The East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD) Main Wastewater Treatment Plant (MWWTP) is a landmark facility in North American wastewater infrastructure, renowned not only for its critical role in protecting the San Francisco Bay but for its pioneering status as a net-positive energy generator. Located at the foot of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, this facility serves approximately 740,000 residents and 20,000 businesses across an 88-square-mile service area in the East Bay.
While the plant treats an average dry weather flow of approximately 50-60 MGD, it is engineered to handle massive hydraulic peaks up to 320 MGD during California’s intense winter storms. The MWWTP is distinguished by its High Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge process and its industry-leading Resource Recovery (R2) program. Through the co-digestion of high-strength organic wastes (food scraps/FOG) alongside municipal sludge, the facility became the first major wastewater treatment plant in North America to produce more renewable energy onsite than is required for its operations, setting a global benchmark for the water-energy nexus.
The MWWTP serves Special District No. 1, a sub-region of EBMUD’s water service area. The collection system is unique due to the age of the infrastructure in cities like Oakland and Berkeley, leading to significant Inflow and Infiltration (I/I) challenges. The district manages approximately 29 miles of large-diameter interceptors, while the satellite communities own and operate the local collection systems (approx. 1,600 miles). The service area is highly urbanized with a mix of residential, commercial, and light industrial users.
The facility’s hydraulic profile is dominated by wet weather events.
During extreme storm events, flows exceeding the MWWTP capacity are managed via three remote Wet Weather Facilities (WWFs), a rare regulatory allowance designed to prevent sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) in the community.
Treated effluent is discharged into the San Francisco Bay via a deep-water outfall located roughly one mile off the ALbany shoreline at a depth of 45 feet. The facility operates under a stringent NPDES permit issued by the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board. EBMUD has maintained an exemplary compliance record, receiving numerous Platinum Awards from the National Association of Clean Water Agencies (NACWA) for consecutive years of perfect permit compliance.
Influent enters the headworks where it passes through coarse bar screens to remove large debris. Following screening, the flow enters aerated grit chambers where heavier inorganic materials (sand, gravel, coffee grounds) settle out. The grit is dewatered and hauled to landfills. The headworks is fully enclosed and ventilated to chemical scrubbers for odor control, a critical requirement given the plant’s proximity to the Bay Trail and I-80 corridor.
Flow proceeds to 16 rectangular primary sedimentation tanks. These tanks utilize chain-and-flight mechanisms to scrape settled sludge to hoppers and skim floating grease/scum. The primary treatment process achieves significant reductions in Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD), reducing the load on the secondary system. Primary sludge is pumped directly to the anaerobic digesters.
The core of EBMUD’s liquid treatment is a High Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge system. Unlike conventional aeration which uses ambient air (21% oxygen), the HPO system utilizes covered aeration basins and >90% pure oxygen generated onsite via a cryogenic oxygen plant.
Secondary effluent is disinfected using sodium hypochlorite (bleach) in contact channels to eliminate pathogens. Prior to discharge into the sensitive ecosystem of the San Francisco Bay, the water is dechlorinated using sodium bisulfite to remove residual chlorine, which is toxic to aquatic life.
This is the facility’s most technologically advanced sector.
Adjacent to the MWWTP is the East Bayshore Recycled Water Project. A portion of the secondary effluent receives tertiary treatment (filtration and additional disinfection) to produce Title 22 recycled water for irrigation, industrial cooling, and toilet flushing in the service area.
The facility houses a sophisticated cogeneration plant. Biogas produced in the digesters is scrubbed to remove siloxanes and hydrogen sulfide before being fed into three Solar Mercury 50 turbines and reciprocating internal combustion engines (project dependent).
Given the location upwind of high-density retail and residential zones, EBMUD employs a multi-tiered odor control strategy. This includes covering primary clarifiers, enclosing the headworks, and utilizing extensive chemical scrubbers (bleach/caustic) and activated carbon filters to treat foul air streams.
Scope: Comprehensive rehabilitation of the anaerobic digesters, including new floating covers, mixing systems, and seismic reinforcement to withstand major Bay Area earthquakes.
Budget: Part of a multi-year CIP exceeding $50 million.
Drivers: Aging infrastructure (1950s/70s construction), seismic resilience, and maximizing biogas production efficiency for the R2 program.
Technical Highlights: Installation of linear motion mixers and rotamix systems to prevent grit accumulation and improve volatile solids reduction (VSR).
