering Force Flow
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Products Good Harbour Laboratories Grundfos Canada H2Flow Equipment Indachem KGO Group LUMINOR Environmental Metcon Sales & Engineering Parkson Corporation Pro Aqua ProMinent Fluid Controls Smith & Loveless SPD Sales Limited SUEZ Trojan Technologies USABluebook Vissers Sales Corp. Dissolved Air Flotation ACG - Envirocan Aeration Industries Int. Aqua Technical Sales BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Elmridge Engineering ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Tanks & Systems John Brooks Company Limited Kusters Water Markland Specialty Engineering Metcon Sales & Engineering Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless SUEZ Vector Process Equipment WESCOR WesTech Engineering Dredges/Dredging Atlas Dewatering Corporation Bishop Water Technologies Markland Specialty Engineering Terrapure Environmental Way Cool Product Co. Drilling Services Insitu Contractors International Water Supply Rittal Systems Sonic Soil Sampling Drinking Water Treatment Equipment ACG - Envirocan Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Aqua Technical Sales Aquafy Water Technologies AWI (Anthratech Western) BI Pure Water Blue-White Industries BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Cancoppas Limited Chemline Plastics Chlorinators Continental Carbon Group DWG Process Supply ENV Treatment Systems Fluid Metering Franklin Empire Good Harbour Laboratories H2Flow Equipment Indachem John Brooks Company Limited KSB Pumps Markland Specialty Engineering Medora Corporation Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Osprey Scientific Ovivo USA Pro Aqua ProMinent Fluid Controls Smith & Loveless SPD Sales Limited SUEZ Sulzer Pumps (Canada)
Guide to Environmental Products & Services Trojan Technologies Veolia Water Technologies Vissers Sales Corp. WesTech Engineering Dust Collection Aquablast Corp. Cancoppas Limited ENV Treatment Systems Educational Materials American Public University Eductors Anthrafilter Media & Coal Atlas Dewatering Corporation Elmridge Engineering Insitu Contractors John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Pro Aqua Service Filtration Of Canada USABluebook Vissers Sales Corp. Ejectors Aqua Technical Sales Elmridge Engineering ENV Treatment Systems Metcon Sales & Engineering Smith & Loveless Vissers Sales Corp. Electric Motors ASL Roteq ENV Treatment Systems Franklin Empire International Water Supply Pencon Equipment Company Service Filtration Of Canada Sew-Eurodrive Sheridan Electric Services USABluebook VL Motion Systems Emergency Gas Shutoff Systems Aquafy Water Technologies ENV Treatment Systems Halogen Valve Systems Indachem Metcon Sales & Engineering Rotork Controls Emergency Response Anachem Aquablast Corp. Belzona Great Lakes Coastal Environmental Systems Drain-All EHS Canada Golden Environmental Services Itech Environmental Services KG Services Loraday Environmental SCG Industries Spill Management TEAM-1 Academy Terrapure Environmental Wessuc Environmental Site Assessments & Remediation Avensys Solutions Cambium Aboriginal Can-Am Instruments DeWind One Pass Trenching Drain-All EHS Canada Golden Environmental Services Healthy Environmental Itech Environmental Services KG Services Northern ANI Solutions Nuna Innovations T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Way Cool Product Co.
