IFAT India 2014: Battling the water crisis

13 mag 2014
• Demand for water in India to double by 2050 • Stricter compliance with laws means enormous markets • Growing demand for disinfection systems and membrane systems • Second IFAT India in Mumbai from October 9–11, 2014

2014 is an important year for India: Parliamentary elections are being held and the results of those elections could mean new impetus that could stimulate the Indian economy and pave the way for needed investments in the environmental sector: India wants and has to urgently improve its inadequate water-supply and sewage infrastructure. According to the experts' forecasts, compared to 2010, demand for water in the country of more than 1.2 billion people will practically double by the year 2050. The water-supply situation is already tense. According to Anna Westenberger, India Correspondent for Foreign Trade and Location Marketing, Germany Trade & Invest (GTAI), "at present, only about half of all urban households have their own potable water connection. However, that says nothing about actual availability: In many of India's major cities, water is only available for a few hours a day—and in many cases, the quality of that water is very poor." Add to that the fact that, according to information from Indian municipalities, up to half of all available water gets lost on its way to the consumer due to dilapidated pipes and theft.

 

There is also an urgent need for action when it comes to sewage treatment. According to GTAI, only approximately 30 percent of urban sewage is currently treated. Siddharth K. Desai, Director of the Indian pump manufacturer Kishor Pumps, explains: "The treatment plants for domestic sewage are mostly financed by local municipal corporations or municipalities. Delays, quality problems, suboptimal maintenance and water shortages are frequent. Treatment plants that are financed by bilateral or multilateral organizations such as the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank or the Japan International Cooperation Agency, on the other hand, meet international standards and are considerably more successful." According to Desai, a growing number of treatment plants are now also being built by well-known Indian and multinational companies that generally operate them for seven or eight years according to the BOOT (Build, Own, Operate, Transfer) principle. "This is a welcome sign that India's sewage infrastructure is improving", emphasizes Desai.

 

Frank Hoffmann from the German-Indian Chamber of Commerce, knows that "legal regulations regarding environmental protection in India are sufficient and stipulated threshold values can even be described as very ambitious." In many places, however, the problem is implementation. Hoffmann explains: "Market opportunities for domestic and international environmental technology companies in India depend to a great extent on whether the pollution control boards will be in a position organizationally and with regard to personnel to enforce compliance in the near future." The State Pollution Control Boards and the Pollution Control Committees are responsible for general environmental monitoring at the Indian state and territorial levels.

 

As soon as these organizational obstacles are overcome, high-end solutions will also have good chances in the subcontinent's water-management sector. The consulting firm Frost & Sullivan expects that as the market for water treatment continues to grow in the future, so will demand for reverse osmosis, ultrafiltration and membrane bioreactor systems. Together with the industrial application sector, analysts feel that the overall Indian market for membrane modules could increase from the equivalent of nearly EUR 71 million per year in 2012 to EUR 153 million per year in 2017.

 

Rapid industrialization of the country and the worsening water shortage are also increasing the need for water disinfection systems. According to a recent Frost & Sullivan report, this market, which was worth some EUR 39 million in 2012, will grow to nearly EUR 60 million within five years. Besides electrochlorination, experts feel that UV disinfection and ozone systems have very good chances on the market.

 

Suppliers and consumers of future-oriented technologies meet at IFAT India, India's Leading Trade Fair for Water, Sewage, Refuse and Recycling.

 

Further information is available online at www.ifat-india.com.

 

 

IFAT INDIA

Messe München International, together with its subsidiary MMI India, expanded its international network of trade events for the environmental technology sector by launching IFAT India in 2013. The second edition of India’s Leading Trade Fair for Water, Sewage, Refuse and Recycling takes place from October 9 to 11, 2014, in the Bombay Exhibition Centre in Mumbai. The premiere attracted 131 exhibitors from 17 countries and 4,934 visitors. The show took up around 5,000 square meters of exhibition space.

 

Messe München International

Messe München International is one of the world´s leading trade show companies. In Munich alone it organizes around 40 trade shows for capital and consumer goods, and key high tech industries. Each year more than 30,000 exhibitors and around two million visitors take part in the events held at the Messe München exhibition center, the ICM – International Congress Center München, and in the MOC Veranstaltungscenter München. The leading international trade fairs of Messe München International are all independently audited. In addition, Messe München International organizes trade shows in China, India, Turkey and South Africa. With a combination of affiliates abroad – in Europe, Asia and in Africa – and over 60 foreign representatives actively serving over 100 countries, Messe München International has a worldwide business network. The Group also takes a pioneering role as regards sustainability: It is the first trade-fair company to be awarded energy-efficiency certification from the technical inspection authorities TÜV SÜD.