Environmental Sciences Proceedings (Oct 2022)

Assessing the Environmental Impact of Combined Sewer Overflows through a Parametric Study

  • Alessandro Farina,
  • Armando Di Nardo,
  • Rudy Gargano,
  • Roberto Greco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/environsciproc2022021008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
p. 8

Abstract

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Design and management of combined sewer overflows (CSOs) have been, so far, mainly based only on complying a fixed dilution rate of wastewater in stormwater during rain events. This poses serious environmental issues, since the definition of the acceptable dilution does not consider the characteristics of the upstream urban catchment, nor the climatic features, nor those of the receiving water body. Overflows are usually designed for activation when the mixed discharge reaches about five-times the mean wastewater discharge (though it may vary, depending on country regulations), the latter being the mean dry weather wastewater discharge. Accordingly, recent regulations started enforcing limits also on the frequency of overflows. Overflow activation frequency and discharged volumes of pollutants may depend on the upstream catchment features as well as on the precipitation regime. The great variability in these factors could make the impact on the receiving water body of similarly designed overflows quite different. In this study, the behavior of a CSO placed at the outlet of urban catchments with the same size but different characteristics was simulated with SWMM. The considered hydrological parameters were catchment imperviousness, width and slope, Manning coefficient and depression storage. Served population characteristics affecting the combined sewer hydraulic regime were studied by changing the population density and the mean wastewater discharge per capita. After defining realistic ranges for each parameter, the time series of discharged overflows were calculated for all the combinations of the variable catchment parameters, corresponding to 20-year-long precipitation series from a single rain gauge. The obtained results, although preliminary, indicate that CSOs’ impact on the receiving water body strongly depends on the characteristics of the upstream urban catchment. Therefore, such characteristics should be considered in CSO design and management.

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