Environmental Software Can-Am Instruments Hoskin Scientific Kisters North America Norditech Erosion Control Products Atlas Dewatering Corporation Belzona Great Lakes Golden Environmental Services Nuna Innovations Titan Environmental Containment Evaporators Aquablast Corp. ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Tanks & Systems John Brooks Company Limited Expansion Joints Aquablast Corp. Belzona Great Lakes Devine & Associates Pencon Equipment Company Runnalls Industries Fans ENV Treatment Systems Rittal Systems Sheridan Electric Services Feeders (Chemical) Aquafy Water Technologies Cancoppas Limited Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Indachem KGO Group KSB Pumps Pro Aqua ProMinent Fluid Controls SPD Sales Limited Sudbury Lime USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies WESCOR Filter Equipment ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales Atlas Dewatering Corporation AWI (Anthratech Western) Bioform Sewage Mining BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions BowRio Water Technologies C&M Environmental Comprevac Continental Carbon Group DWG Process Supply ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation Goslyn Environmental H2Flow Equipment Hoskin Scientific Imbrium Systems Insitu Contractors John Brooks Company Limited KGO Group Metcon Sales & Engineering Nova Filtration Technologies Orival Water Filters Ovivo USA Pro Aqua R.E. Morrison Equipment SCG Industries Service Filtration Of Canada Smith & Loveless Trojan Technologies USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies WESCOR Filter Media/Maintenance Anthrafilter Media & Coal Aquablast Corp. AWI (Anthratech Western) BI Pure Water
BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions C&M Environmental Continental Carbon Group ENV Treatment Systems Imbrium Systems John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering SCG Industries Veolia Water Technologies Waterloo Biofilter Systems Filter Presses Alfa Laval C&M Environmental Echelon Environmental John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Pro Aqua Service Filtration Of Canada WESCOR Filter Underdrains Aqua Technical Sales C&M Environmental Continental Carbon Group Goslyn Environmental Metcon Sales & Engineering Pro Aqua Safe Drain Veolia Water Technologies Filters ACG - Envirocan Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Alfa Laval Aqua Technical Sales Atlas Dewatering Corporation AWI (Anthratech Western) BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions C&M Environmental Comprevac Continental Carbon Group Davis Controls Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Fluidyne Corporation Good Harbour Laboratories H2Flow Tanks & Systems Imbrium Systems John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Nelson Environmental Nova Filtration Technologies Orival Water Filters Ovivo USA Parkson Corporation Pro Aqua R.E. Morrison Equipment Rittal Systems Safe Drain SCG Industries Sealogic Innovations Corp. Service Filtration Of Canada Trojan Technologies USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Vissers Sales Corp. Waterra Pumps Limited WESCOR WesTech Engineering Flocculators/Mixers ASL Roteq C&M Environmental Directrik Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Geneq Hayward Gordon Indachem Napier-Reid Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless Vector Process Equipment Vissers Sales Corp.
WESCOR Flotation Systems ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales C&M Environmental ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Tanks & Systems Kusters Water Napier-Reid Pro Aqua WESCOR Flow Meter Calibration Concept Controls Fluid Components Int. Franklin Empire Metcon Sales & Engineering Monitario Technical Services Flow Meters ABB ACG - Envirocan Atlas Dewatering Corporation Avensys Solutions BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Blue-White Industries Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Chemline Plastics Davis Controls Delpro Automation Endress + Hauser Canada Fluid Components Int. Franklin Empire Geneq Greyline Instruments Hoskin Scientific Hydrovision Insitu Contractors Lime Green Equipment Master Meter Canada Metcon Sales & Engineering Monitario Technical Services Neptune Technology Group Osprey Scientific Service Filtration Of Canada Singer Valve SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Vissers Sales Corp. Watermark Solutions Flumes Avensys Solutions Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Claro Environmental Tech. ENV Treatment Systems Geneq Monitario Technical Services Napier-Reid SPD Sales Limited USABluebook Veolia Water Technologies Gas Detection Arizona Instrument LLC Avensys Solutions Cameron Instruments Canadian Safety Equipment Cancoppas Limited Chlorinators Concept Controls EHS Canada ENV Treatment Systems Franklin Empire Gasmet Technologies Geneq Hoskin Scientific Metcon Sales & Engineering Norditech Osprey Scientific Scentroid
