Over the past three decades, nutrient regulations have driven utilities to implement nutrient removal at their facilities in different watersheds across the United States and Canada, including most notably the Chesapeake Bay area around Washington D.C. and Long Island Sound in New York. Currently, nutrient regulations are being implemented in multiple states with waterways that feed into the Mississippi River, aiming to reduce the incidence of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico, impacting by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) estimates 1,232 publicly owned treatment facilities across 31 U.S. states and two Canadian provinces.
In addition, regulations are being developed on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — so-called “forever chemicals.” While drinking water is an immediate focus, wastewater and effluent quality needs retain some of the spotlight as regulation sets its sights on the pressing issue.
Per the EPA’s 2023 effluent guidelines plan, a nationwide study will be conducted this year to collect and analyze nationwide data on industrial discharges of PFAS into publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) influent, effluent and sewage sludge. The study inevitably will steer the conversation about continued regulations and future practices while driving utilities to better plan their operations to meet the needs of the EPA guidelines.
Along with PFAS guidelines, nutrient removal remains in play. While in some areas, nutrient removal regulations are in place for some nutrients, there remains uncertainty in future direction of those limits and for other nutrients. Highly populated states such as California, Texas and Florida are rolling out nutrient limits to reduce eutrophication — an excess of nutrients in bodies of water. The San Francisco Bay is looking to implement strict nutrient limits, and in Texas, nutrient limits are starting to be issued to facilities discharging into pristine waters. Florida also recently signed legislation that eliminates direct discharges to the ocean driven by severe algal blooms, resulting in increased reuse efforts.
Black & Veatch’s 2024 Water Report — based on expert analysis of survey results from about 630 U.S. water sector stakeholders — highlights an industry on the cusp of change, waiting for the next regulation to take the wheel of their operations and steer them in the right direction while continuing to manage the changes needed to meet existing challenges.