22 Mar 2022
Freshwater withdrawals constitute water taken from ground or surface water sources. As global population and water demand increase, freshwater is more likely to be extracted beyond the rate at which aquifers are replenished, leading to water stressed conditions. Industry also competes for freshwater – often requiring large volumes and generating significant amounts of wastewater too, due to cleaning processes. With deep engineering and process expertise across multiple industries, GEA is well-positioned to help customers meet even the most ambitious water targets.
– Dr. Andrew Steer, President and CEO, World Resources Institute
Reusing industrial wastewater, or effluent, is the most effective way to limit water withdrawals and minimize discharge to sewers. Depending on its original use and end use, effluent must fulfil specific safety and hygiene standards before it is recycled.
GEA offers key technologies that are shaping the discourse and pushing boundaries when it comes to water recovery and treatment in industrial processes. Our customers, which span diverse industries around the globe, are realizing impressive water stewardship results – in some cases achieving water-neutrality across their production and plants. Key GEA solutions in this area include:
Milk is approximately 85 percent water. That means dairy processors have the potential to reuse millions of liters of water annually. Using a GEA reverse osmosis unit, condensate can be collected from an evaporation plant and the resulting water returned to the process. This greatly reduces freshwater withdrawals, minimizes manufacturing and disposal costs and mitigates CO2 emissions.
Located in Gandhinagar, India, AmulFed is Asia’s largest skim milk powder plant. It is also a near zero-water discharge facility. This feat is the result of three sets of GEA reverse osmosis polisher units which treat the condensate from an evaporation plant. From there, the water is reused for product cooling and plant cleaning, which eliminates the use of 420 million liters of freshwater annually.
A type of membrane filtration, reverse osmosis (RO) is commonly used in dairy and food processing to concentrate solids, recover water and for “polishing.” The additional polishing step purifies the condensate resulting from the evaporation process. From there, it is suitable for watering green space or for use as toilet water. With further heat- or UV light treatment, effluent is safe to use in product-contact operations (e.g., final flushing, rinsing cans, cleaning tanks and pipework) and even as an ingredient in finished products.
In chemical processing, manufactures may use evaporation to separate water vapor from their waste stream. After condensing, it is usable as process water. To ensure it meets quality requirements, membrane treatment, stripping or distillation are generally required. In Europe, GEA customers in the medium-density fiberboard (MDF) industry are recycling 100 percent of their condensed wastewater with GEA evaporation technology. And while the energy consumption of evaporation is significant, it can be substantially reduced with thermal or mechanical vapor recompression (MVR).
In other water-intensive processes, such as industrial recycling, materials recovery facilities can integrate a GEA sludge Decanter, which allows them to return wash water back to the process cycle. This step reduces disposal costs freshwater usage and averts potentially harmful chemicals from entering the environment.
Zero-liquid discharge (ZLD) is a process that more industries are adopting, particularly in regions where water shortages are acute. The process is commonly employed in the production of chemicals, oil and gas, power generation, mining and in water treatment plants. The benefits of ZLD are that it:
GEA offers thermal and non-thermal zero liquid discharge systems which utilize crystallization technology to treat liquid effluent. Depending on requirements, GEA can provide membrane separation, decanter centrifugation, evaporation, crystallization, drying and energy recovery in this context. Our ZLD technology is successfully employed within a wastewater treatment plant at a power plant in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. The ZLD wastewater plant converts salt-laden wastewater into pure water for internal recycling. The process leaves behind minimal dry solids for disposal, thanks to a GEA decanter centrifuge for final dewatering.
GEA product recovery and CIP systems also play an important role in minimizing freshwater usage and wastewater disposals. Product recovery, in particular pigging systems, clear process pipes of product which reduces the amount of water and chemical required during cleaning processes. For processes where storage tanks, silos or intermediate containers (IBC) are required, the removal of residues is paramount to safety and product quality. Here GEA Cleaning Technology is used across nearly all industries, ensuring product safety and hygiene and the efficient use of water and cleaning agents.
For juice producer innocent, GEA designed and installed a unique automated CIP system that minimizes the required cleaning surface area of the process piping for the company’s first carbon neutral plant, in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The solution leverages pioneering technology from Fluidor which cleans pipes with an air tornado instead of water. The integration of this system with GEA’s automated CIP system, allows innocent to recover 98 percent of the juice from the process phase.
Another contributor to this impressive freshwater reduction is the use of citric acid rather than freshwater as a seal flushing liquid. The low-acidity and pH level of the citric acid naturally prevents bacterial growth. And by installing condensers, innocent consumes 45 percent less water than was initially estimated.
As part of our sustainability targets, we commit that by 2030, 100 percent of GEA solutions will come with the option to be operated without additional freshwater intake, particularly during the cleaning process. In addition to our existing portfolio, we continue to improve our machines. In 2022, we will launch two significant innovations focused on safeguarding fresh water. These include:
We know that climate change exacerbates the availability and quality of water around the world. Therefore, reducing global greenhouse gas emissions must be part the solution when it comes to safeguarding global water resources. Here too, industry can take the lead by setting, and working as quickly as possible, to achieve net-zero targets. The good news is manufacturing – and the engineering behind it – can play a significant role here too. For its part, GEA is committed to achieving net-zero across its operations by 2040.