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Solar-powered Circulation • Nutrient Reduction/Removal • Mixing • Oxygenation • Algae Control
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Treated Water Storage Tanks • Lakes/Reservoirs • Stormwater Ponds • Estuaries • Wastewater Lagoons/Aeration Basins
Solar-powered Circulation • Nutrient Reduction/Removal • Mixing • Oxygenation • Algae Control
Treated Water Storage Tanks • Lakes/Reservoirs • Stormwater Ponds • Estuaries • Wastewater Lagoons/Aeration Basins
Below is general information about our solar powered (SolarBee) and electric powered (GridBee) circulators for lakes and raw water reservoirs. Links are listed to more detailed information on the Medora Corporation Website.
"Either / Or": SolarBee circulators can be deployed in lakes to solve either epilimnetic problems or hypolimnetic problems. This "one or the other" characteristic is similar to a common hammer used by a carpenter; a hammer can be used to either pound in a nail or else pull a nail, but it can only be used for one purpose at any given time, not both at the same time.
•Epilimnetic (upper water) circulation is effective for elimination/control of blue-green algae blooms and invasive macrophytes (weeds), and prevention of low dissolved oxygen and fish kills.
• Hypolimnetic (bottom water) aeration solves problems of iron, manganese, sulfide odors, arsenic, methylated mercury, and internal loading of phosphorus and nitrogen.
In the left menu are links to more information on these two main lake applications. Also, the "Compare Flows" link graphically shows the differences between the two applications, and compares SolarBee circulators to other products available.
Which path is your lake on? Once a lake starts developing water quality problems, the problems usually get worse each year in both severity and duration. Here are possible courses of action:
•Doing nothing: Sometimes this is the only approach possible, due to a lack of funding to restore the lake. If this approach is taken, care should be taken to monitor the lake and post no-contact warnings when blue-green algae blooms are present.
•Improved watershed management: Aimed at stopping phosphorus and nitrogen input to the lake, watershed management is a step in the right direction, and can sometimes slow down the rate of deterioration. But it virtually never reverses the trend or restores the lake to acceptable water quality.
•Chemical application: Constant application of chemicals to the lake is another path available. This can appear to be a quick and simple solution at first glance, but is very expensive and not very effective. Herbicides generally devastate the lake ecology by killing everything, even the "good" bacteria and other organisms. Then a flood of nutrients is released from dead organic material which causes a worse problem several weeks later, leading to more herbicide being needed. Also, algae and plants build resistance to herbicides so that over time, even more herbicide is needed. Another proposed solution may be sequestration agents, such as alum, used to try to stop "internal loading" or re-cycling of phosphorus or nitrogen from the sediment. Despite various claims of the industry and its advocates, generally this approach confers no measurable benefit to the lake beyond the same year as the application, and there are very few lakes worldwide, most likely less than 10, where any longer term benefits were obtained from this approach in the last 50 years.
•Long-distance circulation: There is one in-lake solution that is sustainable, affordable, and provides immediate and constant progress in restoring a lake to good water quality. That approach is long-distance circulation by SolarBee, now in use in over 350 lakes in the US, many of them for 5-10 years. Many customers tell us in the first year that their lake looks better than it has in decades, and the lake continues to get even better every year after that.
What's the payback? Of the approximately 350 lakes SolarBees have restored in the US, about 50% of them are source water for municipal drinking water plants. In many of these projects the SolarBees paid for themselves in the first year by carbon savings in the drinking water treatment plant and/or chemical savings in the lake.
Several customers with partial-lake treatment (directly in front of the plant) of very large lakes, with plant capacities ranging from 40-70 MGD (million gallons per day) are saving over $500,000 per year in plant operating costs compared to before they installed SolarBees.
The other 50% of SolarBee lakes are recreational lakes, where the homeowers are enjoying better swimming, fishing, and boating, and higher re-sale property values since installing SolarBees.
Equipment Features:
•Choice of equipment, either solar-powered (SolarBee) or electric-powered (GridBee). SolarBee is the best solution for 95% of lakes, while GridBee provides low voltage and is designed for smaller lakes.
•A scalable solution with applications in virtually every lake; SolarBees are restoring lakes from one acre to 10,000 acres with depths from two feet to over 100 feet. Sometime the whole lake is treated and other times, in a partial-lake application, just the high-value portion of the lake is being restored.
•No infrastructure requirements. SolarBee systems can usually be designed in one week, and delivered and installed in 4-8 weeks.
•Factory delivery and installation; annual service plans are also available.
•Available on a "try-before-you-buy" pilot or rental basis, 95% of pilots convert to a purchase.
•Long parts and labor warranty, from two years to 25 years depending on the machine model and component. All equipment has a 25 year design life.
•Standard and optional equipment includes high-wave kits, Coast Guard approved beacons, on-shore SCADA monitoring, anti-jam and self-cleaning capability, data logging, programmable seasonal run times, algorithms for various latitude, and many other unique and necessary features.
For private companies purchasing solar powered mixers, there are extensive tax credits that greatly reduce the cost of the equipment.
Florida has almost three times as many lakes as "The Land of 10,000 Lakes" (Minnesota). From small ponds to the giant Lake Okeechobee, virtually every lake in Florida has become impaired due to excess nutrients. High levels of environmental phosphorus and surface runoff from urban and agricultural areas combine with our subtropical climate to create harmful algal blooms (HABs) and other problems unlike anywhere else. Uncontrolled HABs lead to reduced recreational and aesthetic value. Additionally, in source water, HABs release cyano-toxins that affect the water we drink. SolarBees have helped control HABs worldwide for the last ten years, and form the foundation of our economical and ecological solutions for improved water quality.