NEWS RELEASE                                                                                                         OCTOBER 2013

 

Municipal Wastewater Plants Will Spend $4.5 Billion for Valves In 2017

Municipal wastewater plants will spend $4.5 billion for valves in 2017. $3.4 billion will be for on/off valves and the balance for control valves. This is the conclusion reached in Industrial Valves: World Markets published by the McIlvaine Company.

Municipal Wastewater Valve Purchases ($ Million)

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

Subject

2017

 Ball

615

 Butterfly

813

 Check

140

 Gate

937

 Globe

1,029

 Industrial Plug

760

 Other

240

 Safety Relief

6

Total

4,540

Globe valves will be the leading category with an expenditure of over $1 billion.   China will be the country leader. This is due to its spectacular increase in secondary treatment capacity which has tripled in the last two decades to over 30,000 MGD. By contrast, the U.S. capacity is only 39,000 MGD. Only 4,000 MGD does not receive secondary treatment. Over 90 percent of the transported sewage receives secondary treatment.

By contrast, other countries in the Americas treat anywhere from 31 percent to 79 percent of the transported sewage, so there is a big potential for valves for new plants in these regions. There is new construction in smaller cities in Eastern Europe. The EU Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive is the guiding force behind the new construction and upgrades. Romania has until 2015 to comply, whereas Croatia is facing a 2023 deadline.

The plant size is smaller in Europe than in the U.S. For example, France has less than 20 percent of the population of the U.S. However it has 19,000 municipal wastewater plants compared to 16,000 in the U.S.

There are 1900 active projects in the U.S. and Canada which will require significant valve purchases. However, many of the projects are to replace or upgrade existing facilities rather than for additional needed capacity. The U.S. has not modernized and renovated faculties on an acceptable twenty year cycle. Many valves are obsolete in design and should be replaced by the “intelligent valves” offered today.

For more information on: Industrial Valves: World Markets, click on: http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php/markets/2-uncategorised/115-n028