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CB Automation Concept Controls Heron Instruments Hoskin Scientific Ingu Solutions Solinst Canada T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Waterra Pumps Limited Groundwater Remediation/ Equipment Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Atlas Dewatering Corporation Blue-White Industries Continental Carbon Group DeWind One Pass Trenching Elmridge Engineering Golden Environmental Services H2Flow Tanks & Systems Hoskin Scientific Insitu Contractors Itech Environmental Services KG Services KSB Pumps Northern ANI Solutions Osprey Scientific R.E. Morrison Equipment Safe Drain SCG Industries Sensaphone Solinst Canada Waterloo Barrier WesTech Engineering Hazardous Waste Anachem Aquablast Corp. BI Pure Water Drain-All EHS Canada Itech Environmental Services Loraday Environmental Spill Management T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Terrapure Environmental Heat Exchangers Aquablast Corp. C&M Environmental Claro Environmental Tech. Directrik Napier-Reid Pro Aqua Rittal Systems Vector Process Equipment Hoses Atlas Dewatering Corporation Canadian Safety Equipment ENV Treatment Systems Runnalls Industries Incinerator Systems/ Equipment Aqua Technical Sales Norditech SUEZ Instrumentation ABB Aquafy Water Technologies Arizona Instrument LLC Avensys Solutions Blue-White Industries Can-Am Instruments Cancoppas Limited CB Automation Coastal Environmental Systems Concept Controls Davis Controls Elemental Controls Limited Endress + Hauser Canada Fluid Components Int. Franklin Empire Gasmet Technologies Geneq Greyline Instruments
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Manganese Removal Systems ACG - Envirocan Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Aqua Technical Sales AWI (Anthratech Western) Continental Carbon Group ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Pro Aqua SUEZ World Water Operator Training Co. Material Handling ACG - Envirocan Claro Environmental Tech. DECAST DWG Process Supply Loraday Environmental Metcon Sales & Engineering Sew-Eurodrive Wessuc WTP Equipment Corp. Measurement Systems Avensys Solutions CB Automation Endress + Hauser Canada Fluid Components Int. Hoskin Scientific Ingu Solutions Kisters North America Markland Specialty Engineering Monitario Technical Services Scentroid Mechanical Transmission Equipment Sew-Eurodrive VL Motion Systems Membranes ACG - Envirocan ADI Systems Alfa Laval Aqua Technical Sales Aquablast Corp. Belzona Great Lakes BI Pure Water Bio-Microbics BowRio Water Technologies DWG Process Supply ECOfluid Systems ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment Huber Technology Imbrium Systems John Brooks Company Limited Metcon Sales & Engineering Napier-Reid Nova Filtration Technologies Ovivo USA Premier Tech Aqua Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless USABluebook Vector Process Equipment Wildcat Water Technologies World Water Operator Training Co. Meter Testing Equipment Master Meter Canada Neptune Technology Group Meters (Equip.) ABB Blue-White Industries Can-Am Instruments Chemline Plastics Endress + Hauser Canada Fluid Components Int. Franklin Empire Geneq Greyline Instruments
continued overleaf... February 2016 | 109
Products Hoskin Scientific KGO Group Markland Specialty Engineering Master Meter Canada Monitario Technical Services Neptune Technology Group Osprey Scientific Sheridan Electric Services SPD Sales Limited Watermark Solutions Waterra Pumps Limited Westech Industrial Meters (Service & Installation) Can-Am Instruments Endress + Hauser Canada Master Meter Canada Neptune Technology Group Sheridan Electric Services Watermark Solutions World Water Operator Training Co. Mixers/Agitators ACG - Envirocan Aeration Industries Int. Aquablast Corp. ASL Roteq BowRio Water Technologies Claro Environmental Tech. Directrik Elmridge Engineering Engineered Pump Systems Fluidyne Corporation Greatario H2Flow Tanks & Systems Hayward Gordon Hoskin Scientific Hydro-Logic Environmental Medora Corporation Napier-Reid Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Service Filtration Of Canada Sulzer Pumps (Canada) USABluebook Vector Process Equipment Vissers Sales Corp. WESCOR Xylem Monitoring Well Supplies Atlas Dewatering Corporation Heron Instruments Osprey Scientific SPD Sales Limited Waterra Pumps Limited Monitors ABB Arizona Instrument LLC Atlas Copco Compressors Canada Avensys Solutions Can-Am Instruments Chemline Plastics Franklin Empire Markland Specialty Engineering Monitario Technical Services Norditech Sensaphone Sonic Soil Sampling T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. USABluebook Xylem Mould Removal EHS Canada Golden Environmental Services Healthy Environmental Hydroxyl Environmental Itech Environmental Services Loraday Environmental T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Noise Control CEMATRIX (Canada) Concept Controls
