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The name, Te Whare Wai Para Nuku, was gifted during a Matariki ceremony at the Moa Point Sludge Minimisation Facility construction site this morning. Careful work and research has gone into ensuring that how the sludge is treated aligns with the values of mana whenua, and now the name of the facility will uphold those values too! Here's what it means: 🏠 Te Whare refers to the facility itself, and how it safely holds high volumes of kene (biosolids or sludge). 🌊 Wai Para describes the water left in the kene after it has been treated first in Te Whare Wai Tapu Noa/The wastewater treatment facility, and flows to Te Whare Wai Para Nuku. This is the water that’s not safe to go back into Tangaroa, the sea. 🗑️ Para is a word often used in relation to waste. In this context, para refers to the extracted kene from waimate (dead water, water that is deemed unsafe), like para is extracted from harakeke. ♻️ Nuku speaks to how the facility mimics natural decomposition processes and the technology that enables wai para and kene to go from a state of being tapu to noa before being used in a beneficial way. Te Whare Wai Para Nuku will use an anaerobic digestion process to help us deliver on two critical targets the Council has set for reducing waste and carbon emissions in Wellington City. It will reduce carbon emissions created by the treatment and processing by up to 60 percent, and it will reduce the volume of sludge produced by up to 80 percent! Learn more about the project on the Our Wellington news channel 👇 #OurWellington #TōTātouPōneke

Sludge facility named Te Whare Wai Para Nuku

Sludge facility named Te Whare Wai Para Nuku

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