In the three-month pilot project, Blue Boar Contracts used the Sedi-filter’s de-watering bags to contain and de-water sediment taken from a three-kilometre stretch of the Birmingham and Worcester Canal, UK.

Share

Related Links

  • Sedi-Filter
  • Elsevier Ltd is not responsible for the content of external websites.

Related Stories

  • Fresh water from onboard systems
    Advances in reverse osmosis technology enable more fresh water from smaller, more efficient systems. Parker Hannifin’s Racor Filter Division Europe, looks at how the latest developments in reverse osmosis desalination technology has led to the introduction of smaller, lighter and more energy efficient systems than ever before.
  • Successful environmental monitoring
    Reducing the environmental impact of water management and infrastructure projects is becoming an essential part of the business. In this article, Dr Mike Coffey looks at the role environmental monitoring can play and how to design an effective program.
  • Safe drinking water from Grundfos range
    Since the Haiti earthquake in January 2010, contaminated water has been a contributing factor in the wide spread of cholera. Insufficient power supplies and water shortages are two major factors which needed to be overcome. Grundfos provided rotor and centrifugal pumping systems which combat these problems by using solar and wind energy.
  • Tsurumi in wastewater upgrade at a Bulgarian military training base
    Japanese pump supplier Tsurumi has upgraded a European army base. This is part of an ongoing development to the site using a mix of aerators, agitators, cutters, decanters and sewage pumps.
  • Ultrafiltration aids Chinese paper manufacture
    German company inge supplies ultrafiltration system for river water.

Top 5 Stories

News

Sedi-filter launches de-watering bags

01 April 2010

Designed by Aardvark EM and manufactured by DRM Industrial Fabrics, the Sedi-filter system has been successfully utilized in a pilot project with Blue Boar Contracts

In the three-month pilot project, Blue Boar Contracts used the Sedi-filter’s de-watering bags to contain and de-water sediment taken from a three-kilometre stretch of the Birmingham and Worcester Canal, UK.

The Sedi-filter de-watering bags are made from geotextiles and are designed to capture solid materials without the use of excessive or specialist machinery. The de-watering bags remove excess water from wet wastes, such as sludges, dredged silts and washwaters, through a passive filtration process. Solids are held within the tube, as the water passes through the fabric and flows back to its original source, surrounding ground or another collection point. If the solid waste is contaminated, like the canal sediment, then the wet material can be placed in the Sedi-filter de-watering bags and the water extracted

Simon Potter, director of Blue Boar said: “The use of the Sedi-filter system means that we don’t have to add anything to the contaminated sediment to treat it before it is disposed of. That means we don’t have to have a special licence to deal with the waste and we are not increasing the weight of the sludge. We can dry it out using the Sedi-filter system, so it can be accepted to landfill and, because the water is extracted, we are actually reducing the amount we are taking away, which means lower transport costs and less weight at the landfill weighbridge. We think this system is environmentally better and also more cost effective. It is certainly our preferred method of handling contaminated sediment in future projects.”

Applications for the Sedi-filter de-watering bags include building and development projects, farming, food processing, paper mills and conservation. The sedi-filter system can also be used to create artificial weirs, berms and reefs in watercourses and, in the marine environment, for erosion control or recreation, including surfing reefs.

 

 

 

 

This article is featured in:
Distribution & Supply  •  Water Resources

 

Comment on this article

You must be registered and logged in to leave a comment about this article.