Wastewater Treatment Centre

A person walks along a guard railing in a wastewater treatment facility

Wastewater treatment

The City of Prince George has over 680 kilometres of sanitary sewer pipe that connect residential, commercial, and industrial properties to the Lansdowne Wastewater Treatment Centre and five lagoons: BCR, Blackburn, Danson, Western Acres and Shelley Lagoons. 

The wastewater treatment systems are regulated under Municipal Wastewater Regulation by the BC Ministry of Environment.

Lansdowne Wastewater Treatment Centre 

The Lansdowne Wastewater Treatment Centre (WWTC) was constructed in 1967 with upgrades completed in 1973, 1978-1982 and 1996-1997. The treatment plant is a level 4 treatment system that includes both primary, secondary, and tertiary treatment of wastewater prior to discharge into the Fraser River. The treatment plant is designed to accept and treat wastewater flows of up to 45 million litres per day (45,000 cubic metres per day).

WWTC Facts (Based on 2023 operational data)

Daily flow

  • Average daily flow: 23,524 cubic metres per day

Incoming Raw Wastewater

  • Average biochemical oxygen demand (BOD): 295 milligrams per litre 
  • Average total suspended solids (TSS): 277 milligrams per litre 

Treated Wastewater

  • Average biochemical oxygen demand (BOD): 25.9 milligrams per litre 
  • Average total suspended solids (TSS): 10.7 milligrams per litre 
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An infographic showing how wastewater is processed and treated in Prince George

How the WWTC treats wastewater

The WWTC treats wastewater by removing suspended solids and reducing biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) in the wastewater through primary, secondary, tertiary treatment processes.