Transcript Slide 1

Northern Ireland Water
QUESTOR Centre, QUB
Introduction: UK Water Industry
 25 water companies in England & Wales
 12 water and sewerage providers
 13 water suppliers
 Scotland and N Ireland: 1 water and sewerage provider each
 Water UK
 Represents the UK water industry at a national and European
level
 Engages with governments, regulators and stakeholders at
national and international levels to


develop policy
ensure provision of a high-quality, value-for-money service
Northern Ireland Water
 NI Water is the trusted and reliable provider of the
regions most essential public service
 Region size, 14,000km2
 Population of region <1.8million
 NI Water aims to
 deliver the best quality drinking water to homes
 treat and dispose of wastewater safely: essential for
protection of public health and the environment
The service – water supply
 Water Supply must comply with standards laid out in
European Union, UK and Northern Ireland legislation
 The Drinking Water Inspectorate – an arm of the
Northern Ireland Environment Agency independently audits quality of drinking water in N
Ireland
The service - wastewater
 Water is discharged from
 water treatment works
 wastewater treatment works
 combined sewer overflows on sewerage systems
 emergency overflows from sewage pumping stations
 This is regulated by the Water Regulation Section of
the Northern Ireland Environment Agency
Investment in Water Industry
 Acute underinvestment in water and sewerage systems
in N Ireland has led to:
 Sewer flooding
 Water mains leakage
 Impact on quality of wastewater & drinking water
 Plans to invest £778 million in water and wastewater
infrastructure by 2010
 £174m in water treatment & storage facilities
 £614m in wastewater collection & treatment systems
Storm water Management –
Belfast Sewers Project
 City of Belfast has a Victorian sewerage and storm
water system, resulting in:
 Regular flooding
 Pollution of low-lying areas
 Pollution of River Lagan
 A long-term solution for water management is
essential to enable growth and improvement of the
city centre and its suburbs
 Belfast is one of the fastest growing regional
economies in the UK
Belfast Sewers Project
 £120m investment project to
 improve water quality in the River Lagan and other
smaller watercourses
 reduce risk of flooding in the inner city
 rehabilitate and upgrade sewer network to ensure
compliance with EU environmental legislative standards
 Scheduled for completion in early 2010
How?
 Scheme will manage up to 4 million gallons of
wastewater along 1800km of sewers, impacting a
population of 276,459
 1. Sewer Rehabilitation Works
 500 sewers in poor condition will be upgraded using
state of the art low dig and no dig technology
 2. Storm water Management Works
 A new storm water tunnel: length 9.4 km, diameter up
to 4m
 19km of new sewers and 26 new storm water tanks
Implementation
 Will take almost 7 years to complete: 2004-2011
 Community communications programme
 Inform people well in advance of when work is expected
in their area and how they might be affected
 Will employ a combination of traditional and modern
trenchless technology to lay new sewers or rehabilitate
old sewers.
 Tunnel Boring Machine – state of the art technology to
bore a new storm water tunnel 34m underground
 Construction of new storm water tanks
Sewer laying:
Traditional
open-cut
technology
The new sewer
is laid with
contractor
excavating
down from
surface to lay
the pipe.
Sewer laying/
rehabilitation:
Modern trenchless
technology
A bursting head is inserted
to the existing sewer via an
access pit which the
contractor excavates from
the surface.
The pipe is attached to the
bursting head and is pulled
along the existing sewer
from one access pit to
another.
Sewer rehabilitation:
Cured in Place
A liner is pulled in
from one manhole
(utility hole), along
the sewer to the
next manhole.
The liner is
hardened (by UV
rays or hot water),
and a robot sent up
the pipe to cut open
existing feeds to
the pipe.
Tunnel Boring Machine (TMB)
 TBM is 90m long
 Can cut through the toughest
rock and sediment with its
ripper teeth and disc cutters on
the cutter head
 Can move 150mm per minute at
full capacity
 Operates 34m below ground –
progress is monitored by laser
guidance and onboard computer
controls
Tunnel
Major road
River Lagan
Vertical Shaft
(storm water
connections & access)
Terminal Pumping Station
• Currently under construction over
30m below surface level at an
existing waterworks site
• Due for completion shortly, it will
be capable of pumping 18,200 litres
of water per second
•Regulate flow to existing
wastewater treatment works
•Transfer excess water to storm
screens for treatment and
discharge
Benefits of Project
 Improved water quality of River Lagan and other
watercourses
 Pollutant load will be reduced by 85%
 Potential for flooding in city will be reduced
 Compliance with the rigorous Urban Wastewater
Treatment Directive
 Inward investment to the city will enhance tourism,
create a cleaner environment and will facilitate urban
regeneration
Other Investment Projects
 Water Mains Project (£80 million)
 Improvement of over 1000km of existing water mains
throughout N Ireland
 North Coast Wastewater Treatment Scheme (£45 million)
 Wastewater from urban areas will be collected and
transferred to a new 2-stage treatment works for treatment
to a much higher standard before discharge through new
long sea outfall point
 Alpha Project
 Upgrading existing water treatment facilities at sites
representing 50% of the regions water production centres