Abstract

AbstractLand treatment facilities can provide effective treatment of secondary oily wastewater from maintenance operations, particularly in arid climates. Soil and underlying groundwater from a land treatment facility, which has been operating for eight years, were analyzed to determine the effectiveness of using bioremediation for the treatment of dissolved and free‐phase oil in maintenance wastewater. The study was conducted at a mining site in Western Australia. The facility was capable of treating 140 kiloliters (kL) of oily wastewater per day. The average petroleum hydrocarbon content of the wastewater was 2 percent weight per volume (w/v) based on data available for the first five years. The soil data indicate that the land treatment process has been operating efficiently even at high wastewater loadings with maximum degradation rates of 10–242 mg/kg per day. Based on the soil data, there is no evidence of accumulation of any metal or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) compounds. The land treatment facility has led to only low levels of TPH (total petroleum hydrocarbons) contamination (<4 ppm) in the underlying groundwater. However, nitrate concentrations in the groundwater were shown to increase over the first five years of the facility's operation. This article reports and discusses the operational data from the land treatment process, illustrating its effectiveness in treating oily wastewater. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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