Water&Sanitation Africa November/December 2021

Page 50

INSTRUMENTATION

One small sensor helps ABOVE Both the high-water safety and nature development projects would be paid for with the proceeds from sand and gravel extraction along the Meuse BELOW A Keller 26X high-precision, media-isolated, piezo-resistive pressure sensor encased in a robust stainless-steel housing with high-quality cable gland. Typical applications are hydrostatic pressure measurement, level measurement for groundwater and surface water, and fill level measurement of water – and fuel tanks

A single Keller digital sensor is used as part of a flood safety programme in the Limburg province in the Netherlands.

D

uring 1993 and 1995, the province of Limburg was confronted with two floods on the river Meuse, which caused €200 million (R3.5 billion) in damage. Society demanded more flood safety, but the cost of some €700 million (R1.23 billion) was a stumbling block for years. Eventually, an agreement was forged with Consortium Grensmaas – a partnership of contractors, gravel producers – and Natuurmonumenten, the Dutch organisation for the conservation and development of nature. It was agreed that both the high-water safety and nature development project would be paid for with the proceeds from sand and gravel extraction along the Meuse. Gravel extraction Consortium Grensmaas extracts about 100 000 t of gravel every week – a quantity that requires an enormous logistical operation.

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NOV /DE C 2021

“To give you an idea, 1 t equals 11 wheelbarrows. On an annual basis, we extract 4 500 000 t of gravel. And this gravel extraction is an important part of the Grensmaas project because it is the financial engine. Thanks to this gravel extraction, there are no costs for the taxpayer,” explains Hans van der Meer, head: Production and Technical Services at the Grensmaas gravel extraction site. All gravel is transported by barge, with ships leaving and arriving continuously. A mix of sand and extracted gravel creates a mixture called tout venant. The gravel is rinsed and sorted using an ingenious system of conveyor belts, sieving machines, washers and screw conveyors. Each dimension of gravel has its own final destination – from asphalt to decorative gravel. There is limited space on the site due to the widening of the river and sometimes a pile of gravel may be covered in water. Water level Due to the nature of

the production process, progress is largely dependent on the water level (which fluctuates hugely) in the Meuse. Van der Meer wanted to be able to monitor and record the water level properly. A Keller level sensor was mounted on a mooring post that communicates the water levels with the cloud via a LoRa network. “This system gives me up-to-date information about the water level on a dashboard in my office. Thanks to the sensor’s communication with Keller's own Kolibri cloud, we now have all the information we need from that sensor. Since we have the ability to monitor it ourselves, we can also sound the alarm in good time,” explains Van der Meer. The digital level sensor – Series 26 X – not only measures the water level, but also the temperature of both the water and the air. “We cannot produce if there is ice formation, so we also want to be aware of that risk as early as possible. Under normal circumstances, production here goes on for six days a week, 07:00 to 19:00. If we know that this is going to change, we need to be able to respond as quickly as possible,” concludes Van der Meer.


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Articles inside

Water training that generates a financial return

3min
page 40

From human waste to water

5min
pages 24-25

PIONEERING STANDARD TO END TOILET USE PARADIGM

7min
pages 21-23

Sedimentation as a water and wastewater treatment process

4min
pages 32-33

HDPE systems gaining traction in agricultural market

2min
pages 56-57

Optimising revenue from service charges

3min
pages 54-55

Leak detection in the Mother City

3min
pages 52-53

Unleash Nigeria’s water bounty with affordable sanitation

2min
page 51

One small sensor helps

2min
page 50

Water and life outweigh politics

4min
pages 48-49

Using good governance, stewardship to ensure water security

5min
pages 44-45

Stormwater management should be firmly on the urban agenda

6min
pages 42-43

Walking away on a high

5min
pages 38-39

The best of both worlds – low-/pour-flush toilets

7min
pages 26-29

From appalling to appealing – wastewater sludge beneficiation

5min
pages 30-31

From human waste to water

5min
pages 24-25

Sedimentation part of a water and wastewater treatment process

4min
pages 32-33

100 Mℓ of water from Ndlambe desal plant

1min
page 37

Successful rehabilitation of Setumo Dam

2min
page 36

Pioneering standard to end toilet use paradigm

7min
pages 21-23

Waterless sanitation – when will it take on?

5min
pages 18-20

It was said in WASA

5min
pages 6-7

CEO’s comment

2min
pages 11-12

Mark Bannister’s story

5min
pages 14-15

Chair’s comment

2min
page 13

Fast-tracking adoption of water-efficient toilets

8min
pages 8-10

Editor’s comment

4min
page 5

Green innovation in practice

1min
page 17

IWS

2min
page 16
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