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Why Decentralised?
This strategy has been successfully applied over many decades in densely populated areas of industrialised countries and contributed to a great extend to an "out of sight, out of mind" system of hygienic conditions for these regions.
However, the appropriateness of this model in the context of expanding urban environments must be questioned on a number of key points.
During the last decade, various researchers and institutions, including the World Bank, have started to consider the decentralised wastewater management approach as an alternative to conventional centralised systems.
It is the following important issues that Kuma Decentralised Wastewater systems were designed to address;
- Eliminate the need for monolithic investment programmes.
- Grow the systems in line with the start-stop nature of urban development.
- Ensure a governed, affordable cost per capita.
- Take advantage of technology developments in wastewater treatment as they occur.
- Return wastewater to resusable water in less than 24 hours.
- Eliminate any chance of total system breakdown.
- Adopt a 2 phase process of safe resuable and/or potable water.
- Place the decentralised stations where they can do the most good.
- Accomodate decommissioning where neceassary.
- Ensure economical running costs by eliminating the need for large scale pumping.
The main arguments against decentralisation of wastewater management are based on financial concerns and issues of treatment efficiency.
Our reserach has proven time and time again that at worst we are on a par with the cost per capita, and in many cases can prove to be as much as 75% less capital intensive.
Why choose a decentralised approach?
Apart from its proven benefits, the centralised wastewater management system is nothing else than a transportation system for human excreta and industrial wastes to a central discharge place or a treatment unit.
This requires the use of valuable drinking water as transport medium, these systems are wasteful not only of water but also of human waste elements that can be easily treated and reused in an effective decentralised strategy.
Centralised wastewater management systems hamper wastewater reuse opportunities and increase the risk to humans and the environment in the event of system failures.
Importantly, the decentralised wastewater management concept is better suited to translate Bellagio Principles No 3 (perceiving human excreta and wastes as potential resources) and No 4 (solving sanitation issues as close as possible to the source of waste generation) into practice.
Furthermore the decentralised wastewater management concept broadens the technology options and permits;
Tailoring the solutions to the prevailing conditions.
Minimise the freshwater requirements for waste transportation.
When installing networked stations, reduce the risks associated with system failure.
Increased wastewater reuse opportunities.
Permit incremental development and investment in the communities wastewater system.
A copy of the Bellagio Principles is available from the International Institiute for Sustainable Development here >>
RECENT INDUSTRY NEWS:
TAMPA FLORIDA: Cactus Goo Makes Water Safe Sept. 17, 2008 -- The slimy ooze inside prickly pear cactuses that helps the plants store water in the desert can also be used for scouring arsenic, bacteria and cloudiness out of rural drinking water, according to research at the University of South Florida in Tampa Read on >>
NEPAL: [The] Country's first large-scale community based waste water treatment plant accompanied with a biogas reactor has been set up at Srikhandapur of Dhulikhel Municipality to treat household waste water before discharging it into the river and generate biogas to meet the local energy need. [ Bio-Xpress Editor: The system uses reed bed technology and requires an area of more than 8,000 Sq m. From what we can read in this press article, a model 2000 Bio-Xpress Reactor would exceed this performance in less than 120 Sqm fgo a full scale Wastewater station ... setting aside the actual BOD and time to process] The plant will treat waste generated by around 200 households of Srikhandapur village and is expected to produce biogas for cooking purpose to around 60 families read on >>
BALI: US$64.5 Million Sewage Plant for Bali President Inaugurates Three Phase Project to Provide Waste Water Handling for South Bali to be Completed by 2014 Read on >>
EBENSBURG, Pa. -- Members of a small, isolated Amish community are refusing to follow state code in their handling of waste from a school's two outhouses, citing their religious convictions. Waste from the outhouses has been collected in plastic buckets, then dumped onto fields. The county is demanding the Amish install a holding tank and contract with a certified sewage hauler for disposal. (SNIP)
A district judge last month found Andy Swartzentruber, on whose land the outhouses sit, and school elder Sam Yoder in violation of state sewage disposal law. They have until tomorrow to pay more than $500 each in fines or to appeal the ruling. Read on >>
Scroll down or jump to view archived articles:
MODEL 700 Bio-Xpress Reactor

As the model number implies, in the middle of the 9 unit product range is the 5 metre long Model 700 Bio-Xpress Reactor which can cater for up to 700 persons, 24x7.