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110 | February 2016 Search online or add your company at: esemag.com/ese-directory Environmental Science &â&#x20AC;&#x2C6;Engineering Magazine
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BowRio Water Technologies Directrik ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment IPEC - JWC Environmental Sheridan Electric Services WTP Equipment Corp. Site Remediation Atlas Dewatering Corporation Continental Carbon Group Drain-All Focus Environmental Group Golden Environmental Services Insitu Contractors Itech Environmental Services KG Services SCG Industries Spill Management T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Trojan Technologies Sludge - Level Control ABB Aeration Industries Int. Can-Am Instruments Endress + Hauser Canada Markland Specialty Engineering Metcon Sales & Engineering SciCorp International SPD Sales Limited Syntec Process Equipment Terrapure Environmental Sludge Dewatering ACG - Envirocan Alfa Laval Aqua Technical Sales Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation Bioform Sewage Mining BioMaxx Wastewater Solutions Bishop Water Technologies Boerger BowRio Water Technologies ENV Treatment Systems Flottweg Separation Technology Golden Environmental Services H2Flow Equipment Huber Technology Indachem IPEC - JWC Environmental Itech Environmental Services KSB Pumps Kusters Water Linkon Technology Medora Corporation MetaFLO Technologies Metcon Sales & Engineering Netzsch Canada Pro Aqua Smith & Loveless SNF Canada SUEZ Terrapure Environmental Terratec Environmental Trojan Technologies VFold WESCOR Wessuc Wise Environmental Solutions Xylem Sludge Disposal Anachem Aquablast Corp. Bioform Sewage Mining Drain-All IPEC - JWC Environmental Itech Environmental Services KSB Pumps Linkon Technology MetaFLO Technologies Terrapure Environmental Terratec Environmental Way Cool Product Co.
continued overleaf... February 2016 | 111
Products Wessuc Sludge Drying ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales Bioform Sewage Mining ENV Treatment Systems H2Flow Equipment Huber Technology Indachem IPEC - JWC Environmental Itech Environmental Services KSB Pumps MetaFLO Technologies Parkson Corporation Pro Aqua SUEZ Terrapure Environmental Vector Process Equipment Sludge Handling Equipment ACG - Envirocan Aqua Technical Sales AWT Technologies, Inc Boerger BowRio Water Technologies Claro Environmental Tech. Directrik DWG Process Supply Echelon Environmental ENV Treatment Systems Franklin Empire H2Flow Equipment Huber Technology IPEC - JWC Environmental KGO Group KSB Pumps Linkon Technology MetaFLO Technologies Netzsch Canada Ovivo USA Pro Aqua Trojan Technologies Weir Canada Wessuc WTP Equipment Corp. Sludge Removal Equipment ACG - Envirocan Aquablast Corp. Bioform Sewage Mining Directrik ENV Treatment Systems Hydro-Logic Environmental IPEC - JWC Environmental Itech Environmental Services Kusters Water Linkon Technology Netzsch Canada Pro Aqua Terrapure Environmental Wessuc WTP Equipment Corp. Soil Remediation Aclarus Ozone Water Systems Atlas Dewatering Corporation DeWind One Pass Trenching Drain-All Elemental Controls Limited Focus Environmental Group Itech Environmental Services KG Services MetaFLO Technologies New Leaf Biologics SCG Industries T. Harris Environmental Mgmt. Terrapure Environmental Solvent Recovery Systems Blue-Zone Technologies Drain-All Spill Management Solvent Recycling Services Anachem Blue-Zone Technologies
Guide to Environmental Products & Services Spill Containment Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation Canadian Safety Equipment Drain-All EHS Canada Imbrium Systems Itech Environmental Services KG Services Lime Green Equipment Loraday Environmental Safe Drain SCG Industries Spill Management Trans Environmental Systems USABluebook Wessuc Wise Environmental Solutions WTP Equipment Corp. Spill Response Anachem Aquablast Corp. Atlas Dewatering Corporation Canadian Safety Equipment Continental Carbon Group EHS Canada Itech Environmental Services KG Services Loraday Environmental Safe Drain Trans Environmental Systems Way Cool Product Co. Wessuc WTP Equipment Corp. Spill Response Equipment Atlas Dewatering Corporation Can-Am Instruments Coastal Environmental Systems EHS Canada Itech Environmental Services Lime Green Equipment Loraday Environmental Osprey Scientific Safe Drain SCG Industries Spill Management Wessuc WTP Equipment Corp. Spill Response Training Drain-All EHS Canada Itech Environmental Services SCG Industries Spill Management TEAM-1 Academy Terrapure Environmental Stand Pipes H2Flow Tanks & Systems Storage Buildings Can-Am Instruments Loraday Environmental Megadome Buildings Storage Containers Loraday Environmental Tank Connection Storage Tanks Aquablast Corp. Assman Corporation of America Atlas Dewatering Corporation Can-Am Instruments Drain-All Engineered Pump Systems Focus Environmental Group Greatario H2Flow Tanks & Systems Indachem KG Services Lime Green Equipment Loraday Environmental Metcon Sales & Engineering
