A ready-made site and a new state grant program presented the perfect opportunity for a Massachusetts town to invest in renewable energy.
An aeration blower replacement puts a Wisconsin clean-water plant on a course toward being energy self-sufficient or a net producer of energy.
Colorado renewable-natural-gas-to-pipeline project lauded for environmental and economic benefits
A Nebraska city replaces a combined heat and power facility with a gas scrubbing system that yields renewable fuel for vehicles.
A Colorado plant reaps 38% electricity savings and rapid payback with a project combining two separate blower systems into one all-purpose package.
A linear digester mixer and other sustainability improvements help a growing Idaho city keep rates down and make use of resources.
Award-winning achievement at a New Hampshire plant comes from commonsense measures, some as simple as turning off lights when leaving an area.
Continuous self-assessment and improvement steer a Michigan authority’s newest water plant to a Directors Award from the Partnership for Safe Water.
Persistent efforts to cut energy consumption yield a statewide energy efficiency award for a regional utility in New Hampshire.
Photovoltaic arrays and a large battery storage installation propel an Arkansas city toward an ambitious long-term clean-energy goal.
New Hampshire’s state government backs audits that help clean-water plants identify areas for energy savings and then helps fund their implementation.
Pursuit of LEED certification enhances sustainability in a new Iowa water plant and paves the way for a $6.5 million grant toward construction.
Four Colorado communities reap economic and sustainability benefits by capturing digester methane and producing compressed natural gas for vehicles.
A renewable natural gas plant is the last piece of the puzzle in complete wastewater resource utilization in the Phoenix area.
This industry veteran says young workers should consider a rewarding and lucrative career in wastewater treatment
A successful pilot project in Los Angeles leads to a plan for 550 tons per day of organic slurry incorporation