4,257 plants indexed. Showing 71 matching current filters.
Germany operates one of the most comprehensive wastewater networks in the world. Treatment is mandated at municipal level under the Federal Water Act and EU UWWTD. UtilityRadar indexes 4257 wastewater treatment plants in Germany with a combined designed capacity of 6,530,097 m³/day. The largest plant on file is Frankfurt Am Main _ Flughafen, treating 90,000 m³/day.
Germany operates one of the most comprehensive wastewater networks in the world. Treatment is mandated at municipal level under the Federal Water Act and EU UWWTD.
UtilityRadar's directory currently lists 4,257 wastewater treatment plants across Germany. Together these plants represent a combined designed capacity of approximately 6,530,097 m³/day.
By treatment level, the directory contains 1000 advanced, 383 secondary-treatment plants. Secondary treatment (typically activated sludge with biological nutrient removal) is the most common standard.
The largest plant indexed for Germany is Frankfurt Am Main _ Flughafen, with a designed capacity of 90,000 m³/day.
Plant records are aggregated from publicly available regulatory data (US EPA ECHO, EU UWWTD reporting, national water authority publications), augmented by direct operator information and verified via Google Maps coordinates. Each record includes location, treatment level, capacity where known, operator and operational status. To browse plants by treatment level worldwide, see our secondary and advanced filter views, or read our guide to how sewage treatment works.
Hamberge Buurredder is a closed secondary treatment plant in Hamberge, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It served 1,500 people with a designed capacity of 1,500 m³/day.
Wacken wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,810 people with secondary treatment. The plant is closed and discharges to local water bodies.
Vaale Rumklinth is a closed secondary treatment plant in Vaale, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It served 1,200 people with a designed capacity of 2,000 m³/day and discharged 303.69 m³/day.
Oldendorf wastewater treatment plant in Krummendiek, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves a population of 1,124 with secondary treatment. The plant is now closed.
Oelixdorf wastewater treatment plant in Kollmoor, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,630 people with secondary treatment. The plant is now closed, with a designed capacity of 4,000 m³/day and an average discharge volume of 412.51 m³/day.
Munsterdorf wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves a population of 1,943 with secondary treatment. The facility is now closed.
Dageling wastewater treatment plant in Dägeling, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,278 people with advanced treatment. It is now closed and discharged treated wastewater near the North Sea coast.
Brokdorf wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,662 people with advanced treatment. The plant is closed and located within 10 km of the coast, discharging treated water into the Elbe River.
Todesfelde wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,320 people with secondary treatment. The plant is now closed, with a designed capacity of 2,000 m³/day and an average discharge volume of 334 m³/day.
Wanderup wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves a small population with advanced treatment. Though now closed, it reflects the high standards of the EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive.
Sterup wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,010 people with advanced treatment. The facility is closed but historically discharged into the Geltinger Bucht coastal area.
Sieverstedt wastewater treatment plant in Stenderup, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, served a population of 1,098 with advanced treatment before closure. The facility discharged 277.88 m³/day and had a designed capacity of 2,150 m³/day.
Oeversee wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,587 people with secondary treatment. The plant is now closed, having discharged into the Treene river system.
Munkbrarup wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,800 people with secondary treatment. The closed facility had a designed capacity of 2,000 m³/day and discharged 455.54 m³/day.
Maasholm wastewater treatment plant in Exhöft, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,950 people with advanced treatment. It is now closed, with a design capacity of 2,500 m³/day and discharge volume of 493.5 m³/day.
Ellingstedt wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves a small population of 1,086 with secondary treatment. The plant is now closed, having discharged treated effluent into local water bodies.
Rieseby wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,758 people with advanced treatment. The plant is now closed, having discharged into the Baltic Sea catchment.
Osterby wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, served 975 people with advanced treatment before closure. The plant had a design capacity of 1,500 m³/day and discharged 246.75 m³/day.
Kosel wastewater treatment plant in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, serves 1,815 people with advanced treatment. The plant is now closed, with a designed capacity of 3,000 m³/day.
Nortorf Land Ellerdorf is a closed advanced wastewater treatment plant in Ellerdorf, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It served a population of 1,500 and had a designed capacity of 6,000 m³/day.
UtilityRadar indexes 4257 wastewater treatment plants in Germany, with treatment level, capacity, operator and discharge data on each record.
Among the indexed plants, Nortorf Land Ellerdorf has the highest designed capacity at 6,000 m3/day.