The challenge
PBF Energy's Toledo Refinery in Oregon, Ohio has partnered with Veolia North America on a 20-year agreement in which Veolia operates and maintains the refinery's on-site wastewater treatment facility. The treatment plant recovers 50% of the plant's wastewater for reuse in the refining process.
Located near Toledo, Ohio, the Toledo Refinery processes light, sweet North American crudes. With a capacity of 170,000 barrels per day, the refinery primarily produces fuels, including gasoline, ultra-low sulfur diesel and jet fuel, plus a variety of high-value petrochemicals. The refinery relies on Veolia to maintain safe, reliable operations at the treatment plant to ensure that the refinery can continue running at optimal capacity.
The project challenges are:
- All refining processes produce solids and oily wastewater that must be treated for discharge or reuse.
- In the Toledo Refinery's case, their wastewater treatment plant discharges to the local, publicly-owned treatment works (POTW).
Veolia’s solution
"The quality of the polished water is very important because the refinery's cooling towers need clean water to run properly," explains Veolia Project Manager Bryan Zimmerman, who is based at the client's site.
All-encompassing services:
- As part of Veolia's process upgrade and optimization solution, Veolia met with the client at their treatment plant to review and assess their water reclamation plant operations.
- Working with the customer, Veolia identified equipment that needed to be added for optimal process performance, and implemented a project plan that met the client's goals and budget.
- The resulting agreement called for Veolia to finance, design, build, own, operate, maintain and manage services and upgrades to the refinery's water treatment process under a long-term, 20-year contract.
Innovative technology:
- Veolia treats the wastewater using a variety of advanced technologies. First, the wastewater is collected and screened to remove solids, including debris.
- Oil is then removed in an API separator and a dissolved nitrogen flotation (DNF) system.
- Next, the water is sent to secondary treatment that consists of aeration to remove residual organics and inorganics, and then to a two-train clarification system.
- Treated effluent from the clarifiers is split into two "streams."
- The quality of the effluent is high enough to split a portion for discharge to the municipal treatment plant. The rest is sent to tertiary treatment, or "polishing," using five sand filters.
- This polished water is recycled as "make-up water" for the refinery's cooling towers.
Client targets:
- The refinery needed a solution to upgrade and optimize their wastewater treatment systems within their budget and timeline restrictions, and sought a partnership with Veolia North America.
The benefits for our client
Dedicated & experienced employees
- Fifteen Veolia employees operate and maintain the wastewater treatment plant around the clock.
- The staff includes a project manager, operations manager, eight operators, a maintenance manager, three maintenance mechanics and an administrative assistant.
- "Toledo Refining makes the fuels, and we make their water clean again so they can reuse it in their processes,'' says Zimmerman.” Our plant removes solids and other residuals from the water, and our mechanical crew handles day-to-day maintenance so that the refinery can concentrate on their core business."
- A key advantage to having Veolia operate the refinery's wastewater treatment system is the operational experience that Veolia brings to the project. "With many years of experience operating and maintaining these types of plants, we are able to adapt to changing situations," says Zimmerman. "We can easily adapt and adjust our process chemistry to meet the refinery's needs."
- "Veolia employees have an excellent safety record at our plant," says Zimmerman. "Employees are active on the safety committee, and we host monthly safely meetings that everyone attends. Our people are committed to working safely, and their dedication shows," explains Zimmerman. "In more than 14 years at the site, Veolia employees have had only one recordable incident - a sprained ankle."
Surpassed goals:
- Throughout the partnership, the refinery has saved a significant amount of money by reducing its purchase of city water and lowering treatment costs by directing less wastewater to the city's treatment plant.
- From an environmental perspective, this sustainable solution significantly reduces demand on local water supplies. In addition, the refinery has benefited from reduced risks, significant cost savings, and being able to focus resources on its core business of black oil refining, rather than treating wastewater.
Strong partnership:
- The refinery continues to work with Veolia on ways to increase the percentage of treated water available for reuse.
- According to Aaron Coulter, Toledo Refinery's Area Manager, "The refinery is always looking at ways to increase recycling and reuse. Although the treated water currently meets our specifications, Veolia would have to treat the water at a higher level for us to expand its use, which would require further investment."
- The success of the wastewater treatment plant's operation is often attributed to constant communication between Veolia and refinery staff, notes Zimmerman. "Although refinery and Veolia personnel hold regular meetings, most communication happens on a real-team basis. This allows us to do a better job controlling processing costs and maintaining water quality on our end."
- Coulter agrees that open communication between the two companies' staffs is important. "We give the wastewater plant notice if there are any changes in the refinery, and Veolia wastewater plant personnel do the same for us. The success of our relationship is a combination of people, experience and communication."