The authoritative technical guide to Nebraska’s largest wastewater treatment and wet-weather control asset.
The Missouri River Water Resource Recovery Facility (MRWRRF) is the cornerstone of wastewater infrastructure for the City of Omaha, Nebraska. Serving the older, eastern portion of the metropolitan area—which consists primarily of combined sewer systems—the facility plays a dual role: providing consistent biological treatment for municipal sewage and managing massive hydraulic loads during storm events to prevent Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs).
Operated by the City of Omaha Public Works Department, the plant has recently undergone a transformation under the federally mandated “Clean Solutions! Omaha” (CSO) program. With the commissioning of a massive High Rate Treatment (HRT) facility, the MRWRRF can now treat peak flows exceeding 300 MGD, significantly reducing untreated discharges into the Missouri River. This facility represents a convergence of traditional activated sludge processing and cutting-edge ballasted flocculation technology, making it a case study in modern wet-weather flow management.
The MRWRRF services the eastern watershed of Omaha, covering approximately 40 square miles. This area includes the historic downtown, commercial districts, and older residential neighborhoods. Unlike the Papillion Creek WRRF to the west (which serves separate sanitary sewers), the Missouri River plant’s collection system is largely a Combined Sewer System (CSS). Consequently, the facility must handle extreme variations in flow, shifting from a dry-weather average of 25–30 MGD to hydraulic peaks hundreds of times higher during heavy Midwestern storms.
The facility operates with a tiered capacity structure designed to maximize treatment quality while managing volume:
Treated effluent is discharged directly into the Missouri River. The facility operates under a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit issued by the Nebraska Department of Environment and Energy (NDEE). Strict compliance is required for E. coli (during the recreation season of May-September), Ammonia-Nitrogen, and Total Suspended Solids (TSS). The plant is a critical component in the regional effort to reduce nutrient loading to the Mississippi River Basin and the Gulf of Mexico.
The MRWRRF utilizes a split-stream treatment approach during wet weather, while maintaining a conventional Activated Sludge process for base flows.
Raw wastewater enters the facility via the South Interceptor and major force mains. The headworks is designed for robust debris removal to protect downstream pumps.
Flow directed to the biological train enters primary clarifiers. These large rectangular basins slow the velocity of the wastewater, allowing settleable solids to drop to the bottom (primary sludge) and grease/oils to float to the top for removal. Primary treatment typically removes 30-40% of BOD and 50-60% of TSS.
The facility utilizes a High Purity Oxygen (HPO) Activated Sludge system, a legacy technology often chosen for plants with limited footprints and high organic loading.
Commissioned to address CSO mandates, the HRT facility utilizes Ballasted Flocculation technology (specifically Veolia ACTIFLO® systems).
The facility employs chlorination for disinfection, utilizing sodium hypochlorite. After a dedicated contact time to ensure pathogen kill (specifically targeting E. coli), the effluent is dechlorinated using sodium bisulfite to prevent toxicity to aquatic life in the Missouri River.
Omaha acts as a regional solids processing hub.
The site is constrained by the Missouri River to the East, railroad tracks to the West, and industrial zoning to the North/South. This spatial constraint drove the selection of compact technologies like HPO and Ballasted Flocculation. The campus includes the main Operations Building, the Cryogenic Oxygen facility, the new HRT building, and the massive digester complex.
The MRWRRF is a significant energy consumer, primarily due to the oxygen generation systems and large influent pumps. However, the facility has moved toward sustainability through a Biogas Conditioning System. Methane produced in the anaerobic digesters is scrubbed of impurities (siloxanes, H2S) and used to offset natural gas demand or injected into the pipeline, turning a waste product into a revenue stream.
Situated in the floodplain, the facility is protected by a levee system. Following the historic 2011 and 2019 Missouri River floods, the City has invested heavily in hardening infrastructure, raising critical electrical gear, and ensuring perimeter floodwall integrity.
The City of Omaha is currently executing “Clean Solutions! Omaha,” a $2 billion Long Term Control Plan (LTCP) to reduce CSOs. The MRWRRF is the centerpiece of this initiative.
The facility operates under NPDES Permit NE0040649. The permit acknowledges the dual nature of the plant (biological vs. wet weather). While the biological train must meet strict secondary treatment standards (30 mg/L BOD/TSS), the HRT train operates under specific wet-weather bypass provisions that mandate high-efficiency solids removal and disinfection.
The City of Omaha has been working under a Consent Decree with the EPA and DOJ regarding CSOs. The construction of the MRWRRF HRT facility was a required milestone in this decree. Since its commissioning, the facility has successfully met the capture and treatment targets set forth in the Long Term Control Plan.
The facility is staffed 24/7/365 by a team of certified wastewater operators (Nebraska Class IV, III, II, I), maintenance mechanics, electricians, and laboratory technicians. The City of Omaha Public Works Quality Control Division oversees the laboratory analysis.
A plant-wide SCADA system integrates the traditional biological plant with the intermittent HRT facility. Operators must make rapid decisions during storm events to divert flow to the HRT train as the biological plant reaches hydraulic capacity. This dynamic operation requires advanced training in wet-weather protocols.
Like many dischargers to the Missouri/Mississippi basin, Omaha is facing increasing pressure regarding nutrient loads (Nitrogen and Phosphorus). While not currently under a strict numeric nutrient limit, the facility monitors these parameters. Future regulatory cycles will likely require capital improvements for Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR).
While the HRT facility is new, the core biological plant dates back to the 1960s. Concrete degradation in primary clarifiers and the maintenance of the oxygen generation system (cryogenic plants are maintenance-intensive) remain ongoing operational challenges.
The Missouri River has seen record flood levels twice in the last decade. Ensuring the plant remains operational when river levels are high—which necessitates pumping effluent against high head pressure—is a critical focus of the City’s asset management plan.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Type | High Purity Oxygen Activated Sludge + High Rate Wet Weather Treatment |
| Design Avg Flow (Biological) | 62 MGD |
| HRT Capacity (Wet Weather) | ~240 MGD (Design Peak) |
| Combined Peak Capacity | ~360+ MGD |
| Secondary Process | Cryogenic Oxygen / Closed Basin Reactors |
| Wet Weather Technology | Ballasted Flocculation (ACTIFLO®) |
| Disinfection | Sodium Hypochlorite / Bisulfite Dechlorination |
| Biosolids | Anaerobic Digestion, Centrifuge Dewatering |
| Population Served | ~400,000 |
| Service Area | Combined Sewer Area (East Omaha) |
| Receiving Water | Missouri River |
| Operating Authority | City of Omaha Public Works |
| Key Upgrade | $110M HRT Facility (Completed ~2018) |
Q: Does the Missouri River plant use biological nutrient removal (BNR)?
A: Currently, the plant is designed primarily for BOD and TSS removal with ammonia toxicity control. Full biological nutrient removal (Nitrogen/Phosphorus) is not the primary design driver yet, but is being monitored for future permits.
Q: What happens to the biogas produced at the plant?
A: The City has invested in cleaning the gas for use as Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) or for heating plant processes, moving away from simple flaring.
Q: What is the peak hydraulic capacity?
A: By combining the biological train (~120 MGD peak) and the HRT train (~240 MGD), the plant can process over 350 MGD during extreme events.
Q: Why is the plant located right on the river?
A: Wastewater systems rely on gravity. The river is the lowest point in the geographic basin, allowing sewage to flow downhill to the plant, reducing pumping costs.
Q: Does the plant smell?
A: While wastewater treatment inherently involves odors, the City utilizes odor control scrubbers, particularly at the headworks and solids handling areas, to minimize impact on neighboring areas.