The South District Wastewater Treatment Plant (SDWWTP) is a critical component of the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department’s (WASD) extensive infrastructure, serving as the primary treatment facility for the rapidly growing southern portion of the county. With a permitted Annual Average Daily Flow (AADF) of 112.5 million gallons per day (MGD), it is the second-largest wastewater facility in the Miami-Dade system, trailing only the Central District plant.
Located near Black Point Marina, the facility is currently at the center of one of Florida’s most significant environmental engineering undertakings: the compliance with the state’s Ocean Outfall Legislation (OOL). This mandate requires the elimination of routine ocean discharge by 2025. Consequently, the SDWWTP is undergoing massive capital improvements, shifting from ocean outfall disposal to High-Level Disinfection (HLD) with disposal via Deep Injection Wells (DIW). The plant is distinguished technically by its use of High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge treatment, a process selected to handle high organic loading within a compact footprint.
The SDWWTP services a geographic area encompassing approximately 88 square miles south of Kendall Drive (SW 88th Street). This catchment area includes the municipalities of Cutler Bay, Palmetto Bay, Homestead, Florida City, and unincorporated areas of southern Miami-Dade. The collection system feeding the plant is extensive, relying on a network of regional pump stations to combat the flat topography of South Florida. The service area is characterized by a mix of dense residential developments and agricultural zones, creating a unique influent profile with significant diurnal flow variations.
The facility operates under a Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) permit allowing for 112.5 MGD on an annual average basis. Historical data indicates the plant treats an average of 95–100 MGD, placing it near 85% capacity utilization. This high utilization rate has triggered regulatory requirements for capacity expansion planning. During wet weather events—common in Miami’s tropical climate—peak hydraulic flows can surge toward 285 MGD, testing the hydraulic limits of the headworks and secondary clarifiers.
Historically, the plant utilized a 3.5-mile ocean outfall pipe discharging into the Atlantic Ocean. However, under the 2008 Ocean Outfall Legislation (Section 403.086(9), Florida Statutes), the facility is mandated to achieve zero routine ocean discharge by December 31, 2025. The facility is currently transitioning to 100% disposal via Class I Deep Injection Wells, which inject treated effluent approximately 3,000 feet below the surface into the “Boulder Zone” of the Lower Floridan Aquifer, well below drinking water sources.
The SDWWTP utilizes a High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge process, which differs significantly from conventional aeration. This selection allows for higher mixed liquor suspended solids (MLSS) concentrations and smaller aeration basin volumes.
Raw influent enters the headworks where it passes through mechanically cleaned bar screens to remove large debris, rags, and plastics. Following screening, the flow enters aerated grit chambers where inorganic solids (sand, gravel) settle out. The facility recently upgraded its headworks to improve capture efficiency and protect downstream pumps. Odor control at the headworks is aggressive, utilizing chemical scrubbers (wet scrubbers) to neutralize hydrogen sulfide ($H_2S$), essential due to the proximity of the Black Point Marina recreational area.
Flow proceeds to covered primary clarifiers. The covers are an integral part of the facility’s odor control strategy. Here, settleable solids are removed via gravity, reducing the BOD load on the secondary system by approximately 30-35% and TSS by 50-60%. Primary sludge is pumped to gravity thickeners before digestion.
The biological treatment stage utilizes a High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) activated sludge system. Unlike conventional aeration which uses ambient air (21% oxygen), SDWWTP generates pure oxygen on-site via Cryogenic Oxygen Generation plants (and backup Pressure Swing Adsorption units).
To meet the requirements for Deep Injection Wells, the facility has implemented High-Level Disinfection (HLD). The effluent undergoes filtration followed by chlorination. The chlorination system is designed to meet specific contact times required to reduce fecal coliforms to non-detectable levels required for underground injection. While the facility does not currently perform advanced nutrient removal (BNR) for nitrogen/phosphorus to the levels of AWT, the deep well disposal method relies on geological confinement rather than nutrient reduction.
Primary sludge and WAS are thickened and stabilized via anaerobic digestion.
The SDWWTP is in the midst of a multi-year, multi-million dollar Capital Improvement Program (CIP), driven largely by the Ocean Outfall Legislation and the Consent Decree with the EPA/FDEP.
The facility operates under FDEP Permit FL0057754.
In 2013, Miami-Dade County entered into a Consent Decree with the U.S. EPA and FDEP to address sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) and aging infrastructure. The SDWWTP has been a focal point of this decree, requiring specific rehabilitation projects to be completed by fixed dates. The facility has successfully met the majority of its Consent Decree milestones regarding pump station rehabilitation and treatment process redundancy.
The SDWWTP utilizes a Combined Heat and Power (CHP) system. Methane gas produced in the anaerobic digesters is captured and treated to fuel cogeneration engines. These engines generate electricity to offset grid consumption and provide heat for the digesters, closing the energy loop. This system is a critical component of WASD’s energy efficiency program.
Given its coastal location, the plant is vulnerable to storm surge. Recent infrastructure projects have been designed with elevated base flood elevations. Critical electrical gear and emergency generators are housed in hardened structures designed to withstand Category 5 hurricane wind loads.
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Facility Type | Advanced Secondary (HPO) with High-Level Disinfection |
| Design Capacity (AADF) | 112.5 MGD |
| Peak Hydraulic Capacity | ~285 MGD |
| Biological Process | High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) Activated Sludge |
| Oxygen Generation | On-site Cryogenic Air Separation |
| Disinfection Method | Chlorination (High-Level Disinfection) |
| Primary Disposal | Deep Injection Wells (Class I, ~3,000 ft depth) |
| Secondary Disposal (Retiring) | Ocean Outfall (Atlantic Ocean) |
| Biosolids Class | Class B (Anaerobically Digested) |
| Dewatering Technology | High-Solids Centrifuges |
| Biogas Utilization | Cogeneration (CHP) for power and heat |
| Regulatory Driver | Ocean Outfall Legislation (2008) & EPA Consent Decree |
| Operating Authority | Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department |
1. Why does SDWWTP use High-Purity Oxygen (HPO) instead of conventional aeration?
HPO was selected to treat high organic loads in a smaller physical footprint. The partial pressure of oxygen in the covered basins allows for faster oxygen transfer rates, supporting higher mixed liquor concentrations compared to conventional atmospheric aeration.
2. What is the status of the Ocean Outfall elimination?
As of 2024, the facility is in the final stages of the transition. The Deep Injection Wells are largely constructed and operational. The facility is on track to meet the statutory requirement of eliminating routine ocean discharge by December 31, 2025.
3. How does the facility manage wet weather peak flows?
The plant utilizes robust hydraulic capacity in its headworks and can leverage the ocean outfall as an emergency backup during extreme hydraulic events (permitted under OOL for emergency/peak flow management only after 2025), alongside deep well injection.
4. Is the plant producing Reclaimed Water?
While the plant treats water to a high standard, the primary focus at SDWWTP is Deep Well Injection. However, Miami-Dade is implementing large-scale water reuse projects at the *South District* plant, primarily focused on aquifer recharge and potential cooling water for the nearby FPL Turkey Point power plant in future phases.
5. Does the plant smell?
Odor control is a top priority due to the plant’s location near Black Point Park and Marina. The facility uses covered clarifiers and chemical scrubbers to treat air before release. While occasional odors may occur during maintenance, systems are in place to minimize impact.
6. Is the discharged water safe for the environment?
Yes. The water injected into the Boulder Zone (3,000 feet deep) is separated from the Biscayne Aquifer (drinking water source) by multiple confining layers of rock and clay. The water is treated and disinfected before injection.