ARTICLES BY PETER CHAWAGA
-
Is It Time To Start Worrying About Treatment Plant Hackers?8/23/2016
Treatment plant control systems are more vulnerable to computer hacks than ever before. What should utilities be doing to prepare themselves?
-
5 Innovations In Cyber-Water8/8/2016
Just because water has been around since before the Stone Age doesn’t mean it’s immune to evolution. Here are five ways that water is getting swept up in the future.
-
Engineering The Future: Two Tools For Wastewater Plant Design6/1/2016
Two tools leverage computing power for engineering design, opening up a digital world of possibility for wastewater plants.
-
Simulating A Cure For Brain Drain2/8/2016
Much has been made of the gap in knowledge to come when the water industry’s aging workforce reaches retirement. With advances in simulation training software capable of getting new employees familiar with plant processes, it may be an analog fear in the digital world.
-
Betting On Biogas: A Wastewater Plant’s Journey2/1/2016
The Lancaster Area Sewer Authority’s (LASA) recent $26.8 million upgrade to its lone wastewater treatment facility promises to reduce the plant’s environmental footprint and save costs by emphasizing energy efficiency and allowing for biosolids reuse.
-
Connecting To The Future: Where Will Digitally Linked Devices Take The Water Industry?12/2/2015
You may hear talk of an emerging “smart grid” in the sector. Maybe you’ve heard of a tomorrow dependent on the Internet of Things (IoT). Whatever they choose to call it, advocates will agree: a network of digitally connected devices is emerging, which will pool data together and funnel it to a single source, painting a more complete picture of how water is used. And soon, it will be everywhere.
-
Testing The Waters: SCADA Simulator Updates Operator Training9/1/2015
It might seem straight out of Space Camp, but there is an increasingly common scene in water and wastewater municipalities where supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) simulation training offers hands-on experience to usher in the next generation of operators.