Metro Vancouver Logo Skip navigation links
About Us
Boards
Services
Planning
Outreach
 
Metro Vancouver

We have detected that you do not have a Flash Player, for optimal experience please click here to download it and install.

 
Home Email page Print Share this page Increase text size Decrease text size
 
 
Wastewater Sources
Wastewater Treatment
Planning
Nutrifor
Production & Quality Control
Research & Projects

Nutrifor 

Nutrifor products and services were initiated by Metro Vancouver in 1990 to find beneficial ways to use the treated sewage sludge or biosolids produced at the region's five wastewater treatment plants.

Biosolids are made from municipal wastewater. Metro Vancouver manages the production and distribution of this nutrient-rich organic matter.

Biosolids are the end-product of wastewater treatment processes that begin when you flush your toilet or send dishwater down the drain.

After you flush, your wastewater joins wastewater from many other sources to begin a journey through kilometres of underground piping. Eventually, this wastewater reaches its destination: a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP).

At the WWTP, the solids are separated from the wastewater. These solids, which consist mainly of organic matter, are then treated and dewatered. At the end of the process, the solids (also known as sewage sludge) become biosolids. There are three main components in biosolids: water, organic matter, and silt/sand. Percentages of trace elements in biosolids from the Annacis Island WWTP: Nitrogen-4.32%; Iron-3.86%; Phosphorous-2.88%; Aluminium-1.56% ; Magnesium-0.54% ; Copper-0.11%; Potassium-0.15%; Zinc-0.10% ; Sodium-0.09% ; Manganese-0.04% ; other trace Elements-less than 0.03% ; (values obtained from the mean concentrations for samples collected in 2005 based on dry weight.)

The biosolids produced in Metro Vancouver plants are rich in nutrients and organic matter. Today, they are being used to:
· Rehabilitate land where mining or other activities have removed soil and vegetation,
· Fertilize lands to improve vegetative production,
· Create soil for landscaping purposes.

Metro Vancouver is finding more ways to recycle this valuable resource. Currently, the Nutrifor Program is developing high-quality soil products and exploring partnerships with private companies interested in producing and distributing these products.

Biosolids benefit the environment in two significant ways:
1. Nutrient resources are recovered when biosolids are recycled;
2. Unproductive land is improved when biosolids are used to add essential plant nutrients and organic matter.

Metro Vancouver recycles biosolids in a safe, efficient and cost-effective manner that is good for the environment.


Back to top