TRILITY BD Newsletter December 2022

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Issue: December 2022

An end of year snapshot of TRILITY’s contracts and projectsnews

2022 - That’s a wrap!

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

In this Issue

TRILITY further expands

its footprint

Page 4

A fellowship trip with

Sydney Water

Page 5

KDX - Making waves

Page 7

What’s involved in the

replacement of diffuser pads

Page 8

Flooding across the nation

Page 9

Broughton Pass flooding

event

Page 10

Seawater inlet cleaning

Page 12

Building on our future

Page 14

In 2023 TRILITY is aiming

to have your water sector

training requirements

covered

Page 15

Improving the water supply

in remote communities in

regional New South Wales

Page 16

How nature links us to

the history of our First

Nations people

Page 17

Solutions expand its

network services

Page 18

Effective and pre-emptive

water-quality strategies

Page 21

Australia’s best-tasting tap

water has been announced

Page 22

Celebrating ten years of

operations at the Adelaide

Desalination Plant

Page 22

TasWater’s UV Stage 1 project

is on its way to completion

Page 23

TRILITY’s cyber security

uplift program progress

Page 24

TRILITY product portfolio

Page 25

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

Welcome

Dear valued clients and partners,

On behalf of the TRILITY Group, we wish you and your families

a safe and very happy festive season. We also want to take this

opportunity to thank you for another successful year which has

been achieved despite several challenges.

2022 has seen the ever-present and ongoing pandemic and some of

the worst floods on record. We are all dealing with cyber vulnerability,

the challenges and benefits of employees working remotely, digital

transformation and optimisation and extracting organisational value

from it. With that comes the ever-evolving regulatory process,

reporting changes and impacts. Despite the challenges, TRILITY

has had a reasonably successful year.

As the year ends and we prepare for the New Year, we typically wrap up

the year’s activities, reflect, plan strategic initiatives for the coming year,

and celebrate our accomplishments. Our reflections revealed another

year of excellent service delivery, growth, and many positive learnings,

for example, our most recently awarded contract with Sydney Water

and what we are doing concerning cyber security.

Within our contracts, we deep dive into the impacts of the New South

Wales floods on our Macarthur Water Filtration Plant. Then there’s the

success of our newly implemented traineeship program and our plans

to expand our training capabilities further in 2023. We look at the

expansion of our Network capabilities and services, what’s been

happening within the Water Consultancy Services arm, and the world

of data analytics with KDX, and we celebrate ten years of operations

at the Adelaide Desalination Plant. Murray Bridge takes out South

Australia’s ‘best-tasting tap water award’, what’s involved in cleaning

a desalination plant’s inlet, and much more.

This year’s success, as in prior years, is due to the dedication and

focus of our wonderful employees and the special relationships we

have built over the years. TRILITY would not be where it is today

without you, our clients and our partners.

Our growth journey will continue during 2023, making for exciting

times, for so many of our learnings include better ways to work,

communicate, and deliver services. We look forward to increased

opportunities to meet with our employees and clients in person

across New Zealand and Australia in the coming year.

From the entire TRILITY team, it’s been a privilege to work with

you and the communities we serve, and we look forward to

working with you again in 2023.

Francois Gouws

Managing Director

Francois Gouws

Managing Director

TRILITY Brands

October marked the award of Sydney Water’s latest project. They formally awarded the contract to construct and operate the new Upper South Creek Advanced

Water Recycling Plant (AWRC) in Western Sydney, together with associated pipelines, to a consortium of TRILITY, John Holland, GHD, and Jacobs.

John Holland will be responsible for the construction. At the same time, GHD and Jacobs will provide engineering and design services, and TRILITY will provide

operations and maintenance advice during the design and construction to ensure the plant’s operations requirements can be achieved once completed.

TRILITY, in a Joint Venture with John Holland, will be responsible for the operations and maintenance for the initial 5-year term of the facility once completed,

during which TRILITY will provide the leading role.

