Risk: Low Operational Secondary treatment

Usine eau usee Wastewater Treatment Plant, Saint-Cuthbert, Quebec

Saint-Cuthbert, Québec, Canada

Overview

Usine eau usee is a secondary wastewater treatment plant serving Saint-Cuthbert, Quebec, Canada.

Usine eau usee is a municipal wastewater treatment plant located in Saint-Cuthbert, Quebec, Canada. It serves a small population of 267 residents in the Lanaudière region, operating under the regulatory framework of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act and provincial Quebec regulations. The plant provides secondary treatment, which is appropriate for its small scale. In Canada, secondary treatment is the standard for municipal wastewater, ensuring removal of organic matter and suspended solids. The plant's effluent likely enters a local watercourse that drains into the St. Lawrence River system, which is ecologically significant as a major freshwater ecosystem supporting diverse aquatic life and migratory fish species. The plant's operation contributes to protecting downstream water quality in the St. Lawrence River basin.

Environmental context

The treated effluent from Usine eau usee likely discharges into a local stream or river that flows into the St. Lawrence River, one of North America's largest and most ecologically important waterways. The St. Lawrence River supports diverse aquatic habitats, including fish spawning grounds and migratory corridors for species like American eel and Atlantic salmon. The plant's secondary treatment helps reduce nutrient and pollutant loads to this sensitive freshwater ecosystem.

Frequently asked questions

Usine eau usee is located on Côte Joly in Saint-Cuthbert, Quebec, Canada, within the D'Autray Regional County Municipality in the Lanaudière region.

The plant serves a small population of 267 residents in the Saint-Cuthbert area.

The plant provides secondary treatment, which is the standard for municipal wastewater in Canada, removing organic matter and suspended solids.

The plant operates under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act and Quebec's provincial regulations, which require secondary treatment for municipal wastewater to protect water quality.

For small populations like 267, secondary treatment is typical and effective, often using lagoons or mechanical systems to meet regulatory standards for effluent quality.

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