Ratepayers: invoices for instalment one are expected to be sent out in late September, which is a little later than usual. Further information can be found on our Rates webpage.

Shotover Wastewater Treatment Plant Upgrade

Upgrades will improve wastewater capacity in the district and provide for future growth in the area through to the year 2048.

About the project

The Shotover Wastewater Treatment Plant currently services Whakatipu Basin communities of Queenstown, Arthurs Point, Frankton, Kelvin Heights, Quail Rise, Shotover Country, Lake Hayes Estate, Lake Hayes, and Arrowtown.

A third stage of upgrades to the plant are now underway to improve wastewater capacity in the district and provide for future growth through to the year 2048. Construction includes a second Modified Ludzack-Ettinger (MLE) reactor down by Shotover Delta, and a range of new equipment, technology and supporting infrastructure to help keep our district's pipes flowing.

Once complete, the new treatment process for wastewater will be handled by the two MLE reactors. This will ensure long-term compliance as more people choose to make the Whakatipu Basin their home and help to protect the environment, meeting tighter effluent consent limits if required by Otago Regional Council (ORC) in the future.

An existing oxidation pond will be repurposed as part of the works. Part of the pond will be used for improved stormwater management on site, with another area converted to act as a calamity pond in the event the treatment plant goes offline.

These upgrades will also allow the plant to receive additional wastewater flows from Jacks Point Village, Hanley Farm, Ladies Mile and an extension of the Quail Rise residential development area.


What's the latest?

28 August 2024

Crews expect to finish dredging sludge from one of the existing oxidation ponds on Tuesday 10 September. After this, work will begin to drain water from the pond into the other two on site, which we expect to be completed in early October this year.

There is the possibility this work may result in some odour around the facility once the pond has been drained. More details are available below in the ‘Management of odour’ section on this webpage.

 

15 May 2024

McDonnell Dowell's shared a video update of how upgrades are progressing at the Shotover Wastewater Treatment Plant. Watch it here.


Managing construction effects

Measures will be put in place by McConnell Dowell to mitigate any potential stormwater, dust, noise, and odour effects during construction.

The project's carbon footprint will be reduced by reusing spoil from the site, using sustainable materials, reducing transport emissions and the amount of steel and concrete used where possible.


Management of odour

By early October, crews will have finished dredging one of the existing oxidation ponds and draining water from it into the other two ponds on site.

When all water is drained, some older sludge remaining at the bottom of the pond will need approximately four-to-six weeks to dry out before it’s collected and removed. While we don’t believe this remaining sludge will smell as it will be older and low in organic content, there is still the possibility of some odour in the area around the facility.

Crews will monitor smell from the pond and at different elevations nearby, and if required, will use aerosol cannons and lime neutralise the remaining sludge and disperse any odour.

About the treatment process

The Modified Ludzack-Ettinger (MLE) process sees raw sewage screened to remove the bulk of the non-degradable solids before it’s pumped through a series of tanks. The first tank starves the bacteria of oxygen, causing them to begin to break down elements in the wastewater in order to produce the oxygen they need to survive. The second tank then feeds the wastewater with an oversupply of oxygen, causing further biological processes that complete the stabilization of the organic matter, reducing the nitrogen concentration in the end product

The material is then pumped into a settling tank (a clarifier) that further separates and clarifies the resulting liquid. The processed clear water is then UV treated and pumped out of the system. Some of the remaining solids are then pumped back to the start of the process to begin it all over again, while the rest is pumped into a dewatering plant where it is dried out and removed, to be disposed of at an approved off-site location.

Any questions?

If you have any questions, please give us a call on 03 441 0499 or email services@qldc.govt.nz