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112 | February 2016 Search online or add your company at: esemag.com/ese-directory Environmental Science &â&#x20AC;&#x2C6;Engineering Magazine
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ACG Technology................................. 114, 115 AECOM.......................................................... 48 Alltork Actuation.......................................... 72 Associated Engineering............................... 31 AWWA .......................................................... 88 BCWWA........................................................ 87 Bi Pure Water............................................... 24 Blue-White................................................... 17 BNW Valve Manufacturing.......................... 24 C&M Environmental..................................... 35 Canada Unlimited/IFAT 2016....................... 61 Canadian Safety .......................................... 72 CANECT........................................................ 80 Chemline Plastics........................................ 66 Denso .......................................................... 28 Endress + Hauser.......................................... 7 Engineered Pump........................................ 67 Envirocan ......................................... 114, 115 Eramosa....................................................... 52 Evoqua ........................................................ 71 Force Flow................................................... 58 Greatario ..................................................... 69 Greyline Instruments................................... 71 GridBee......................................................... 23 H2Flow ........................................................ 10 H2O Logics................................................... 23 Hoskin Scientific.................................... 25, 40 Huber Technology........................................ 41 Hydro International...................................... 42 Hydroxyl Environmental.............................. 57 Imbrium Systems......................................... 21 Indachem..................................................... 47 International Water Supply......................... 62 IPEX.............................................................. 77 Kemira.......................................................... 36 KGO Group ................................................... 73 Kusters Water.............................................. 13 Mantech ...................................................... 63 Markland Specialty Engineering................. 26 Master Meter ................................................ 3 Medora ........................................................ 23 Minotaur Stormwater Services................... 54 MONITARIO................................................... 27 MPE Engineering.......................................... 66 MSU Mississauga........................................ 19 Mueller......................................................... 10 NETZSCH Canada......................................... 29 Ontario Clean Water Agency..................... 116 Ontario’s Water Conference & Tradeshow.68 Orival Water Filters...................................... 30 Parsons........................................................ 70 Pro Aqua........................................................ 9 ProMinent....................................................... 2 SEI Industries............................................... 49 Sentrimax .................................................... 39 Smith & Loveless........................................... 5 SolarBee....................................................... 23 SPD Sales..................................................... 43 Spill Management........................................ 51 Stantec......................................................... 43 USF Fabrication............................................ 67 Victaulic....................................................... 12 Vissers Sales................................24 & INSERT VL Motion..................................................... 72 Watermark................................................... 62 Waterra Pumps.......................... 11, 37, 55, 65 World Water Operator Training Company .. 59 WTP Equipment............................................ 75 Xylem........................................................... 15