TRILITY will bring to the project its in-house developed data analytics platform KDX which will have an ongoing role to provide real time operational control input

with its cutting-edge software developed specifically for advanced wastewater treatment. By viewing utility operations as a whole, using remote support and

digital twin capabilities, TRILITY and KDX bring confidence and clarity to operations with purpose-built wastewater management applications.

TRILITY’s Solutions arm will also bring its expertise by providing the dosing and disinfection equipment.

The AWRC will produce high-quality water suitable for a wide range of non-drinking uses in homes, various industrial uses, in businesses, in agriculture, and

for the watering of public open spaces.

Above: L - R, Francois Gouws - TRILITY Managing Director, Roch Cheroux - Sydney Water Managing Director and Jayne Whitney - John Holland

Chief Strategy Officer

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

TRILITY further expands its footprint

Sydney Water awarded its contract to construct and operate its new Upper South Creek Advanced Water Recycling Centre

For more information on this project - click here

To read the media release- click here

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TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

A fellowship trip with Sydney Water

After a few false starts due to COVID-19, the knowledge transfer fellowship trip

between Sydney Water and TRILITY became a reality in early October 2022.

Led by Greg Wood (Regional Operations Manager, NSW, Victoria and

Tasmania), the trip demonstrated some of the innovative treatment practises

related to domestic sewerage and biosolids processing that TRILITY operates.

This allowed our client (Sydney Water) to obverse and learn more about the

variety of work we do around the country.

The trip started with a tour of the Yarra Park WRF, adjacent to the MCG.

During our visit, one of the Membrane Bioreactors was offline for maintenance,

allowing a once-in-10-year opportunity to look inside. There were also valuable

operational lessons shared, relating to aeration intervals and influent

composition variability and its effect on plant performance. The following

day we made our way to Barwon Heads, where TRILITY operates the Barwon

Biosolids thermal drying facility.

The fellowship formed great new relationships between TRILITY and

Sydney Water and has led to an increased interest in the work that TRILITY

is completing. Following the trip, the Sydney Water fellowship attendees

expressed a keen interest in visiting the Macarthur WFP and are excited to

observe the similarities and differences between the organisations so we

can learn from each other!

Left to right: Richard Wickham, Stella Modyanto, Greg Wood, Elyssa

Kirton, Maximilian Curtis, Alice Carney, and Phoebe Lingat

We look forward to continuing this fellowship with Sydney Water next year as

we continue to share our knowledge and form relationships with our clients.

Above: L - R, Jason Julius - John Holland Project Director, Steven Blanch - Sydney Water Head of Legal Claims, Pouya Razavi - Sydney Water Procurement

Director, Stephanie Clarke - Sydney Water Project Director USC, Shaun Kempton - John Holland Precontracts Manager Water, Kate Day - GHD

Operations Manager Sydney Region,Roch Cheroux - Sydney Water Managing Director, Phil DeGroot - TRILITY Operations and Maintenance Manager,

Mary Kanavoutsos - Jacobs Executive Director Water, Jamie Hollamby - Sydney Water GM Finance and Business Performance, Jayne Whitney - John

Holland Chief Strategy Officer, Francois Gouws - TRILITY Managing Director, Margaret Riley - John Holland General Manager Water and Optimisation,

Xavier Decomps - Sydney Water Head of Procurement

Stella Modyanto, Senior Process Engineer Sydney Water said, “we had a great time, developed new relationships and

learnt so much through this visit.”

www.KDX.ai

Designed by operators, for operators

Next generation

water management

The suite of KDX solutions for water and wastewater treatment,

and networks

Vantage+

Scorecard

Smart compliance

manager

Filter+

Optimiser

Filter health

monitor

Stock+

Manager

Chemical stock

manager

Demand+

Manager

Network demand

prediction

Aer+

Optimiser

Wastewater

aeration optimiser

ChemDose+

Optimiser

Chemical dose

optimiser

KDX provides world-leading predictive analytics software designed to maximise the

efficiency of water and wastewater operations, saving time and money.

Designed as a modular, cloud-ready solution, KDX can be adapted to your specific

operational goals, whether they are financial, environmental or customer-drive.

