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Membrane bioreactor (MBR) technology is being used for municipal and industrial wastewater treatment in many locations across the country and around the world. This emerging technology shows particular promise due to its reduced footprint, simplified process train, and consistently high effluent quality. Thus, MBR is a treatment option that offers several advantages over conventional systems.

Advances in this technology continue to occur while more knowledge is gained concerning key factors that assure successful installations and optimization of processes. However, the cutting-edge nature of this technology, varying levels of experience among manufacturers, and the manufacturers’ equipment differences create an uneven playing field that can cause problems when using the conventional design-bid-build (DBB) approach to procurement.

An agency attempting to take full advantage of this MBR technology will benefit by asking a series of questions.

Inherent Problems
What problems are inherent in using the conventional DBB approach for procuring an MBR facility? Many of the problems encountered with the DBB procurement process are linked to (1) a lack of equipment knowledge, (2) manufacturers’ equipment differences, (3) limited operational experience, and (4) the failure of DBB to address operations and maintenance (O&M) costs.

MBR is a competitive field and manufacturers are seeking to gain a marketplace advantage by applying proprietary knowledge developed through years of research and applications. Unfortunately, due to the openness of the DBB approach, a manufacturer is less willing to share this information with the design engineer because this would leak valuable information to his competitors and reduce his competitive advantage. Additionally, there is no guarantee that the manufacturer would benefit from a sale. In the end, this lack of knowledge can result in substandard installations or incompatible treatment process components, causing the system buyer and user to suffer with inefficiencies and less than optimal treatment facilities.

The DBB process ignores differences in manufacturer’s equipment by making the MBR a generic “black box.” These differences can create a situation in which the manufacturer’s equipment interfaces differently with other processes and process equipment. The specific ancillary processes/process equipment that works best for one MBR manufacturer’s equipment may differ from the specific ancillary processes/process equipment that works best for another.

For example, the optimal screening mechanism for MBR Manufacturer A features 1-mm openings, whereas the optimal screening mechanism for MBR Manufacturer B features 3-mm openings. Therefore, using a conventional DBB approach, in which screening equipment is limited by design specifications, may result in one MBR manufacturer being unwittingly favored over another. Importantly, a more suitable overall treatment train could have been developed had the differences in MBR equipment been taken advantage of.

The DBB approach does nothing to ensure competent and reliable long-term operation after construction is complete. Given the cutting-edge nature of this technology, there are a limited number of operators with experience operating these advanced technology facilities. The lack of expertise can lead to O&M errors, potentially resulting in process failures. This issue might be overcome by outsourcing the O&M function. However, that would require more administrative action, possibly another bid/interview process, beyond the bid that was already undertaken to construct the facilities.

A conventional DBB approach creates competition among bidders with the goal of ensuring cost-effective construction of facilities. This approach, however, does nothing to address the long-term O&M costs that will be associated with the facilities in the future, nor does it allow the examination of life-cycle costs in determining which MBR equipment to choose.

There are several characteristics of MBR technology that make O&M costs a major consideration in the life-cycle costing of a facility: expected life of the membranes, extent of process automation and operator involvement, and energy use. By ignoring these factors, the system purchaser may be saddled with a process that requires huge infusions of capital (e.g. membrane replacement) to maintain effective and reliable operations that could dramatically increase the life-cycle costs of the facility.

So, approaching the procurement from a conventional DBB standpoint leaves the agency purchasing the MBR with a system that is potentially

  • substandard and inefficient;
  • not the most suitable for the application;
  • difficult to staff with adequate O&M personnel; and
  • expensive to operate and maintain.

What Alternatives Are Available?
A different project delivery approach is the design-build-operate (DBO) method. From the purchaser’s point of view, this approach involves

  • outlining project performance requirements and expectations;
  • developing a set of contract documents that reflects those requirements;
  • assigning the risk of performance, construction and operating costs to the DBO entity;
  • pre-qualifying DBO entities;
  • evaluating and selecting the best DBO proposal; and
  • monitoring facility construction, startup, and performance of the process, and the charges from the DBO entity.

How Will DBO Address the Difficulties Identified?
The DBO approach solves the problem of limited sharing of technical knowledge. Both the engineer and manufacturer are working together as a team to develop a design that optimizes the MBR equipment to its full potential. The manufacturer’s knowledge can be applied under this DBO team-oriented arrangement to maximize the team’s chances of success.

The difficulties associated with differences in equipment are resolved in the DBO approach. Each design is tailored to optimize the MBR process being featured. In the DBO approach, the MBR “black box” is not forced into a design that may or may not take advantage of its full potential. Since the DBO process integrates design, construction, and anticipated operation from the very beginning, the approach allows the manufacturer the opportunity to surround equipment with processes that best complement its function.

By its nature, the DBO process places the role of O&M squarely on the shoulders of those most familiar with the equipment and its nuances, dramatically increasing the opportunity for successful long-term operation. Given the evolution of the technology involved in MBR, the association of the manufacturer with the O&M of the equipment becomes even more important than with a more conventional technology.

The potential for outsourcing of the operations function was discussed earlier, in conjunction with the DBB approach. However, outsourcing brings with it the difficulty of procuring economical O&M services once a plant has been designed and constructed by a third party. The DBO approach avoids this problem by locking in operations as part of the initial DBO package.

Optimizing long-term O&M and life-cycle costs is directly addressed in the DBO process. As part of determining the most suitable MBR process, all of the construction and O&M costs are included in the DBO proposal packages submitted by the integrated teams. This information allows the calculation of a project life-cycle cost based on guaranteed capital, O&M and repair and replacement costs. Therefore, the purchaser will avoid the potential costs of premature membrane replacement, in addition to staff and legal time involved with determining fault for the early membrane failure.

Are There Other Advantages to the DBO Process?
Two additional advantages of the DBO approach include the reduction in the project implementation schedule and construction cost savings. The advantages are not specific to the MBR process, but are inherent in many more complex, long-term projects.

By eliminating several stages of the normal agency design review process, significant schedule efficiencies can be realized by using the DBO approach, in favor of the conventional DBB process. Also, due to the integrated involvement of the contractor and equipment manufacturer in the design, it is likely that construction will be completed more rapidly. Furthermore, because of the manufacturer’s involvement, problems during the startup period will be minimized and the facility will be ready sooner for operation. As a result, using the DBO approach instead of the conventional approach reduces the time—from design to startup—by three to four months.

Construction cost savings are also realized by using a DBO procurement approach as opposed to the DBB process. The complete, 100% bid-level design of MBR facilities is not necessary under the DBO process, as the design and contractor work on the same integrated team. Further, by placing the design engineer, contractor, and equipment manufacturers on the same team, opportunities for efficient, economical construction are greatly elevated. The contractor benefits by sharing its experience in economical construction with the engineer, who can then create a design that takes advantage of this knowledge without the need for troublesome and delaying change orders. In addition, the equipment manufacturer assists in optimizing the design by maximizing the advantages of equipment to the fullest.

Summary
The DBO approach to MBR procurement not only avoids disadvantages of the DBB process, but makes the best use of experience and technology, as well as schedule and cost efficiencies that can provide dramatic project benefits. It creates a situation in which the water entity wins by virtue of a low-cost reliable system, the manufacturer wins by being provided the best opportunity to feature his equipment and, ultimately, the consumers win through lower rates and a protected environment.

JOHN CHRISTOPHER, P.E., is with management consulting and engineering firm R.W. Beck Inc. in its San Diego, CA, office. KYLE RHORER is a principal with R.W. Beck Inc. in its Sacramento, CA, office.

 

 

OW - November/December 2005

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