The illustration shows all the input and output connections:
- 3 phase power inlet
- Screened Sewage inlet
- Biosludge outlet
- Low BOD Recycled Water outlet
In essence, raw sewage and electrical power goes in, and Biosludge and Low BOD Recycled Water comes out.
The largest Bio-Xpress Reactor units can cater for in excess of 2,000 people and are delivered inside a standard 40' shipping container.
Bio-Xpress Sewer Mining Stations can be built with multiple Bio-Xpress Reactors for additional capacity within a very small footprint.
Request a brochure or more information:
OUR TEAM
Nationality: Australian
Location - Thailand
Tim has an extensive background in IT management and marketing with a particular emphasis on manufacturing and production systems.
Telephone +61(0)3 9018 6548
Thailand Mobile :66(0) 8766 05408
Email: tim.collins@bamal-ventures.com
Joe Peters - General Manager Australia
Nationality - Australian
Location - Victoria - Australia
Joe has extensive experience in capital equipment sales to Government and Industry and major account management and support.
Telephone: 61 0411 22 3336 Email: tim.collins@bamal-ventures.com
Boris Zbicki- General Manager USA -The Americas
Nationality - American
Location - Utah USA
Boris has over 30 years of experience in international business planning and development, strategic marketing, partnership and alliance arrangements and product management.
He holds several graduate degrees in electrical engineering, medical sciences and executive marketing management. In addition he is multilingual in English, Spanish, Russian, German and French.
Email: tim.collins@bamal-ventures.com
Plus-Kuma's dedicated team of well trained and fully qualified Thai metal workers, machinists, tradesmen and administrative assistants.
INSIDE THE 1st PHASE BIO-XPRESS REACTOR


Functionally these tanks are identical.
The 1st stage tank receives from the screened sewage inlet
In this image you can also see the settled sludge pickup on the floor.
In operation both 1 & 2 tanks contain the bacteria which colonises the proprietary Bio-Xpress Media. (see image above) There is around 3 metric tonnes floating free in a model 700. Each piece is approximately 12 mm in diameter and is designed to provide the maximum surface area for the microbes that do all the hard work.
They simply feed on the raw sewage destroying pathogens, suspended solids and contaminents. They do this whilst consuming oxygen provided by the continuously running aerator.
The Bio-Xpress Media is continually agitated by the action of air passing through the diffuser tubes.
The macerated and processed sewage (effluent) is then passed to the 2nd stage tank via upper and lower screens.
The sludge pickup continually collects the heavier sludge in both tanks which is passed through the Cyclone in the Control Station where it is separated over and over until it can be safely removed as Biosludge .
The 2nd stage tank continues this process and passes the further refined effluent through the upper screens and on to the 3rd stage tank.
3RD STAGE DEFLECTOR PLATE ASSEMBLY

CONTROL STATION

All components are of the highest quality and manufactured to AS-ISO standards within the USA.
All electrical components carry a 12 month guarantee unless this is exceeded by the manufacturers warranty.
All warranties in Australia are in addition to the warranties implicit under the Trade Practices Act 1974
HIGH PERFORMANCE BIO-XPRESS MEDIA

A most important component of the Bio-Xpress Reactor is the Bio-Media which attains neutral buoyancy in raw sewage when aearted. It is the Bio- Media that provides a very large conglomeration of "homes" for the bacteria that breaks down the human sewage.
Bio-Xpress Media provides a very high surface to volume ratio that adds materially to the high speed (less than 24 hours) breakdown of the raw sewage.
The media incorporates a mechanical cutting action that further speeds the disintegration of the faeces.
The action of the Bio-Xpress Media means that fast efficient aerobic conversion takes place without any need to heat the sewage use chemicals or require expensive and maintenance intensive consumables such as membranes. This results in;
Lower power consumption.
