Wednesday, March 25, 2009

When Industry Pollutes Water, Nature Can Help Clean Up The Problem.

When Industry Pollutes Water, Nature Can Help Clean Up The Problem.
When a company causes water pollution, it can face heavy fines. Yet there are low cost, ways for businesses to clean up dirty water before sending it into a sewer or the ground. The process is effective and environmentally sound because it uses nature to scrub nature.

- By Isaac Rudik

Not only is the world starting to slowly run out of fresh water, the water that’s available for drinking, washing and other sanitary uses is increasingly polluted and dirty. Municipalities and regions are finding growing pressure being put on their waste water treatment facilities thanks to a combination of manufacturing, agriculture, food processing, soft drink bottling and the general growth in the number of people consuming water.

Even more distressing is that contaminated water is seeping into aquifers and other sources of fresh water.

Scrubbing Bubbles

Companies need to clean contaminated water both for their own processes and before offloading it into the sewers. But it’s not necessary to install acres of costly equipment to do the clean up because nature provides biological products to do the work.

A partial list of available bio-based solutions includes:
· Aqua-One™ eliminates or prevents the most common problems associated with pond and aquarium water quality.
· Bio-One™ cleans up specific hydrocarbon and hydrocarbon-related contaminants.
· Hydro-One Blue™ degrades components in food processing, textile, pulp, paper, wood processing, municipal waste treatment systems, lagoons, RVs, and septic tank wastewater.
· MicroClean-One™ removes grease, oil, or other hydrocarbon surface contamination.
· Safe-One™ reduces odours in feed lot, dairy, swine, and poultry waste treatment processes.
· GreaseClean-One™ digests grease, oil, or other food wastes in pipes, traps, sewers and lift stations.
· Terra-One™ stimulates plant root growth and reduces thatch.

Using biological decontamination products such as these reduces water and operating costs while using a natural “scrubbing bubble” to save the environment and avoid costly clean-ups.

Widespread Problem

A substantial portion of waste entering our water comes from sources such as industrial discharge pipes and municipal sewer outlets or pollutants carried in the atmosphere. Up to 54% of the 170 direct dischargers in Ontario exceed their allowed monthly pollution limits.

Moreover, many industries use municipal sewers and treatment facilities to deal with wastewater and this can overwhelm treatment facilities. This is one of the most serious problems facing the municipal water industry. Worse, municipal facilities may not treat toxic industrial contaminants and it is almost impossible to police sewage discharges.

When dirty water contamination is left for a government facility to “clean up,” large amounts of water are wasted. With ever tighter legislation and the need to save costs cleaning it by yourself is much cheaper and less risky.

Fortunately, new bio-technology makes it easier and cheaper for companies to manage potential problems with bad water damaging the environment while reducing own operating costs.




Isaac Rudik is a compliance consultant with Compliance Solutions Canada Inc., Canada’s largest provider of health, safety and environmental compliance solutions to industrial, institutional and government facilities.

E-mail Isaac at irudik@csc-inc.ca or phone him at 905-761-5354.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Even Empty Barrels Need Tender, Loving Storage.

Even Empty Barrels Need Tender, Loving Storage.
Supposedly empty barrels and used batteries pose a potentially huge risk – and cost – to companies as they await collection for disposal or re-conditioning.

-By Isaac Rudik

We’ve all seen them as we drive along the expressway or down an industrial street. At the rear of a parking lot next to a factory or warehouse sit a forlorn group of empty barrels, sometimes stacked to the sky, awaiting pickup for disposal or re-conditioning. Yet those empty barrels aren’t truly empty for they all contain the residue of the liquid or vapour product they once contained.

In fact, supposedly empty barrels are anything but and pose a potentially huge risk – and cost – to companies as they sit, alone and forgotten, awaiting collection. The reality is that even “empty” barrels need tender, loving storage. At the same time, useless old batteries waiting for pick-up pose a hazard to a business, the surrounding community and the environment.

Some 90% of the residue in both empty barrels and used batteries are toxic and pose a serious hazard. Improper storage – even the weather – can result in leaks of the residue material into the ground. If it happens, the resulting expense to the facility in cleanup and fines can run into six figures.

Ignoring Hazards

Too many companies ignore the potential hazard posed by seemingly empty barrels.

For example, two years ago a manufacturer east of Toronto was engulfed in flames that sent three employees to hospital and took fire fighters more than six hours to extinguish. The blaze started when a worker was using a welding torch to cut supposedly empty barrels in half to prepare them for pickup. For nearly a decade, the business had been cutting barrels to reduce the storage space needed while they waited for a monthly collection without a problem.

But then luck ran out.

The welding torch’s intense heat coupled with a week of hot weather set off a spark, igniting built-up fumes inside a barrel which had been sitting outside, unprotected from the unrelenting, scorching sun beating down. The blaze ignited other barrels and before the fire department arrived on the scene, the factory itself caught fire. The place was totalled.

While insurance covered much of the cost of cleaning up the remains and re-building the facility, the process took seven months which meant being out of business for more than a half-year. What wasn’t covered, though, were the hefty fines levied by the province for improperly storing hazardous material and exposing workers to a serious health risk. Legal fees for negotiating with the government, settling suits brought by injured workers, and paying nearby businesses for lost revenue that were forced to shutter their doors for a few days during and after the fire added to the total cost of improper storage.

Yet even without a fire, used barrels and old batteries can cause problems for a business. They can easily leak, causing residue material to seep into the ground which will lead to costly soil remediation projects with the possibility to sample and test nearby potable water sources for contamination and clean up.

Proper Storage and Disposal

As the fire-ravaged factory learned, there is no such thing as an “empty” container. Drums should be completely drained, properly bunged and promptly returned to a drum re-conditioner or properly disposed of quickly. Moreover, they should not be kept under pressure, cut, welded, brazed, soldered, drilled, ground or exposed to heat, sparks, static electricity and other potential ignition triggers.

Here’s the good news.

There is a smart and cost-effective way to protect against potential problems caused by storing empty barrels and old batteries improperly: Modular spill containment platforms are one type of solution which captures leakage risk and avoids unforeseen events or accidents causing a problem. Better still, these solutions cost a fraction of the cost of fines, which can hit upwards of $250,000.00, and possible worker comp claims and lawsuits – and that’s before adding in clean-up costs which will be even greater.

When you leave work today, look out back at the barrels and batteries many industrial businesses find piling up awaiting collection. Remember that those empty barrels need tender, loving storage.




Isaac Rudik is a compliance consultant with Compliance Solutions Canada Inc. , Canada’s largest provider of health, safety and environmental compliance solutions to industrial, institutional and government facilities.

E-mail Isaac at irudik@csc-inc.ca or phone him at 905-761-5354.