When the vines are heavy with juicy, ripe grapes, it’s time for the wine growers and their harvest workers to turn them into wine. But the grape-crushing process produces a large quantity of polluted wastewater that challenges the capacity of the local treatment plant. This is also the case in the wine-growing community of Edenkoben in the Palatinate region of Germany. Whereas the load on its wastewater treatment plant doesn’t exceed 7000 person equivalents (PE) on a normal Sunday or public holiday, it can rise to as high as 120,000 PE during the harvest – 17 times as much. This increase in the effluent load also pushes up the plant’s power consumption, which can surge to three times the normal level at harvesting time. Small-scale wastewater plants use a technique known as aerobic stabilization to prevent the sludge produced during wastewater treatment from developing unpleasant odors. This involves prolonged aeration to stabilize the sludge. The downside is that the aeration system consumes a lot of energy.
Energy requirements reduced by 20 percent
Edenkoben’s wastewater treatment plant has operated far more efficiently – and not only with regard to power consumption – since the introduction of the high-load anaerobic digestion, a process developed by researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB in Stuttgart. “We converted the plant to a process based on high-load anaerobic digestion with the help of colleagues from several engineering companies. The new process implemented in Edenkoben has numerous advantages. First, it generates energy instead of merely consuming it. Second, it reduces the quantity of sludge that would otherwise have to be disposed of at great cost,” explains Fraunhofer IGB scientist Dr. Werner Sternad. Energy consumption is 20 percent lower because the process doesn’t require a power-hungry aeration system. Of the power actually consumed, 50 percent or more is generated from sewage gas on-site in two cogeneration units. This means that less than half of the electricity the wastewater plant needs is bought in. Sludge disposal is another area in which it has been possible to slash costs. In the past, the sludge had to be dewatered on a daily basis. Anaerobic digestion produces so little sludge that now the filter press runs only twice a week, except during the wine harvest.
Adaptable to operating needs
One of the researchers’ main priorities was to design a solution for Edenkoben adapted to the local situation, namely wide seasonal variations in the effluent load. “We installed two digestion tanks, which can be operated in parallel during the wine harvest, or in series at other times of the year. This makes it possible to adapt the process flow to the volume of sludge produced and optimize sludge treatment,” reports Sternad. The new plant entered service in early 2016. When operating in series mode, it is processing approximately 40 cubic meters per day. During the wine harvest, however, it can now go up to 130 cubic meters. “High-load anaerobic digestion enables a flexible response to changes in the effluent load,” says Sternad. “It also saves energy, produces its own electricity, and greatly reduces the quantity of sewage sludge for disposal.”