Fast conversion - less than 24 hours.
No emission of undesirable gases and odours.
SCREENING AND BUFFER TANK

Firstly it is equipped with an automatic conveyor that screens, separates and accumulates the foreign objects that inevitably find their way into any sewerage system.
Typically they are sanitary napkins, condoms, and other objects that may accidentally or with a measure of intent find their way into the system.
The Buffer Tank screens these items and allows for their safe extraction and destruction or delivery to an approved land-fill site where they can be used for Biogas production.
The untreated waste is passed through a stainless steel strainer where the foreign matter is collected on a conveyor belt that transports to either a secure waste disposal bin or on-site incinerator without any need for physical handling.
The other purpose of the buffer tank is to provide a fail-safe containment facility prior to hand-over to the Bio-Express Reactor.
By design, the capacity of the Buffer Tank allows for sufficient time to handle any scheduled or non-scheduled maintenance whilst maintaining 24 x 7 service to the community.
1st PHASE Bio-Xpress - WHAT COMES OUT?
Safe Water can be reticulated or stored for later use or released safely into the environment and water table.
Biosludge: the sludge that can be extracted from the Reactor can be treated immediately for use as high nutruient fertiliser. It can be re-mixed on site with safe effluent water or undergo dewatering using low cost systems such as Geotubes for distribution and further treatment as cake, powder or pelletized in line with relevent community and EPA regualtions.
Gases: The aerobic bacterial process emits very little discernible gases. The reason for this improvement over conventional sewage farms is that we install the innovative Bio-Xpress Media which performs two roles; a host for the bacteria and a macerating action on the sewage. This cutting action means there is no need to heat the effluent or add chemicals to provide high speed conversion. Simply put; no heat = no gases. In the rare event a particular installation does produce offensive odours, which are almost exclusively "rotten egg gas" or HSo2, Kuma can install scrubbers for its removal.
Noise: The loudest piece of equipment in a Bio-Xpress Waste Sewer Mining Station is the aerator or "blower". Kuma have selected the very finest available that incorporates US EPA approved sound mufflers. When this is combined with the Structural Insulated Panels used in the walls of the Station, very little if any noise can be discernred from the outside.
"COMMUNITY FRIENDLY" 1st PHASE BIO-XPRESS DECENTRALISED WASTEWATER STATION
2ND PHASE WATER TREATMENT
- UV light
- Reverse osmosis
- Membrane filtration
- Chlorination
- Ozone
- Nanotechnology
This 2nd phase system has a considerably smaller footprint when compared to the matched 1st Phase Bio-Xpress Reactor.
By providing this as an "as required" 2nd Phase system it provides freedom of choice and significantly reduces the cost of consumables and maintenance.
This will provide Class A water that is compliant with current EPA guidelines for human consumption.
This water can be packed for sale, stored in adjacent tanks, reticulated for use or returned safely to the environment.
In the 2nd illustration below you can see the typical layout of a full service 1st and 2nd Phase Bio-Xpress Decentralised Wastewater Station suited for community locations complete with;
- Incinerator for non-biodegradable waste removed before Primary Treatment phase.
- !st Phase sewage treatment to low BOD Recycled Water.
- 2nd Phase drinking water purification system.
- Backup or primary power generator.
- Bio-Xpress Sludge treatment and packing station.
COST TO INSTALL
Using the example of a 500 - 1,000 person community, a fully equipped Complete Bio-Xpress Sewer Mining Station as per the diagram above inclusive of;
- building (excluding land and site preparation).
- 2nd phase treatment for water purification.
- Bio-Sludge treatment/packing Station.
- Non-biodegradable waste Incinerator
- Installation and commissioning
ON-GOING MAINTENANCE
The cost of this service is dependent upon the level of equipment installed. Due to the high reliability factor in Bio-Express manufactured items, and the exclusive use of AS-ISO standard ancillary equipment, this is calculated to be no more than 5% of the installed equipment cost pa.
The performance of the entire system and the Bio-Xpress Sewer Mining Station is backed by a negotiated contract with agreed service levels and penalty clauses for non or below agreed level performance.
