Alar Corp

Solving Worldwide Industrial & Environmental Wastewater Problems Since 1970

Williston Basin Petroleum Conference 2013

Alar Water Recycling Systems will be exhibiting at the WBPC 2013 Conference.
Show schedule is:
April 30th 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
May 1 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
May 2 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Visit our booth #A5, we will have a working model of the Auto-Vac demonstrating how it can clean
Oil Rig Drilling Mud, Flowback & Produced Water.

ALAR Services Industries Such As:

* Rig Drilling Mud
* Flowback Water
* Production Water
* Pond Water
* Lateral Drilling Mud
* Cuttings Mud
* Oily/Petroleum Contaminated Water

Show’s location:
Evraz Place
Credit Union EventPlex
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada

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April 29, 2013 at 3:32 pm Comments (0)

What Is A Rotary Vacuum Filter

Per Wikipedia, a Rotary Vacuum Filter consists of a drum rotating in a tub of liquid to be filtered. TheALAR Auto-Vac is a rotary vacuum drum precoat filter is exactly that…it effectively removes solid particles from the sludge, producing dewatered waste. Typically, this waste is disposed of at a local landfill without further drying.  The Auto-Vac is self-cleaning with every revolution, which prevents blinding or clogging, and provides rapid filtration and extremely high filtrate clarity.

The Auto-Vac Features:  16 Filter Sizes  -  Reduces Hauling Costs  -  Easy Operation  -  Quality Water & Dry Solids  -  Environmental & Economical Solutions  -  Absolute Microfiltration

Ideal For: Total Suspended Solids  -  Metals  -  Biological Oxygen Demand

Industries:  Concrete  Flexographic Printing  -  Food & Dairy  -  Grease & Septic  -  Metal Finishing  -  Paint & Coatings  -  Hydraulic Fracturing  / Oil Drilling Fluids…as well as many others

 

 

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December 18, 2012 at 9:02 pm Comments (0)

Sustainable Solutions In North Dakota

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July 27, 2012 at 7:36 pm Comments (0)

Oil Drilling Mud Waste Dewatering

New rules from the North Dakota Industrial Commission go into effect April 1, 2012 that will provide stricter regulations to the oil industry.

Specifically, oil companies will now be required to separate liquids and drilling mud from rock cuttings.  The liquids can then be hauled away for disposal or recycling rather than stored in reserve pits.

Governor Jack Dalrymple, who is part of the Commission, said, “We want to do away with open pits for production wastewater.  There are treatment processes available today to clean and recycle these waste liquids  so that we leave a lighter footprint on the environment. Our management and oversight must reflect improvements made possible through new technologies .”

Aware of the upcoming “No Reserve Pit” regulations, ND based Paragon Water Solutions tested conventional methods such as Centrifuges, Hydrocyclones, Filter Presses and Settling Tanks. In each scenario, they hauled out hundreds of barrels of dirty water, and replaced them with truckloads of clean water.

In January 2011, Paragon contacted ALAR Engineering Corporation, a manufacturer of wastewater separation and water recycling equipment, with a need to dewater water-based drilling mud from active circulating systems where other technologies failed. ALAR recommended the Auto-Vac®  rotary vacuum precoat drum; a self-cleaning filter that does not blind or cause bottlenecks, and is forgiving of wastewater variances and thick oily sludge.

A trailer-mounted ALAR system, capable of filtering up to 800 barrels a day, was commissioned in April 2011. A year later the Auto-Vac® continues to filter a combination of wastewaters, producing dry solids and recyclable clean water without the cost and headaches.

Paragon noticed that the Auto-Vac® eliminates the need for reserve pits, which should satisfy the NDIC rule.  Their customers claim that the clean water increases the drilling rate of penetration and reduces mud pump and downhole tool wear and maintenance. The dry solids decrease wet tonnage hauling and water truck traffic congestion.  Most of all, the dollar savings are substantial. Earlier methods cost Paragon customers up to $66 a barrel; Paragon charges much less utilizing their mobilized Auto-Vac®.

Paragon Water Solutions focusses mainly on water-based drilling fluid reserve pit wastewater in the Williston Basin and Bakken Shale Oil Field.  A video of the ALAR Auto-Vac® system in operation is available online at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkZUzEaqh-M

There are Auto-Vac® systems in the infant stage currently filtering hydraulic fracturing production water in PA and NM; showing promising results. ALAR custom builds sixteen (16) filter sizes to accommodate virtually any volume of wastewater.

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March 22, 2012 at 9:21 pm Comments (0)

Wastewater Equipment for Bakken Hydraulic Fracturing

In January 2011, North Dakota based Paragon Water Solutions contacted ALAR with a need to solve a closed loop drilling mud problem.

Paragon tested conventional methods such as Reserve Pits, Centrifuges, Hydrocyclones, Filter Presses, and Settling Tanks. In each scenario, they still hauled out dirty water, and trucked in clean water.

After exhausting every avenue, Paragon searched for a “magic bullet” to filter a combination of wastewaters, produce dry solids and recycle clean water without the cost and headaches. They found the ALAR Auto-Vac® filter.

The ALAR Auto-Vac® works with Surface Mud, Lateral Brine Water, Fresh Water, and Frac Tank Sludge. This technology does not blind or cause bottlenecks, and is forgiving of wastewater variances and thick oily sludge.

The clean water increased the drilling rate of penetration and reduced mud pump and downhole tool wear & maintenance. The dry solids decreased wet ton hauling and water truck congestion. Paragon also noticed that the Auto-Vac® eliminated reserve pits. Most of all, the dollar savings were substantial. Earlier methods cost up to $66 a barrel; Paragon now charges $10 per barrel.

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August 17, 2011 at 4:11 pm Comments (0)