KSB Delivers Pumps for Europe’s Largest Waste Water Project

26.04.2017

KSB Aktiengesellschaft, Germany, supplied 21 pumps to Emschergenossenschaft for use in the Emscher sewer, also known as Emscher canal, which is currently Europe’s largest waste water project.

KSB Delivers Pumps for Europe’s Largest Waste Water Project

One of the two huge pumps in close-coupled design built for the Gelsenkirchen pumping station at KSB’s Halle factory (Image: KSB Aktiengesellschaft)

The pumps are employed as main pumps in two new pumping stations run by Emschergenossenschaft in Bottrop and Gelsenkirchen. Specially modified pumps from the Sewatec range were delivered for this project. This type series is used in numerous waste water pumping stations all over the world.

The biggest pump sets each have a drive rating of 470 kW and handle up to 6480 cubic metres per hour. A special technical feature of the pumps is their casing design. Unlike Sewatec’s standard casing, the casings for this variant were designed with tangential discharge nozzles by KSB engineers to achieve even better efficiencies. The impellers were also optimised to ensure excellent efficiencies without compromising on the high level of operating reliability.

The efficiencies the pumps achieved on the test facility exceeded the values established via the CFD (computational fluid dynamics) simulation. KSB’s factory in Halle/Saale produced all of the pump sets for this major project, including two huge pumps in close-coupled design (photo) specially manufactured for the Gelsenkirchen pumping station.

The pumping stations in Bottrop and Gelsenkirchen are used to lift the waste water from the eastern Emscher valley to sewer sections located at a higher level. From there the water flows to the waste water treatment plants operated by Emschergenossenschaft. Over a distance of 51 kilometres, the Emscher canal collects the waste water produced by more than 1.8 million people and effluent discharged by industrial plants and commercial businesses in the area. The canal transports the waste water to the treatment plant in Bottrop and the Emschermündung waste water treatment plant in Dinslaken.

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