This contract can in turn be underwritten by an approved major Australian Insurance Company.
The Bio-Sludge by-product remains the property of the purchasing entities and can be used to offset maintenance and energy fees.
Similarly the treated water can be resold for approved use. In Melbourne, Victoria this is currently valued at A71c per Kilolitre.
OPERATING COSTS
The operating costs can be broken down into three major areas:
- Maintenance.
- Electrical and/or diesel fuel power requirements.
- Non-biodegradeable solid waste disposal.
Maintenance can be provided by a Full Service Maintenance Agreement or on an as-required basis.
However, given the economies of scale, it is almost certain that the FSMA option will provide the lowest overall cost and most reliable service.
The power requirements are dependent upon the amount of electrical and/or diesel energy required. As a guide, the Bio-Xpress Reactor model 700 will normally consume less than 5,000 watts at peak operation hourly. The overall power requirements of the installed Bio-Xpress Sewer Mining Station will be dependent upon the level of ancillary equipment installed.
The solid waste from the buffer tank can be stored in secure bins destined for approved land-fill or destroyed in a high energy diesel or electric incinerator housed within the Bio-Xpress Sewer Mining Station.
Introduction to water treatment - a primer
Thesaurus (provided by InterWATER I R C)
- carbon dioxide
- water
- other mineral products.
The need for water treatment
Many "contaminents" are actually beneficial
Many essential, health giving "contaminents" are actualy benficial to humans and the environment. The purpose of the scientific ongoing study of water and its treatment is to provide the most beneficial result in terms of safety and value for humans and the natural environment.
The treatment methods vary greatly.
Purification of water
What kind of contaminants are In the water?
In untreated water contaminants ranging from chemicals, parasites, and bacterias are measurably present. There are also others including algae, bacteria, viruses, fungus, heavy metals and parasites such as Guardia and Cryptosporidium.
Each of these different substances present the potential to cause ill effects on human health. Some of the contaminants in water are actually proven to be hazardous to your health. When these substances are taken out of the water by the use of water treatment methods of purification, the water will improve in taste, smell, colour in what is known as potability.
Major Contaminents
The major pollutants that can make ther way into water can be the following;
Sewage and other oxygen-demanding wastes (largely carbonaceous organic material, the decomposition of which leads to oxygen depletion).
Infectious agents.
Plant nutrients that can stimulate the growth of aquatic plants, which then interfere with water uses and, when decaying, deplete the dissolved oxygen and produce disagreeable odours.
Exotic organic chemicals, including pesticides, various industrial products, surface-active substances in detergents, and the decomposition products of other organic compounds.
Petroleum, especially from oil spills. Inorganic minerals and chemical compounds.
Sediments consisting of soil and mineral particles washed by storms and floodwater from croplands, unprotected soils, mine workings, roads, and bulldozed urban areas.
Radioactive substances from the wastes of uranium and thorium mining and refining, from nuclear power plants, and from the industrial, medical, and scientific use of radioactive materials.
Heat may also be considered a pollutant when increased temperatures in bodies of water result from the discharge of cooling water by factories and power plants.
Effects of water contamination
Notable effects of water pollution include those involved in human health.
Nitrates (the salts of nitric acid) in drinking water can cause a disease in infants that sometimes results in death.
Cadmium in sludge-derived fertilizer can be absorbed by crops; if ingested in sufficient amounts, the metal can cause an acute diarrhoeal disorder and liver and kidney damage.
The hazardous nature of inorganic substances such as mercury, arsenic, and lead has long been known or strongly suspected.
Lakes are especially vulnerable to pollution. One problem, eutrophication, occurs when lake water becomes artificially enriched with nutrients, causing abnormal plant growth. Run-off of chemical fertilizer from cultivated fields may trigger this. The process of eutrophication can produce aesthetic problems such as bad tastes and odours and unsightly green scums of algae, as well as dense growth of rooted plants, oxygen depletion in the deeper waters and bottom sediments of lakes, and other chemical changes such as precipitation of calcium carbonate in hard waters.
