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Processing the total quantity of polluted sludge in the port of Antwerp will be a long-term assignment. In 2018, a pilot project was launched to process contaminated dredging sludge in AMORAS. This mapped the impact on the plant and potential risks.
The agreement involves removing 800,000 m³ of sludge from the docks and processing it into 500,000 tonnes of filter cakes. For this, the sludge that obstructs nautical access will first be removed. The worst TBT hotspots will also be taken care of. After this, the other areas in the port will be treated.
The process starts with dredging the contaminated TBT sludge from the docks. With a 15 m³ eco friendly gripper, we avoid spreading the pollution to the surrounding water. The dredged spoil is transported to the AMORAS treatment plant in transport containers of 2400 m³. SeReAnt extracts the sludge from the transport containers and pumps it into the treatment plant. Here, coarse dirt and sand are removed. The wastewater is purified via a water treatment plant. TBT sludge is further purified by activated carbon. The water then flows back to the docks. The sludge is processed into a dry end product – filter cakes that are safely stored on the deposit site. The site has a capacity of 14 million cubic metres, good for storing dewatered sludge for another 30 years
