1 / 13

“Gilbane Gold”

“Gilbane Gold”. PHIL/ENGR 482 ETHICS & ENGINEERING Gilbane Gold Case Study. Taxonomy of Obligations. To whom does an engineer have obligations? To self? To others? Family and friends Employer and fellow employees Fellow professionals Clients/Consumers/3 rd Parties

gella
Download Presentation

“Gilbane Gold”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “Gilbane Gold” PHIL/ENGR 482 ETHICS & ENGINEERING Gilbane Gold Case Study

  2. Taxonomy of Obligations • To whom does an engineer have obligations? • To self? • To others? • Family and friends • Employer and fellow employees • Fellow professionals • Clients/Consumers/3rd Parties • Public; including future generations • To the environment?

  3. Gilbane Gold Background

  4. Allowable Lead and Arsenic Concentration in Wastewater Note:

  5. Assumptions: • 250,000 gal/day wastewater before expansion • Old test methods indicated 5 ppb lead, ok. • New test indicates 7.5+ ppb lead • Legal limit is 7.5 ppb lead • Planned expansion will cause 500% increase in wastewater (and lead) volume

  6. Impact of proposed expansion... • Wastewater • Current: 250,000 gal/day • Future: 1,250,000 gal/day • Lead • Current: 250,000 g/day @ 7.5 ppb = 5.7 lb/day • Future: 1,250,000 g/day @ 7.5 ppb = 28.5 lb/day

  7. A problem…? • When trying a new and more accurate test method, we discover that the plant is discharging wastewater concentrations at or above the legal limit of 7.5 ppb lead… • Regulations do not require the new test method be used... 0.25 Mgpd Wastewater @7.5ppb lead Wastewater treatment plant 7.5 ppb Sludge + treated effluent

  8. A bigger problem…? • A proposed production increase will increase the amount of wastewater 500%... 1.25 Mgpd Wastewater @7.5ppb lead Wastewater treatment plant 7.5 ppb Sludge + treated effluent

  9. A potential solution?“The solution to polution is dilution…” • It is proposed to dilute effluent to achieve an acceptable concentration, say 5.75 ppb... 1.25 Mgpd Wastewater @7.5ppb lead 0.4 Mgpd Clean H2O Wastewater treatment plant 6 ppb Sludge + treated effluent

  10. Annual cost of 0.4 Mgpd water... • Fresh water purchase • (@ $0.25/1,000 gal) = $35,000 • Incremental sewage charges • (@ $0.75/1,000 gal) = $105,000 • Total annual cost = $140,000

  11. Potential solution 2?Ion Exchange

  12. Potential solution 3?Artificial Wetland

  13. Summary of three possible solutions

More Related