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Home Water and Wastewater Treatment

Wastewater treatment plants and the often overlooked gas

by Hayley Ralph
January 19, 2026
in News, Water and Wastewater Treatment
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Image: miss irine/stock.adobe.com 

Image: miss irine/stock.adobe.com 

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Researchers have flagged the extent of hidden ammonia emissions from the wastewater drying process and the need for the industry to adapt.

A collaborative study led by The University of Queensland (UQ), University of Melbourne and Melbourne Water confirmed open air sludge drying pans also release ammonia gas, an emission that is generally overlooked in wastewater operations. 

UQ’s Zhiyao Wang and Mei Bai from the University of Melbourne’s School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Science confirmed the finding after two monitoring campaigns over a two-year sludge drying pan drying cycle at a major Victorian wastewater treatment plant. 

By linking site specific monitoring data with modelling, the team estimated ammonia emissions from general open air sludge drying processes, indicating that these processes can be a notable but often overlooked source, with an industry focus on greenhouse gases. 

“While ammonia is not a greenhouse gas and water utilities are not obligated to report emissions, it may contribute to potential environmental risks such as soil acidification, water eutrophication as well as particulate matter formation under certain conditions,” Wang said. 

Sludge drying pans are a common fixture at treatment plants around the world. In these shallow, open-air pans, sludge is spread out on an impermeable base so that water is lost primarily through evaporation. 

Free liquid is drained away from the pan for further treatment, leaving a semi-solid material that is dried by the sun and wind for easier storage, re-use or disposal. These nutrient rich ‘biosolids’ are highly sought by some sectors. 

Wang said this drying process was effective, but the high nitrogen content in sludge and large liquid-gas interfacial area of the pans seem to create conditions ideal for ammonia to escape into the atmosphere. 

“Our project was to measure how significant these emissions were,” Wang said. 

The research team monitored ammonia volatilisation in a sludge drying pan using inverse-dispersion modelling coupled with open-path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic techniques over two short measurement campaigns. 

Factoring in wind speeds and seasonal temperature variations, modelling estimated that 43 tonnes of ammonia emissions was emitted from the pan over a two-year sludge drying cycle. 

“That is nearly 95 per cent of the total nitrogen-based emissions from the pan, a third of the overall nitrogen content in the drying pan,” Wang said. 

“If we extrapolate the results to all drying pans in the plant, ammonia emissions could account for six to nine per cent of the total nitrogen received by the treatment plant.” 

Wang said the study highlighted a need for wastewater treatment plants to transition to different sludge drying methods. 

“For example, the feasibility and effectiveness of an aerobic post-treatment unit could be investigated to remove the ammonia in anaerobically digested sludge through nitrification,” Wang said. 

“This might offer additional benefits including enhanced pathogen removal, heavy metal leaching, and micropollutants degradation.” 

This research helps to better understand gaseous emissions and meet the General Environmental Duty, applicable to all Victorian businesses and industries. 

Controls in place to manage odour impacts, including buffers and planning overlays, are also suitable for ammonia emissions. 

According to UQ, agricultural activities such as the storage and application of livestock slurry and mineral nitrogen fertilisers remain the biggest contributor to atmospheric ammonia. 

 

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