Click here to return to contents

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

Making waves

The Macarthur Water Filtration Plant (WFP) in Sydney successfully navigated extremely difficult circumstances,

weathering unseasonal rainfall and water quality challenges. To meet this challenge, the KDX ChemDose+

application was used for coagulant dose prediction, water quality management, and process performance

monitoring, enabling a new era of data-driven incident response management.

This capability, combined with a commitment to operational excellence, saw the team not only achieve, but

exceed expectations for production, availability, and water quality during these very trying conditions.

With a focus on operational excellence and confidence in meeting climate and regulatory challenges, our

compliance tool, Vantage+, was deployed at; GWMWater plants in Ararat, Stawell, Halls Gap, and Great

Western. It is also being deployed at Macarthur WFP, and all water treatment plants operated by Lower Murray

Water and Mackay Regional Councils.

By giving operational teams the ability to automatically pre-process online data and calculate filtration and

disinfection log removal value; the compliance software allows quality teams to be ahead of the curve for

health-based targets compliance under the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines in real time.

We also continue our focus on innovation, with our flagship digital twin and co-simulation technology for

wastewater operations, Aer+, which has been deployed for Victor Harbor Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP)

and other utility partners in 2023, including Mackay regional council.

This technology allows teams to optimise and automatically calibrate a real-time digital twin of the WWTP,

benchmarking to industry standards, dynamically optimising, and drastically improving energy usage and

bioreactor performance in real-time.

Access to our expert teams is one of our fundamental value propositions enabling us to offer hands-on help

with core operational issues; demonstrating how the service can provide the right solution for many

operational problems.

2022 saw a multitude of KDX applications utilised across the industry

and within TRILITY operations

Designed by operators, for operators

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

Empty IDEA Cell, waiting for cleaning

What’s involved in the replacement of diffuser pads

Like all equipment, maintenance is a given. After 15 years of near-continuous

service, the rubber pads in the diffusers of the Intermittent Decanted Extended

Aeration (IDEA) cells at our Echuca Wastewater Treatment Plant had reached

their expiry date.

Through routine inspections, our operations team scheduled the replacement

of the pads. The team set about planning the changeover, with IDEA cell two

being chosen to be emptied due to a damaged boot on the outlet pipe and a

damaged valve that could not be changed without fully emptying the cell.

The process is both time-consuming and complex.

The changeover process commenced with the cell being drained of part of

the contents, some of which were sent out to the drying beds, and the thick

sludge being pumped into the sludge digester over the course of a week. Next,

some time was spent hosing down and cleaning the cell floor at the outlet end,

followed by removing the diffusers to clear the area for two scissor lifts.

The lifts were used in tandem over the course of a day; the boot was changed,

and the diffusers were put back in preparation for changing the diffuser pads.

The process of changing the pads, while considered simple, is very time

consuming because of the sheer volume of diffusers. There are approximately

2500 diffusers per cell, and this involves the undoing of the PVC ring holding

each of the pads in place, the removal of each pad and the plate underneath,

then scrubbing clean the PVC parts, lubricating the edges of the new pads, and

then putting everything back together again. Once complete, the team filled

the cell to just over the diffuser level; to identify any air leaks, it was essential

to ensure there were no leaks before completely refilling the cell. Where an air

leak was found, it had to be resealed. This was done manually with someone

carefully walking out in waders and blindly tightening the seals where the leak

had been located, which was challenging in the slippery, sludgy, muddy water.

The Echuca operations team aimed to get a row and a half of diffusers done per

day; the process took over a month to complete. The team are now scheduling

the same approach across the plant’s remaining cells.

To find out more, email us at info@trility.com.au

Dropping one of the scissor lifts into the cell

Changing the diffuser pads in IDEA Cell 2

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TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

Flooding across the nation

Eastern Australia battled its fifth

major wave of floods over the past

19 months. Across October, heavy

downpours flooded large areas of

New South Wales, Victoria and

Tasmania and the abnormally wet

conditions are expected to last until

2023. The same floodwaters then

made their way down the rising

River Murray into South Australia,

impacting Riverland towns from

Renmark to Tailem Bend.