Another problem, of growing concern in recent years, is acid rain, which has left many lakes in northern and eastern Europe and north-eastern North America totally devoid of life.
Sources and control
The major sources of water pollution can be classified as municipal, industrial, and agricultural.
Municipal water pollution consists of wastewater from homes and commercial establishments.
For many years, the main goal of municipal sewage disposal was simply to reduce its content of suspended solids, oxygen-demanding materials, dissolved inorganic compounds (particularly compounds of phosphorus and nitrogen), and harmful bacteria.
In recent years, however, more stress has been placed on improving the means of disposal of the biosolids or sludge from municipal treatment processes.
Biosludge
The handling and disposal of solid residues can account for 25 to 50 per cent of the capital and operational costs of a treatment plant.
The characteristics of industrial wastewaters can differ markedly both within and among industries. The impact of industrial discharges depends not only on their collective characteristics, such as biochemical oxygen demand and the amount of suspended solids, but also on their content of specific inorganic and organic substances. Three options (which are not mutually exclusive) are available in controlling industrial wastewater.
Control can take place at the point of generation within the plant; wastewater can be pretreated for discharge to municipal treatment systems; or wastewater can be treated completely at the plant and either reused or discharged directly into receiving waters.
Agriculture, including commercial livestock and poultry farming, is the source of many organic and inorganic pollutants in surface waters and groundwater. These contaminants include both sediment from the erosion of cropland and compounds of phosphorus and nitrogen that partly originate in animal wastes and commercial fertilizers.
Animal wastes are high in oxygen-demanding material, nitrogen, and phosphorus, and they often harbour pathogenic organisms.
Wastes from commercial feeders are contained and disposed of on land; their main threat to natural waters, therefore, is via run-off and leaching. Control may involve settling basins for liquids, limited biological treatment in aerobic or anaerobic lagoons, and a variety of other methods.
Traditional 3 stage water treatment model
Treatment Stages
Traditionally, three levels of sewage or wastewater treatment are defined. These are;
- Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary (or advanced)
This traditional model is being expanded especially in developed countries with enlightened levels of awareness and ever improving testing facilities. It follows then that there is an argument for introducing a 4th stage that we might refer to as Tertiary ++ that addresses these advances.
Primary
This level removes the majority of bulk solids, from the waste stream. Where required, systems also trap greases, oils, and other non-soluable solids.. Primary treatment provides a clarified raw sewage but does not remove dissolved organic materials or other pollutants from the wastewater; it is a preliminary treatment stage, truly useful only when followed by subsequent treatment. It includes grit removal, screening, grinding, flocculation (aggregation of the solids).
Secondary
This level of treatment removes dissolved organic materials through either chemical or biological mechanisms, and combined with clarification further removes suspended solids.
Secondary treatment processes are generally considered to remove greater than 85% of the BOD and suspended solids from the wastewater stream, and provide limited removal of the nutrients nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P). Secondary treatment is considered sufficient in cases where the effluent is to be directed to land use where the N and P are beneficial for irrigation, or where the nutrient levels are low following treatment and subsequent analysis.
Tertiary
Wastewater treatment provides an extra stage for the removal of phosphorous and nitrogen nutrients and even further removal of BOD and suspended solids. Generally, advanced wastewater treatment processes can provide removals of greater than 95% for BOD and suspended solids and high levels of nitrogen and phosphorus elimination in the final effluent. Tertiary treatment is necessary when receiving bodies of water would be adversely affected by the influx of the extra nutrients, and could result in contamination of watercourses.
Tertiary ++
In today's tertiary treatments, advances are being made as the level of trace elements and contaminants is being more clearly understood with the development of more sophisticated testing methods. These advances are examining in detail the presence of pathogens and other undesirable elements even when they are in extremely small concentrations.
Micro filtration, advanced or selective biological systems, Ultra Violet Light and Ozone are technologies that are being utilised along with chemical processes, (albeit with understandably less support for their use).
The recent advances in nanotechnology in laboratories, universities and research organisations around the world promises further innovative processes that are expected to become commercially stable and economically viable in the future.