1,667 plants indexed.
Pszczolki wastewater treatment plant serves Kamierowskie Piece, Poland, with secondary treatment for a population of 5,348. It discharges 762.54 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 8,853 m³/day.
Klanino wastewater treatment plant serves the village of Parszkowo in northern Poland, treating domestic wastewater for 982 residents with secondary treatment. The plant discharges 140.02 m³/day and is located within 10 km of the Baltic Sea coast.
Krokowa secondary treatment plant serves Minkowice, Poland, discharging 546 m³/day. Located near the Baltic coast in województwo pomorskie, it protects local waterways.
Hel wastewater treatment plant in Hel, Poland, serves about 5,700 people with advanced treatment. It discharges 811 m³/day of treated wastewater into the Baltic Sea coastal zone.
Rowy wastewater treatment plant in Rowy, Poland, serves about 6,453 people with advanced treatment. It discharges 920.10 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 45,000 m³/day.
Debrzno Wies is an advanced wastewater treatment plant in Debrzno-Wieś, Poland, serving approximately 6,572 people. It operates under EU regulations with a designed capacity of 8,745 m³/day.
Sulęczyno wastewater treatment plant in Poland serves 1,096 people with advanced treatment. It discharges 156.27 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 4,962 m³/day.
Slawki wastewater treatment plant in Sławki, Poland, serves a population of 6,592 with advanced treatment. It discharges 939.92 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 21,000 m³/day.
Skorcz wastewater treatment plant serves the town of Skórcz, Poland, treating municipal wastewater for approximately 5,965 residents with secondary treatment. The plant discharges a daily volume of 850.52 m³.
Krynica Morska wastewater treatment plant serves the coastal town of Krynica Morska, Poland, with advanced treatment for a population of 5,318. It discharges treated wastewater near the Vistula Lagoon, a sensitive Baltic Sea ecosystem.
Rytel wastewater treatment plant in Poland serves a small population of 872 with secondary treatment. It discharges 124.33 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 5,750 m³/day.
Choroszcz wastewater treatment plant in Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland, serves about 7,000 people with secondary treatment. It discharges treated effluent into local waterways, supporting the region's environmental health.
Mielnik wastewater treatment plant serves the town of Mielnik in województwo podlaskie, Poland. It provides secondary treatment for a population of 76.
Drohiczyn wastewater treatment plant in Czepielin, Poland, serves 481 people with secondary treatment. It discharges 68.58 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 2142 m³/day.
Tykocin wastewater treatment plant in województwo podlaskie, Poland, serves about 2,986 people with secondary treatment. It has a designed capacity of 5,000 m³/day and discharges 425.76 m³/day.
Szepietowo wastewater treatment plant in województwo podlaskie, Poland, serves 881 people with secondary treatment. It discharges 125.62 m³/day of treated wastewater, with a designed capacity of 2660 m³/day.
Rajgrod wastewater treatment plant in Radziłów, Poland, serves 714 people with secondary treatment. It discharges 101.81 m³/day and has a designed capacity of 4,000 m³/day.
BOS 100 is a secondary treatment plant serving 419 people in Stawiszcze, Poland. It discharges 59.74 m³/day of treated wastewater and operates under EU Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive standards.
Hydrocentrum is a secondary wastewater treatment plant in Czeremcha, Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland, serving a population of 438 with a designed capacity of 1,100 m³/day.
Knyszyn wastewater treatment plant in Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland, serves about 3,000 people with secondary treatment. It discharges 432.74 thousand m³/year and has a designed capacity of 6,000 m³/day.
UtilityRadar indexes 1667 wastewater treatment plants in Poland, with treatment level, capacity, operator and discharge data on each record.
Among the indexed plants, Rowy has the highest designed capacity at 45,000 m3/day.