Scope: A 30-year roadmap to address aging infrastructure, stricter nutrient regulations, and climate change adaptation.
Drivers: The SF Bay Regional Board is moving toward stricter limits on nutrients (nitrogen). This will likely require converting the HPO process to a Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) configuration or adding side-stream treatment.
Projected Timeline: Planning 2020-2025; Implementation 2025-2050.
Scope: Modernization of the cryogenic oxygen generation plant controls.
Technical Highlights: Improved turndown capability to match biological demand in the aeration basins, resulting in significant energy savings.
EBMUD operates under the unique “San Francisco Bay Nutrient Watershed Permit.” While the Bay has historically been resilient to nutrient loading due to tidal flushing and turbidity, recent algae blooms have shifted regulatory focus. EBMUD is currently monitoring nutrient loads and exploring optimization strategies to reduce Total Nitrogen (TN) discharge without massive capital construction, although full BNR upgrades are anticipated in future permit cycles.
The plant operates under a consent decree requiring significant reductions in Inflow and Infiltration (I/I) from satellite collection systems. The MWWTP’s ability to blend primary and secondary effluent during peak wet weather flows (above the biological capacity of the secondary system) is a permitted activity strictly monitored to ensure final effluent meets bacteriologic and toxicity standards.
EBMUD is widely recognized as a “Utility of the Future.”
Located immediately on the bay shoreline, the MWWTP is vulnerable to rising sea levels. Future planning involves perimeter protection, raising critical electrical switchgear, and hydraulic grade line analysis to ensure gravity discharge remains viable against higher tides.
Much of the plant’s concrete and mechanical systems date to the 1950s and 1970s. Concrete corrosion in the headworks and digesters requires continuous rehabilitation. The transition from HPO to BNR for nutrient removal will likely require larger basin volumes, presenting a spatial challenge on the constrained site.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Type | High Purity Oxygen (HPO) Activated Sludge |
| Design Capacity (Secondary) | 168 MGD |
| Peak Wet Weather Capacity | 320 MGD (Combined Primary/Secondary) |
| Average Dry Weather Flow | ~55 MGD |
| Aeration Method | Covered basins, High Purity Oxygen (>90% O2) |
| Disinfection | Sodium Hypochlorite (Chlorination) |
| Dechlorination | Sodium Bisulfite |
| Biosolids Stabilization | Mesophilic/Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion |
| Energy Generation | ~11 MW Capacity (Cogen Turbines/Engines) |
| Net Energy Status | Net Positive (Produces >100% of demand) |
| Receiving Water | San Francisco Bay |
| Outfall Depth | 45 feet (approx. 1 mile offshore) |
| NPDES Permit | CA0037702 |
| Service Population | ~740,000 |
The MWWTP is the hub of a larger wet-weather management system. It works in concert with three **Wet Weather Facilities (WWFs)**:
These facilities only activate during high-intensity rainfall events to prevent upstream sanitary sewer overflows.
1. What is the specific secondary treatment process at EBMUD MWWTP?
The plant utilizes a High Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge process. This allows for higher biomass concentrations and a smaller physical footprint compared to conventional air activated sludge.
2. How does the plant achieve energy neutrality?
EBMUD implements a “Resource Recovery” (R2) program where high-strength organic wastes (food scraps, grease) are trucked in and added to anaerobic digesters. This increases biogas production significantly, which fuels onsite cogeneration turbines.
3. Does the facility perform nutrient removal?
Currently, the plant is not designed for biological nutrient removal (BNR). However, under the SF Bay Nutrient Watershed Permit, EBMUD is studying optimization strategies and planning for future upgrades to reduce nitrogen loads.
4. How are peak wet weather flows managed?
Flows up to 168 MGD receive full secondary treatment. Flows between 168 and 320 MGD receive primary treatment and are then blended with secondary effluent before disinfection and discharge, in compliance with the NPDES permit.
5. Can the public tour the facility?
Yes, EBMUD offers tours of the Main Wastewater Treatment Plant for schools, community groups, and professional organizations. These must be scheduled in advance through the EBMUD website.
6. What happens to the “sludge” produced?
The solids (biosolids) are treated in digesters to kill pathogens and reduce volume. The remaining material is used as a soil amendment/fertilizer on non-food agricultural crops, keeping it out of landfills.