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Our Edmonton wastewater treatment plant is one of the most innovative wastewater treatment operations in North America.

 

Every year the Gold Bar Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) treats more than 200,000 million tons of sewage. We continue to invest in new technologies to meet future treatment needs. Discover more about our treatment process below or see what's new at Gold Bar.

Treatment process

Our wastewater treatment process involves many steps and different pieces of equipment, and the full tertiary treatment process can take 17 to 18 hours. See what it takes to treat wastewater in Edmonton.

 

Pre-treatment

Pre-treatment protects plant equipment by removing large pieces or materials that would otherwise create wear and tear on the plant while also improving quality of organic solids (which play an important part in later treatment).

  • Wastewater enters long narrow tanks called “grit chambers” designed to slow down the flow so solids can settle out of the water.
  • Heavier material called grit (sand-like particles mixed with debris and mud) drops to the bottom of the tank and is removed.
  • Flow exits grit tanks through screens, which trap and remove materials like plastic, rags and wood.
  • Screenings and grit are hauled to a local landfill.

1a. Primary treatment

Primary treatment consists of gravity-settling aided by a rake mechanism.

  • Heavier particles (solids) sink to the bottom and lighter particles (scum) float to the top.
  • A rake moves the different particles to a collection point.
  • The rake then also rises to the surface to remove the floating “scum.”

​1b. Enhanced primary treatment (stormwater)

During wet weather periods the combined sewers often capture more runoff than they can handle, resulting in wastewater overflow to the river.

  • Enhanced primary treatment allows the plant to take in and treat more seasonal flows, reducing the amount of untreated overflow entering the river.

​Solids handling

Solids go to the fermenters and digesters for treatment to create “biosolids” which can be re-used as fertilizer.

2. Secondary treatment

Microorganisms digest nitrogen and phosphorus in the water and then settle out in the clarifiers to clean the water further.

  • By the end of this stage, 95-97% of organic impurities have been removed.

3. Tertiary treatment

Cleaning the water further (polish & disinfect.)

3a. Membrane filtration

A small portion of treated wastewater is diverted for membrane filtration.

  • Membrane filters are a series of porous synthetic strands containing millions of microscopic pore openings that allow water to pass but act as a barrier to even the smallest bacteria.

3b. UV disinfection

Before being returned to the North Saskatchewan River after almost 18 hours of treatment, the clear wastewater effluent is disinfected by high intensity ultra-violet light.

  • After a few short minutes, this chemical-free process renders the treated wastewater safe for contact through different recreational activities through the outfall.​

 

Learn more about the commitments
we've built into our long term plan for Gold Bar.

Our Gold Bar commitments

Infrastructure

Edmonton is one of Canada's largest Class IV wastewater treatment plants (class level indicates how complex the plant's operations are). The Gold Bar Wastewater Treatment Plant is ISO 14001 and OHSAS 18001 certified. Every day Gold Bar produces treated water that consistently surpasses regulatory standards.

The Edmonton plant utilizes innovative processes that reduce our environmental impact including membrane-based wastewater recycling facility which supplies local industry with reclaimed water. We also recover approximately $200K in annual fuel savings by utilizing biogas produced on site.

We're continually investing in new ways to control odours at Gold Bar minimizing our impact on the surrounding community. Learn more about recent odour improvements.

Plant capacity

Each day an average of 265 million litres flow through the Edmonton WWTP with the full tertiary treatment process taking 17-18 hours from start to finish, but the plant's current design can treat up to 310 million litres per day. Some other capacity figures include:

  • Peak primary treatment capacity: 910 million litres/day
  • Peak secondary/tertiary treatment capacity: 420 million litres/day
  • Headworks (grit removal and screening) capacity: 1,200 million litres/day
  • Combined digester (8 anaerobic digesters that treat sludge) capacity: 67.5 million litres/day
  • Biogas produced (average per year): 11 million m3

Gold Bar also provides biosolids to farmers and has distributed close to 550,000 dry tonnes of biosolids to over 16,000 hectares of farmland since 1978. The biosolids program is available to Edmonton-area farmers. Additionally, more than 180,000 dry tonnes of biosolids have been made into compost products for sale since 2000.

Plant expansions and upgrades

Since its beginnings, Gold Bar has undergone two major processing capacity (primary and secondary treatment) increases; they occurred a decade apart, with the last in 1981. Solids handling capacity increases occurred right up to 2011, with the addition of 2 new digesters. The plant site has room on the eastern perimeter, if needed and if the same configuration is followed, for three more bioreactors/clarifiers or up to 126 million litres per day. See how we're planning for future flows at Gold Bar.

Treatment upgraded

Improved effluent quality: tertiary treatment upgrade began in 1995 and was completed in December 2001, three years ahead of the mandated deadline from the province.

Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) upgrade

Facilities to support the BNR upgrade component include primary sludge fermenters; sludge blend tanks; Waste Activate Sludge (WAS) thickeners; two new bioreactors/clarifiers; and a new 3,500 horse power blower.​​