Osceola County Water Service Provider Selects MIEX Treatment

Oct. 31, 2012
System is expected to be operational by summer 2013

Toho Water Authority, the largest water service provider in Osceola County, Fla., has selected MIEX Treatment to reduce disinfection by-product (DBP) precursors from the groundwater at their Harmony Water Treatment Plant (WTP).

Treating water from the Upper Floridan Aquifer in eastern Osceola County, a raw water source containing significant amounts of organic carbon and hydrogen sulfide, the Harmony WTP was challenged by high levels of DBP formation. A consent order from the state, received in 2011, prompted the utility to evaluate treatment options that would reduce the DBP formation potential and facilitate compliance with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations for water quality.

Working with consultant CH2M HILL, the utility evaluated the performance of MIEX Treatment at the pilot scale. It was demonstrated to reduce the levels of organic carbon in the raw water by nearly 80%, reduce sulfide concentrations by nearly 90% and, when implemented in a full scale operation, will allow the Harmony WTP to resume use of free chlorine for disinfection, maintaining consistency with the utility's 17 other water treatment plants. Additionally, the finished water produced by the pilot was well below EPA's MCL standards for DBP formation. A successful community taste test reinforced the Authority's decision to contract with Orica Watercare for the purchase of a 0.5 million gal per day (mgd) MIEX Treatment system to be installed at the Harmony WTP.

The system was selected because of its reliability and higher overall finished water quality, of the technologies evaluated by the utility—a factor influencing the Authority's decision. Deborah Beatty, the project manager from Toho Water Authority states, "Toho's Engineering and Operations Staff is confident that the selection of the MIEX Water Treatment System for the Harmony WTP will provide a financially sustainable solution that will facilitate compliance with FDEP and EPA regulations and meet customer expectations for taste and water quality."

The Harmony Water Treatment Plant's system is expected to be operational by early summer 2013.

Source: Orica Watercare

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