NEWS RELEASE                                                                                                       OCTOBER 2013

Municipal Wastewater Plants Will Spend $8.3 Billion for Pumps Next Year

Led by East Asia, municipal wastewater treatment plants around the world will spend $8.35 billion for pumps in 2014. This is the latest forecasts in Pumps World Markets published by the McIlvaine Company.

Pump Municipal Wastewater Revenues ($ Millions)

Top of Form

World Region

2014

Africa

 261

CIS

 296

East Asia

 2,783

Eastern Europe

 298

Middle East

 232

NAFTA

 2,178

South & Central America

 204

West Asia

 216

Western Europe

 1,888

Total

8,356

Nearly $6 billion will be spent on centrifugal pumps. Rotary pumps will account for just under $1 billion in expenditures. The remainder is divided between diaphragm and reciprocating pumps.

A significant portion of the total expenditure will be for the transport of sewage from households and other generation points to the plants. Within the plant there is primary treatment usually followed by secondary treatment and in some cases tertiary treatment.

Sludge dewatering is one of the processes incorporated in secondary treatment. In one of the typical processes, pumps are used to:

  • Move activated sludge to the gravity belt thickener
  • Move thickened waste sludge to the sludge digester
  • Move digested sludge to a belt press or centrifuge
  • Move dewatered sludge to dryer or landfill

Pumps can move dewatered sludges long distances and result in lower capital and operating costs than using mechanical conveyors.

For more information on   Pumps World Markets, click on: http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php/markets/2-uncategorised/116-n019