Title: Strategic Management of Non-Point Source Pollution from Sewage Sludge
1Strategic Management of Non-Point Source
Pollution from Sewage Sludge
- L. Bolton1 L. Heathwaite1, P. Whitehead2 and P.
Quinn3 - 1Department of Geography, University of Sheffield
- 2 Aquatic Environments Research Centre,
- Reading University
- 3 University of Newcastle upon Tyne
2Sewage Sludge Disposal
UK, 1991/1992
9 OTHER
6 INCINERATION
26 SEA DISPOSAL
11 LANDFILL
47 RECYCLING TO FARMLAND
WaterUK
3Sewage Sludge Disposal
UK, 2000
22 INCINERATION
11 LANDFILL
12 OTHER
55 RECYCLING TO FARMLAND
WaterUK
4Sewage Sludge or Biosolids
- Benefits of recycling to land
- Fertiliser- agronomically useful quantities of
nutirents and trace elements - Increases soil quality
- Cheaper than mineral fertilisers (up to 100/ha)
- Most environmentally sustainable method of
disposal - Best option in most circumstances EU and UK
government - Supported by environmental groups
- Surfers Against Sewage
5Sewage Sludge or Biosolids
- Drawbacks of recycling to land
- Accumulation in soil/transfer to
groundwater/surface water - Heavy metals
- Diffuse nutrient pollution
- Fertiliser governed by nitrogen application can
lead to excess phosphorus - Controlled by 1986 EU Directive (86/278/EEC) and
ADAS Safe Sludge Matrix
6Critical Source Areas
C S A
7Soil P Index
- Sludge not applied when risk of P loss is
identified - Soil P index 3
- UK 56 arable and 30 grassland soil P index 3
- Current thinking has little understanding of the
vulnerability of sludge P loss to receiving
waters - Is it possible to minimise nutrient loss by
applying sludge to land outside CSAs regardless
of soil P index status?
UK Code of Good Agricultural Practice, 1998
8Study Area
- Arable farm receiving regular sewage sludge
treatments, SE England - Upper Chalk
- Perched water table
- Groundwater dominated system
- 20m unsaturated zone
9Field A
Prior to Application
- 30ha field, ephemeral ditch
- Mean soil Olsens P 38.8 mgL-1, areas of soil P
index 5 - Digested sludge cake and lime stabilised sludge
treatment September 2001 - Dominated by subsurface flow
P index
2
3
4
5
10Field A
Post application
- Mean ditch total phosphate 0.475 mgL-1
- Mean soil water total phosphate 0.451 mgL-1
P index
2
3
4
5
11Field B
- Field B treated with digested sludge cake,
October 2003 - Soil Olsens P prior to treatment 22.00mgL-1
- Adjacent control field not treated
- Both fields are tile drained
- Nutrients concentrations in tile drains from both
fields monitored
12Field B tile drains
control (untreated)
sewage sludge treated
13Field A and Field B
- Field A
- P concentration in ditch water relatively low
- P not lost from this field retained in soil or
no connectivity - High initial soil P is not coincident with
transport - No CSAs for surface water
14Field A and Field B
- Field B
- Rainfall occurred during application
- Incidental loss of P very important in this
situation - Land drains effectively turned the whole field
into a CSA
15Modelling
- Field Scale Connectivity Modelling
- TopManage
- Digital terrain analysis to visualise the effects
of land management on hydrology - TOPCAT
- timeseries modelling of flow and nutrients
- Catchment Scale Modelling
- INCA-N and P models
16P leaching 100 cereal catchment low
connectivity
Total P leaching kg ha-1 y-1
Biosolids P input kg ha-1 y-1
17P leaching 100 cereal catchment high
connectivity
Total P leaching kg ha-1 y-1
Biosolids P input kg ha-1 y-1
18Nutrient Export Risk Matrix
Output gained from scenario tests with plot and
field scale INCA is being used to fill in the
nutrient availability axis on the NERM
High risk
FERTILISER
APPLICATION AND
SOIL
MANAGEMENT
Low risk
SOIL TYPE
FLOW
CONNECTIVITY
19Phosphorus Export Risk Matrix
High risk
FERTILISER APPLICATION AND SOIL MANAGEMENT
Low risk
FLOW CONNECTIVITY
20Phosphorus Export Risk Matrix
- Series of questions are asked relating to
- Flow Connectivity
- Hill slope form
- Hedgerows
- Remediation options
- Fertiliser Application and Soil Management
- How much P do you intend to apply
- Current soil P index
- Prototype PERM available on www.sheffield.ac.uk/SE
AL and www.ncl.ac.uk/wrgi/TOPCAT/
21Conclusions
- Sewage sludge has an environmental and economical
use when applied to land - Export of P occurs when transport and source
factors coincide as CSAs - P export can be controlled by strategic
management of applications of sewage sludge
22Acknowledgements
- EPSRC (GR/N26074/01) The SEAL Project Strategic
Management of Non-point Source Pollution from
Sewage Sludge - Roger Pryor for access to field site
- Lister Noble (Farm Systems) for P index data
- Thames Water and Terra Ecosystems for sludge data