A guide to some of the industry jargon, made simple.
wastewater containing sewage
The amount of oxygen needed by the organisms to break down organic material.
A type of sewage treatment plant that uses a series of rotating discs for the organisams to live on.
Biological material from living, or recently living organisms.
A type of sewage treatment plant that contains a submerged medium with a large surface area which is aerated.
A circular tank that uses a pump to spread waste through the system
Represents the interests of the UK water and wastewater industry on UK and European regulations and legislation.
A watertight holding tank for sewage and effluent that is used where ground conditions prevent the use of a septic tank or sewage treatment plant.
Material which forms on top of the effluent and sludge in a tank that is removed when the system is desludged.
Permission from the Environment Agency to discharge final, trade or industrial effluent, surface water or storm water to a receiving watercourse.
Your legal responsibility to make sure any waste that you produce, store, transport or dispose of is done without harming the environment.
Removing the crust, sludge and waste material using a specialist tanker.
Waste water mixed with waste.
Regulatory body for England and Wales.
A secondary settlement tank where the treated waste flows and settles.
By products of cooking from kitchens and food processing sites, the waste gets washed down the sink and can block pipes and drains when it cools.
A device to separate grease, fat and oil from wastewater.
Groundwater lies below the ground in the saturation zone (below the water table).
A settlement tank following the primary and secondary treatment tanks.
A way of connecting a property to the mains sewer, using either gravity or a pump.
An underground system, which collects sewage and waste water and transports it to a sewage works for treatment.
Material within a sewage treatment plant that the microbes live on.
Another name for a sewage treatment plant
The volume in litres that a single domestic person uses per day with the organic and ammonia load expressed in grams.
The maximum number of people a premises can accommodate based on 60 gallons BOD per head per day. Used when sizing a sewage treatment plant.
The test shows if the land around a septic tank or sewage treatment plant is absorbant enough for effluent to soak away.
Releases bacteria into drain runs to prevent the build up of FOGs in pipes.
Where solid matter is allowed to settle by sedimentation.
Connecting a properties sewerage system, straight to the mains sewer, using either gravity or a pump
Reeds planted over a gravel bed which offer a form of additional treatment for sewage.
Used in sewage treatment plants, a series of slowly rotating parallel discs on a horizontal shaft. The discs rotate in and out of the settled effluent and the treatment takes place on the discs.
A treatment process that distributes oxygen through the waste to reduce the BOD.
Where treatment happens using naturally occurring micro-organisms.
A simple treatment tank with an outlet pipe which allows effluent to soak away.
A multistage tank using biological processes and pumps to treat sewage and effluent to a high standard for discharge to a watercourse.
Regulatory body for Scotland
Sludge is the matter that is produced by all sewage systems and must be removed regularly.
A submerged mechanical device distributes oxygen through the waste.
Reducing the amount of sufrace runoff into drains by either diverting the volume or velocity of water entering in the first place, or divert the water for other purposes.
Rain water which falls onto roofs, drives, car parks, roads etc.
Allows treated effluent from a septic tank or sewage treatment plant to seep slowly into the ground usually in the form of perforated pipes laid out in a herringbone design.
Is everything that gets put down drains from toilets, sinks, washing machines, dishwashers and showers etc
Run off water from roofs, car parks, highways etc
Describes the system or network, e.g. sewage runs in a sewerage system
Is a moving body of water such as a stream or river.
The underground depth at which point the ground is totally saturated with water
Any business operating a waste carrying business is required by law to have a waste carrier's licence from the Environment Agency.
A waste transfer note is a legal document that details the transfer of waste from one person to another. They must be kept for a minimum of two years after a job date.