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Report, cost/benefit study of the impacts of potential nutrient controls for Colorado point source discharges
Cost benefit study of the impacts of potential nutrient controls for Colorado point source discharges report
Camp, Dresser & McKee. Colorado Water Resources and Power Development Authority. Colorado. Department of Public Health and Environment. Water Quality Control Division. Harvey Economics (Firm) Risk Sciences Group.
2011
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Water Quality Control Division
Denver, Colo.
The Colorado Department of Health and Environment (CDPHE) Water Quality Control Division is developing an approach to manage nutrients in Colorado waters. The primary driver for this effort has been an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) directive to reduce nutrients in waters under jurisdiction of the federal Clean Water Act (CWA). The Division's proposal to control the discharge of nutrients relies largely on a technology-based control regulation that would establish effluent limits for both total phosphorus (TP) and total inorganic nitrogen (TIN) for many domestic and some nondomestic wastewater treatment facilities that become subject to the control regulation will have to invest in capital improvements and ongoing operation and maintenance (O&M) costs.
CDM, HE, Risk Sciences ; on behalf of Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, Colorado Water Resources & Power Development Authority. "December 2011." Online resource; title from PDF cover (viewed June 2016)
Nutrient pollution of water Water quality management Phosphorus content Phosphorus content Nitrogen content Nitrogen content
Colorado
1 online resource (approximately 354 pages) : illustrations, maps
eng
HE17/20.2/C82/2011/INTERNET
http://hdl.handle.net/11629/co:21922
951066263
2016-06-20T14:53:35.287Z