Skip to content

Breaking Tri-Cities WA News

News Stories for Richland, Kennewick, Pasco, West Richland and Surrounding Communities

Menu
Menu

Oh Crap! But in A Good Way for Kennewick’s Waste Treatment

Posted on by admin


There’s an old phrase in business, and radio, “crap in, crap out.”  It refers to taking an inferior product, and trying to make it better—often doesn’t work. In this case, that phrase is debunked.

   Kennewick Set to Unveil New Bio Waste Plant

Funded largely by a WA Dept. Of Ecoology Grant, the City of Kennewick began plans in 2024 to build a new biowaste plant that would create certified, safe, fertilizer.  It would utilize sewage sludge from the wastewater treatment plant to create the product.

870 AM KFLD logo

May 27th, Kennewick will have an open house (pre-registration required) to show off their new  Kimley-Horn and Merrell Bros., Inc built plant, located at 36 South Nutmeg in Kennewick.  The location is next to the Kennewick Wastewater plant, just north off of Chemical Drive. It will include the official ribbon cutting, and operations will begin soon.

This image shows it’s location.

kennewick google maps

kennewick google maps

   Work Began in Late 2024

Using a multi-step process, including replacing traditional lagoon-based treatment, a solar-based drying and treatment turns the sludge into safe, Class A fertilizer. More and more communities are investing in this tech, because it replaces the need to add more lagoons, or ponds, to treat growing amounts of sewage in expanding communities.

 Kennewick was faced with the prospect of literally running out of lagoon room in that area in the next decade.

 Hey, Less Smelll from the Current Treatment Plant!

It will also reduce odors from wastewater treatment, and provide fertilizer that can generate income to help offset costs.

According to the City, the benefits include:

  • “Reduced long-term maintenance and operational costs
  • A scalable design to support future population growth
  • Improved odor control and environmental performance
  • Conversion of biosolids into a high-quality Class A fertilizer product
  • Built to meet evolving regulatory and operational requirements”

Having it right next to the current wastewater treatment plant allows for the transfer of the sludge that’s removed from wastewater and have it directly treated to become fertilizer.

For more details on the new plant, including about the open house, click here.

KEEP READING: Scroll to see what the big headlines were the year you were born

Here’s a look at the headlines that captured the moment, spread the word, and helped shape public opinion over the last 100 years.

Gallery Credit: Andrew Lisa

 



Source link

Get a daily summary email:
Powered by follow.it

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim.

Tri-Cities WA News is supported by our audience, if you click and purchase through a link on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

©2026 Breaking Tri-Cities WA News | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme