Point Sources Progress Reporting

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Point Sources Progress Reporting Management Board Conference Call February 9, 2012

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Point Sources Progress Reporting. Management Board Conference Call February 9, 2012. Nutrient Reductions Progress Reporting. Annual Progress Report: The annual progress report should assess the success of the implementation efforts from the preceding year’s action plan. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Point Sources Progress Reporting

Page 1: Point Sources  Progress  Reporting

Point Sources Progress Reporting

Management Board Conference Call

February 9, 2012

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Nutrient ReductionsProgress Reporting

• Annual Progress Report: The annual progress report should assess the success of the implementation efforts from the preceding year’s action plan.

• Indicator: A valid indicator of progress must hold constant everything except the change that is being measured.

• Issue: The point source progress measure is not measuring implementation progress, it is measuring the combined influence of progress and flow.

• By not accounting for WWTP flow, an understanding of progress is confounded.

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2010 Status Report Nutrient Loads Delivered to the Bay

• Loads delivered to the Bay over past year

• Influenced by precipitation.

• The existing indicator should be retained as the primary indicator, and as an indicator of status.

•Chart Source: EPA Chesapeake Bay Program

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Current Progress Reporting Approach

• Inconsistent approach for point and nonpoint source indicators.

• EPA reports non-point source nutrient reductions progress based on the watershed model that uses a 10 year hydrologic averaging period that is applied to the most recent implementation efforts

• This approach reduces the influence of annual variation in flow and provides a better indication of “on the ground” progress.

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Current Progress Reporting ApproachPoint Sources

• EPA reports point source progress based on most recent year information from Discharge Monitoring Reports (DMRs).

• Flows vary with precipitation due to infiltration and inflow (I & I) into the collection system

• Because of this, the current progress indicator is confounded by flow changes caused by precipitation that varies annually, thus masking reductions (or increases) in effluent concentrations.

• This is not an accurate progress report for decision makers or the public.

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Point Sources Progress Reporting

Issues/Concerns:– How to make PS and NPS comparable in

Progress Scenarios, Milestones, Bay Barometer.

– The influence of annual variation in precipitation or any other confounding factor must be removed from both.

– Follow up with 2009 Executive Council decision to report “Practices in Place.”

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Point Sources Progress Reporting

Actions Requested:

– Provide feedback on proposed supplemental indicators for PS progress reports (e.g., nutrients concentrations, # of upgraded facilities)

– Provide feedback on methodology to estimate PS loads for Progress reports; decide on flow averaging period

– Prepare to present issue to PSC if necessary.

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Example of Flow used in Current Progress Reporting

Are we comparing Apples and Oranges?

NPS Averaging Period

Qave Point Sources

Point Sources WWTPFlow CY2000 - CY2010

400

500

600

700

Flow

(mgd

)

Point Sources

CY2000-2010 Flows

Qave Nonpoint Sources

PS Avereraging Period

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Precipitation and Growth

• There are two signals from flow:– “Random noise” from natural variation in precipitation.– An increasing trend from growth.

• The noise should be factored out to clarify progress.• The increase due to growth is an important factor that should be

made apparent.

• Growth– Load differences in similar flow years can be attributable to

growth and are consistent with estimates of population growth and EDUs from the Maryland Department of Planning.

– However, TN Load decreased reflecting WWTP upgrades and showing Progress.

– In wet years, this Progress is masked by rainfall.

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inc

he

s

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Flo

w (

mg

d)

Precipitation, WWTP Flows and Growth

2001WWTP Flow = 515 mgdTN Load = 14.94 M lb

2007WWTP Flow = 536 mgd

TN Load 12.67 M lb

2001Precip = 37.43 inches

2007Precip = 37.62 inches

WWTP Annual Flows CY* 2000 - 2010

2008WWTP Flow = 592 mgdTN Load 13.25 M lb

Precip = 45.77 inches2008

Maryland Annual Average Precipitation CY* 2000 - 2010

*The charts above were developed using calendar year data, and are presented with the purpose of showing the correlation between rainfall and WWTP flows

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Major Municipal WWTPsFlows 2000 - 2010

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Major Municipal WWTPTN Load 2000 - 2010

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Annual Flows forMajor WWTPs

Annual TN Load for Major WWTPs:

•Significant reduction after 2005Reflecting ENR upgrades

•Load is reduced despite increase flows from hookups or growth, but progress is hidden by rainfall

Flows vs Loads – Major WWTPs

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Annual Flow Weighted TN Concentrations

Trend – When presentation is flow-weighted, the trend becomes apparent.

Annual Flows forMajor WWTPs Facilities

Flows vs TN Concentrations – Major WWTPs

Major Municipal WWTPsFlows 2000 - 2010

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Major Municipal WWTPWeighted TN Concentrations 2000 - 2010

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Flows vs TP Concentrations – Major FacilitiesMajor Municipal WWTPs

Flows 2000 - 2010

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Major Municipal WWTPWeighted TP Concentrations 2000 - 2010

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TP (m

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Weighted TP

Annual Flows forMajor WWTPs Facilities

Annual Flow Weighted TN Concentrations

Trend – When presentation is flow-weighted, the trend becomes apparent.

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Conclusion

• The 2009 Executive Council (EC) intended to measure progress of implementation (report “Practices in Place”)

• Current indicator does not show Progress because:– It is confounded by rainfall– Is inconsistent with NPS progress reporting

• Progress reporting requires a consistent flow averaging period for both PS and NPS

• If current indicator is retained, other indicators not confounded by rainfall are needed, including:– WWTP performance (Nutrient concentrations)– Normalized or average flows for load estimates– Number of facilities upgraded