Reducing water usage for a pulp and paper manufacturer

The Challenge

The pulp and paper mill was aiming to reduce water usage by 6,000 m3/day in summer and 8,000 m3/day in winter by cleaning and reusing certain process water streams, including vacuum seal water (VSW) containing white fiber, and combining it with raw freshwater (RW) make-up. The mill goals were to reduce RW demand, improve process water quality, recover thermal energy and reduce wastewater flow.

 

The Solution

The two Actiflo® package plants, built by Veolia Water Technologies., are used to treat wastewater from the vacuum pump seal. In an innovative solution for paper mills, they produce high quality water for use in paper production by blending it with river water. Wastewater from the mill's vacuum pump seal water will flow to the Actiflo® units and be blended with raw river water.

The Actiflo® ballasted clarification process produces purified water at a rate of 3,400 USGPM. Energy is saved that used to be spent on reheating river water for use in the mill. Vacuum pump seal wastewater from the pump has a turbidity of around 600-800 NTU, and Veolia's Actiflo® water treatment system will transform it, without filtration, to water with a turbidity of less than 1.5 NTU. "We provide major energy savings and high quality water by warming up cold water from the river for the mill," says Robert Lafond, Sales Engineer for Veolia.

The Client

A major producer of pulp and paper products in Canada.