Black & Veatch to Provide Design and Engineering Services for Essential Upgrades at Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department’s Three Wastewater Treatment Plants

As part of their multi-year USD8.6 billion Capital Improvement Programme, the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department is upgrading, enhancing and expanding critical wastewater plant elements during the next eight years.

The Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department (WASD) recently selected Black & Veatch, one of the global leaders in critical infrastructure, to provide design and engineering services for renewal and replacement projects at its three wastewater treatment plants.

The project, comprised of major upgrades to critical elements of the three treatment plants, includes the plants’ biological processes, filtration and disinfection systems, electrical generation buildings and injection well pump stations.

As part of this contract, Black & Veatch will also support WASD as they implement processes to reuse 60 percent of its wastewater to meet the state of Florida’s Ocean Outfall Legislation (OOL) requirements. The legislation requires that utilities in Southeast Florida eliminate the daily use of ocean outfalls by the end of 2025, reduce nutrient discharges, and implement a reuse system that is technically and economically feasible.

This solution, the implementation of Effluent Energy Recovery Systems, uses non-potable water to cool plant buildings — replacing cooling towers with heat exchangers, saving the county millions of dollars and allowing the department to meet their legislative requirements for water reuse. The high quality, non-potable water then will be disposed of through deep injection wells not connected to the county’s drinking water source. Moreover, the reuse system will be powered almost entirely from renewable energy sources, following Miami-Dade County’s commitment to sustainable practices.

“The Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department is committed to being a model utility of excellence in reliability, resilience, and environmental stewardship,” said Water and Sewer Director Roy Coley. “We are eager to partner with organisations such as Black & Veatch and invest in opportunities that will best position the department to provide the highest quality of services to our customers.”

About Black & Veatch
Black & Veatch is a 100-percent employee-owned global engineering, procurement, consulting and construction company with a more than 100-year track record of innovation in sustainable infrastructure. Since 1915, it has helped its clients improve the lives of people around the world by addressing the resilience and reliability of the most important infrastructure assets. Follow on www.bv.com and on LinkedInFacebookX (Twitter) and Instagram.