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Advertiser INDEX
Guide to Environmental Products & Services
February 2016 | 113
The Experts in Wastewater & Water Treatment Equipment PRIMARY TREATMENT • Complete line of fine screening equipment • Self-cleaning perforated plate screens • FlexRake® front-raked fine screens • FlexRake® front-raked bar screens • FlexRake® low flow • Self-Cleaning trashracks • Muffin Monster® grinder (for sludge, scum, septage, screenings & wastewater) • Channel Monster® grinder for pump stations and sewage treatment plant headworks • Honey Monster® septage receiving station • Auger Monster® fine screen system • Monster® fine screen & band screen perforated plate fine screens with 2, 3 & 6mm perforations • Screenings washer/compactors • Rotating drum screens (down to 2mm perfs) • Raptor screenings washer press • Grit removal
TANK COVERS & DOMES • Aluminum geodesic domes • Flat aluminum and FRP tank covers • Aluminum channel and launder covers • Aluminum hatch covers DISINFECTION • UV disinfection systems • Package & custom ozone systems BIOSOLIDS PROCESSING/HANDLING • Sludge storage bins & live bottom dischargers • GBT & RDT for sludge thickening • Belt filter presses & screw presses • Centrifuges for thickening & dewatering
SECONDARY TREATMENT • Aqua-Jet® direct drive floating aerator • Aqua DDM mechanical floating mixer • Fine bubble aeration systems using membrane or ceramic diffusers with gas cleaning systems • Stainless steel coarse bubble aeration systems • Multi stage activated biological process (MSABP) • Two & three rotary lobe P/D blowers • Centrifugal multistage blowers • Hybrid screw/lobe compressors • Floating diversion curtains (for aerated lagoons, activated sludge systems & clear wells) • Subsurface jet aeration/mixing systems • Spiraflo & Spiravac peripheral feed clarifiers • Closed loop reactor oxidation ditch systems • Rotary brush aerators • High efficiency single stage integrally geared blowers • Direct drive turbo type blowers • Aeration system controls & instrumentation • Chain & flight clarifier systems & components (plastic, cast iron or stainless steel) • Half bridge, centre feed, circular clarifiers • Spiral blade clarifiers TERTIARY TREATMENT • AquaDisk® - cloth media tertiary filter • AquaDiamond® tertiary cloth media for traveling bridge filters ADJUSTABLE SPEED DRIVES • Eddy current drives
www.acgtechnology.com
ODOUR CONTROL • Biofilters • Bioscrubbers • Carbon adsorbers • Chemical wet scrubbers • Ionized air BULK MATERIAL HANDLING • Shaftless & shafted screw conveyors • Screw pumps (open & closed designs) • Industrial grinders FLOWMETERS • Open channel flow metering (portable and permanent; wireless data transmission) • Insertion mag flow meters with wireless data transmission • Data loggers with wireless data transmission
JWC
INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT • PCl Series DAF with corrugated plates • PWl Series DAF low profile, from 20·800 GPM • Pipe flocculators • Industrial wastewater treatment systems • Coalescing oil/water separators • Inclined plate clarifiers PACKAGE TREATMENT PLANTS • Package potable water treatment plants • Package sanitary wastewater treatment plants • Package industrial wastewater treatment plants • Package industrial process water treatment plants WATER TREATMENT • Pressure filtration systems (removal of iron and manganese, arsenic, fluoride, radium, uranium)
RPS
Engineering ®
VIKING CHAINS GROUP
e n v i r o S Y S T E M
d i v i s i o n
I N T E G R AT O R S
and more…
www.envirocan.ca
CALL 905.856.1414 • 131 Whitmore Rd., Unit 13, Woodbridge, ON L4L 6E4
®
Environmental
Ontario Pollution Control Equipment Association
Non-contact RADAR flow measuring system
HEADS-UP THE HAS HATCHED ! Advantages of the radar flowmeter: , Personnel have no contact with the flow , Easy installation , Maintenance caused by immersed sensors is eliminated , No site calibration required
Rue J.H. Cool 19a l B-4840 Welkenraedt TĂŠl.: +32 (0)87 899 799 l Fax: +32 (0)87 899 790 E-mail: info@flow-tronic.com
www.flow-tronic.com
13-131 Whitmore Road, Woodbridge ON, L4L 6E4 l CANADA P: +1 905-856-1414 l F: +1 905-856-6401 Email: sales@acgtechnology.com
www.acgtechnology.com
Trust. It flows from experience & commitment. Coming from Ontario, land of freshwater, perhaps our dedication to water quality and innovation shouldn’t be surprising. The Ontario Clean Water Agency has earned a world-class reputation in the operation of clean water and wastewater facilities. Collaboration flows through everything we do. If you’d like to discuss your municipality’s needs, whatever the size, wherever you are, we look forward to talking with you.
For sales enquiries call 1-855-358-1488 or visit www.ocwa.com. Follow us on Twitter. Like us on Facebook.