Saturday, February 18, 2012

Global Boom for Upgrading Wastewaster Treatment by Jenny Marusiak

Research on a “green” solution for wastewater treatment is underway at Siemens’ global R&D center in Singapore. Image: Siemens.com

 
Governments and water utilities across the world will be investing some $28 billion this year to improve their existing wastewater treatment infrastructure, a new report by Lux Research has found.

The report published last week by the Boston-based independent research house estimated that water managers globally will spend aboout USD$27.8 billion for advanced wastewater treatment technologies in 2012.

That spend will provide an additional global wastewater treatment capacity of 16.3 million cubic metres (m3) per day.

The report noted that wastewater technologies most commonly used by cities today “gobble enormous amounts of energy, send megatons of toxic sludge to landfills and incinerators, and throw away valuable water that many communities could reuse”.

Using specialised filters and other techniques, advanced wastewater treatments can clean wastewater such that the water and other byproducts can by recycled, and in some cases used for energy production.

The investments into new technologies are aimed at taking advantage of these opportunities. More than half of the money – 55 per cent – will be spent on upgrading or replacing old treatment plants in urban areas, many of which are in developing countries.

Of the potential advanced wastewater projects identified across the globe by Lux Research, 15 per cent were new facilities, while the rest of the projects involved upgrading or expanding existing plants.

China and the United States are the largest markets for advanced wastewater treatment technology, with Japan, Brazil, Germany and India completing the list of top investment opportunities.

While the wastewater treatment projects identifed were distributed evenly between developing and developed countries, the bulk of the investment – $22.3 billion – will be in developed countries. The costs for such projects are four times higher in developed countries, according to the report.

But even though the costs in building and upgrading plants are significantly smaller in developing countries, they are still a barrier, noted report author and senior analyst Brent Giles in a statement.

“Solving the most pressing problems in wastewater treatment will require technologies that are not just effective, but also affordable to the rapidly growing market in the developing world,” he said.

Research manager Melvin Leong of advisory firm Frost & Sullivan’s Asia Pacific environment and building technologies division told Eco-Business that governments in Asia’s developing countries usually cite ‘lack of financial means’ as the reason for delaying the use of advanced water treatment technologies.

The use of such technologies may become more viable in this region if the technology companies are able to offer business models that defray the up-front costs, he said.

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