The Clean Water Act (CWA), formally known as the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, establishes the process of regulating discharged pollutants into the water and also regulates the quality standard of water. Under the CWA, it is prohibited to discharge any pollutant from a point source into navigable waters without a permit. A point source can be defined as a discrete conveyance such as a pipe or man-made ditch.

Under this act, industrial and municipal facilities must have a permit from the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES). The objective of the permit is to address the most significant problems and to promote compliance among the regulated community. The compliance monitoring of the NPDES Program takes places at the state level and includes a range of techniques, including discharge monitoring report reviews and on-site compliance evaluations. The specifics of these inspections differ depending on the types of discharges that occur at an industrial or municipal facility. Typical types of discharge include municipal wastewater overflows, stormwater, pretreatment, biosolids, and discharges from concentrated animal feeding operations.

Go Back

Justifying Controls with Opacity-Driven Energy Optimization

Paper Mill Controls Upgrade

At a paper mill in New England, a long-delayed controls upgrade project was cost-justified within eight months of completion. The improved performance and energy savings from an ESP controls project saved the mill an average of $8,000 per month. ...

Read the White Paper

"I wish we had made the upgrade years ago when you first recommended it!"

Project Engineer

Paper Mill

Back to Top