A two stage management of raw biodiesel wastewater was carried out at a laboratory scale and ambi-
ent temperature. In the first step, biodiesel was chemically recovered from the wastewater using sul-
phuric acid as a proton donor with subsequent natural phase separation. Biodiesel was recovered
from the raw biodiesel wastewater, in this case at 6–7% (w/w). In the second stage, the aqueous
phase discharged from the first stage was supplemented with sodium chloride to 0.061 M and subject
to electro-oxidation using a Ti/RuO
2
electrode. The combined treatment completely removed COD and
oil and grease, and reduced BOD levels by more than 95%. The rate of removal of all three pollutants
fitted a pseudo-first-order rate kinetics with oil and grease removal being approximately 8–16- and
2–7-fold faster than BOD and COD removal, respectively.