Utility August 2022 Digital Edition

Page 42

WAT E R OP E RATIONS A ND TR EATME N T | Sponsored editorial

CLIMATE-RESILIENT WASTEWATER

INFRASTRUCTURE

The severity of recent weather events in Australia has continued to highlight the need for climate-resilient infrastructure. Bushfires, floods, droughts and other unprecedented weather events have placed a significant strain on the Australian economy, as well as their devastating impact on both regional and metropolitan communities. Effective wastewater infrastructure designed for climate-resilience is vital to long-term sustainability.

T

he changing climate is already having an impact on the way we live, and higher temperatures, more extreme fire weather and extended rainfall events have the capacity to impact essential infrastructure across core utilities, including energy, water, transport and telecommunications. To counter this, a proactive and evidence-based approach to managing risks posed by climate change is critical in the planning, design and asset management of infrastructure servicing homes, businesses, and communities. Federal and state governments currently have climateresilience and adaptation strategies in place, designed to position the country to anticipate, manage and adapt to the changing climate. For these strategies to be successfully delivered, utility service providers have a responsibility to ensure the products and infrastructure they provide are designed, built, and managed in a way that can continually respond to unpredictable climate disruptions.

WASTEWATER SOLUTIONS THAT CAN WITHSTAND EXTREME WEATHER True Water provides long-term wastewater infrastructure solutions that minimise lifecycle costs, while guaranteeing operational and environmental security. Kubota treatment plants are fibre reinforced plastic modules, with all components required for treatment of wastewater contained within the plant below ground and accessed by gas tight lids. The resulting regulated treatment environment is unaffected by fluctuations in temperature and weather.

In addition, its clever design requires few mechanical moving parts, ensuring critical failure points are minimised. The robust systems can even survive inundation due to extreme weather (such as floods or severe storms), with individual parts able to be cleaned, restored and operational again with little down time. During the recent floods in northern New South Wales, a wastewater treatment system designed by True Water for the Ampol Service Centre at Chinderah, experienced severe flooding and system inundation. True Water were alerted to a power outage caused by rising flood levels through its TELEmi™ remote monitoring platform, allowing the team to successfully minimise impacts, and ensure the infrastructure remained viable following the one-in-100-year flood event. The True Water team were on site within 48 hours of the flood water receding, to evaluate damage and restore the system to compliant operation. Despite being inundated, the system was still operational upon arrival. True Water provided an interim solution for a failed mechanical component and replaced it within weeks. The Kubota plant was cleaned, recommissioned, and refurbished immediately and at minimal cost, preventing any impact to the environment. True Water specialises in designing, installing, and managing high quality, sustainable wastewater infrastructure solutions for businesses and communities around Australia. Its goal is to consistently deliver fit-for-purpose infrastructure that meets the needs of the changing climate, while protecting the natural environment and improving quality of life for current and future generations.

For more information, please contact True Water at www.truewateraustralia.com

40

UTILITY • AUGUST 2022

WWW.UTILITYMAGAZINE.COM.AU


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New horizontal directional drill packs a punch

2min
pages 96-97

Biochar innovation paves the way to net zero

3min
pages 98-99

Australia’s pathway to 100 per cent renewable gas

5min
pages 92-93

The challenges of remote monitoring of assets

7min
pages 86-89

Australian-first robot trenchless technology

1min
pages 94-95

Project Symphony: Western Australia’s energy future

3min
pages 84-85

Critical fault clearing in closed transition switching

3min
pages 76-77

Solving real-world problems at the edge of the grid

3min
pages 82-83

How digitisation is preparing utilities for the future

9min
pages 70-73

Who will drive Vehicle-to-Grid?

5min
pages 74-75

Renewable energy infrastructure – an opportunity to drive business transformation?

3min
pages 68-69

Using machine learning for bushfire prevention in Australia

2min
pages 66-67

Why security seal numbering matters

1min
page 65

How South East Water is reducing customer water leaks and bill shock

4min
pages 52-55

Balancing current needs with future network demands

8min
pages 62-64

After the storm: what the floods have taught us

3min
pages 58-59

Choosing the right check valve for your water needs

2min
pages 60-61

Flood recovery tool improves SEQ resilience

3min
pages 56-57

Smart water meters tackle water losses in tropical North Queensland

1min
pages 50-51

New high-tech rotary lobe pumps

2min
pages 48-49

Dealing with supply chain issues in 2022

2min
pages 32-33

UV disinfection system lighting up SA Water treatment

4min
pages 44-47

Climate-resilient wastewater infrastructure

2min
pages 42-43

Critical success factors for community engagement campaigns

10min
pages 38-41

Four practical ways to implement effective compliance programs

3min
pages 36-37

Delivering new capital projects is only getting riskier — make it predictable

1min
pages 34-35

Elevating customer service with new technology

9min
pages 28-31
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