Odor Control

Long-Term Odor Abatement

Wastewater Odor Reduction Analysis

Due to ongoing odor concerns, the City is conducting a wastewater odor reduction analysis. The odor reduction analysis follows the process of identifying where hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is most prevalent in the treatment system, chemical dosing at locations that can effectively reduce H2S, and adjusting dosing rates that balance the effectiveness of H2S removal and preventing the dosing from hindering the overall effectiveness of the treatment process.  

There are four steps to the process: 

  1. Identify dosing locations.
  2. Set up temporary dosing stations (tanks to store chemicals and equipment that controls measured dosing rates).
  3. Determine the effectiveness of dosing (optimum chemical and dosing rate).
  4. Identify the cost to establish permanent dosing (i.e., cost of storage tanks, chemical feed skids, chemicals, etc.).  

Short-Term Odor Abatement (Resolved October 2024)

The short-term odor issue is related to a wiring error by a private contractor during a routine inspection that resulted in inoperable equipment. Without the use of the equipment, two of the four anaerobic digesters at the Water & Resource Recovery Center (WRRC) became dormant and could no longer accept and treat the waste stream. To adhere to permit limitations, waste must be temporarily stored in the uncovered excess flow tanks that allow odor-producing gases to readily escape into the atmosphere. It is the odor from these tanks that has resulted in unprecedented odors coming from the WRRC. 

There are three main steps to eliminate the short-term odor issue:

  1. Nurse the anaerobic digesters back to health and return to normal waste handling.
  2. Remove the waste being temporarily stored in the excess flow tanks.
  3. Clean the excess flow tanks.    

Background Information

For additional information, please email staff or call 563-589-4176.