South Australia too was affected,

in November, having received some

of the highest falls on record.

The impacts were felt across the

state, resulting in most of our sites

suffering from flood-related

operational issues.

We would like to recognise the

efforts of our dedicated team. The

2022 eastern Australia floods have

been described as one of the nation’s

worst recorded flood disasters,

with a series of floods that occurred

from February to April in Southeast

Queensland and parts of New South

Wales. The floods then made

their way to Victoria.

To give some perspective of the flood water flow from across Australia, and travelling into the Murray Darling Basin,

click here to access the up to date Flowtracker map c/- www.mappingsa.com.au

October 2022: Floodwaters have risen around the old Echuca-Moama bridge on the Moama side. Image: Steve Huntley

Floods in Maryborough, Queensland, Australia, January 2022. Hundreds of people were evacuated after

650mm of rain in 24 hour period. Image: Fraser Coast Regional Councils

Click here to access video footage of the Riverland floods - c/- Riverland Commercial Photography

10

TRILITY news

Newsletter for TRILITY Group and Joint Venture clients

Broughton Pass flooding event

In recent years, weather patterns have changed in Sydney, whereby East

Coast low-pressure systems regularly produce concentrated rainfall events,

which usually last for three to four days at a time. When these occur, the

catchment that supplies water to the Macarthur Water Filtration Plant (WFP);

Broughton Pass raw water supply intake becomes flooded with high colour and

organically loaded raw water. Following these events, raw water colour

can increase to extreme levels, and it can take several weeks before the raw

water returns to pre-rainfall levels. For example, in late February 2022,

a rainfall flooding event occurred, and concurrent rainfall events, high raw

water colour, and organic levels continued into August.

As a result of the repeated heavy rainfall, a landslide occurred, which

deposited rock and soil into the weir at Broughton Pass. Thankfully there were

no personnel at the location at the time; however, access to our pump station

and infrastructure was blocked by boulders, and a large amount of silt blocked

the inlet structure, which needed to be removed. Rectification works required

coordination between TRILITY, Sydney Water, and Water NSW, and

all stakeholders worked together to ensure that the works progressed

safely and effectively.

Following the $20M upgrade of the facility in 2020, mechanisms are now in

place to hold undesirable water in storage so that it can be further treated

through the filtration process. At the flood’s peak, some state-of-the-art online

monitoring equipment installed at Broughton Pass as part of the plant upgrade

was washed away. The Macarthur team’s knowledge and experience ensured

that the filtration process continued to supply the required quality treated

water to over 300,000 customers in Western Sydney throughout

the event.

Flood water abated cable tray missing

Broughton Pass pre flood

Flood water abated with debris

Floodwater above Cable Tray

Due to the raw water’s extreme colour and organic load, high volumes of filter

residue sludge are being produced, which requires dewatering, drying, and,

ultimately, removal from the site. The Macarthur team has worked around the

clock to ensure this occurs effectively, and the Macarthur Management team

is working closely with Sydney Water to ensure that the situation can continue

to be managed long-term.

This is a personal note to pass on my congratulations and job well done for the

Macarthur Plant team in recent months.

I say thanks to Greg, Pat and the team but that can be a bit yeh yeh sometimes, as

success is often just taken for granted. It was an amazing effort given the extreme

wet weather conditions the plant has had to deal with this calendar year, let alone

the last two.

For my last 10 years there were always questions leading with “what’s happening

at Macarthur” It’s now noticeably not asked. In fact it’s nice to say upfront that

Macarthur is performing well despite treating severely deteriorated raw water

quality, atrocious weather and being a bit tired.

It’s really nice to say the improvements the team have been working on for a

long time are working well. We are not out of the woods, as the impacts of recent

floods will be felt for a number of years. But I know the Macarthur team have

done a lot of work, and I’m a bit proud of our successful operational teams here at

Sydney. Well done and thanks.

Ben Blayney - Head of Water Supply and Production

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