Natural Bugs, a Green Solution to MTBE Groundwater Contamination
PETALUMA, Calif., July 18, 2006 - Although half of the states in the U.S.
have banned MTBE - methyl tertiary butyl ether - in gasoline because it
contaminates groundwater, past spills and underground storage tank leaks
will continue to impair groundwater quality in parts of the country for
years or decades to come.
Helping to address this problem are
bioreactors from Cardno ERI, now being used at
dozens of locations, which show that naturally occurring microorganisms
concentrated in state-of-the-art bioreactors can effectively clean
contaminated groundwater sites. Microorganisms have been used more and more
in groundwater remediation in recent years as water industry practitioners
learnmore about the microorganisms’ vast treatment capabilities, said Joe
O’Connell, President of Cardno ERI. He added that bioreactors are more frequently
being embraced by water industry officials as a treatment tool since
bioreactors can clean both MTBE and related chemicals such as TBA, -
tertiary butyl alcohol- and other gasoline components.
Cardno ERI worked
with Drs. Edward Schroeder, Daniel Chang and Kate Scow at the University of
California at Davis to develop a compact, practical, and effective
bioreactor technology to treat groundwater. Bioreactor-based water treatment
involves pumping groundwater out of the ground, mixing it with active
microorganisms in a bioreactor system, and discharging the newly treated
water. The discharge is either sent back into the ground, to a municipal
sewer system, or into surface water.
The bioreactor groundwater
treatment technology developed by Cardno ERI and UC Davis includes an above ground
tank containing trillions of microorganisms, primarily bacteria that attach
themselves to the surfaces of fine grains of sand. The grains are distributed
throughout the tank by the upward flow of the water passing through the tank
for treatment. As the contaminated water mixes with them, the microorganisms
consume MTBE and other dissolved gasoline components as food. During the
water’s 20-minute journey through the bioreactor, the microorganisms destroy
the gasoline chemicals, converting them to carbon dioxide and water, thus
eliminating the contamination.
Cardno ERI bioreactors can treat a wide range
of contaminant concentrations because of the way their distinct water recycle
loop dilutes water coming out of the ground. Cardno ERI’s bioreactors have handled
extremely high concentrations (up to a million parts per billion of gasoline
constituents), reducing them to non-detectable levels. Laboratory analyses
of water samples leaving Cardno ERI bioreactors are able to detect little if any
MTBE or other gasoline traces.
Microorganisms, like people, require
oxygen and essential nutrients to survive, grow and multiply. Bioreactors
have systems that provide these essential materials to the microorganisms as
they treat the contaminated water. Microorganisms in a bioreactor ecosystem
have the ability to adapt to changes in water temperature, water flow rate
and contaminant concentrations, which often fluctuate over time.
Cardno ERI
bioreactors have been deployed at over 30 MTBE sites. The bioreactors are
quiet and odor-free and can be efficiently moved - along with their microbial
communities - to new treatment sites.
Contact: Ellen
Moyer
Cardno ERI
(413) 862-3452
EMoyer@eri-us.com
[ Site Map ] [ Legal ] [ Privacy Policy ] © 2010 Cardno ERI. All rights reserved.
[ IT Dept Portal ] [ Cardno ERI Web Mail ]