SOURCE WATER RESOURCES

DRINKING WATER SOLUTIONS

  • NIROBOX™ Containerized Desalination Solutions

    Small-footprint, containerized solutions to treat water from any source- at any scale.

  • WATERTRAK™ Sea Water Reverse Osmosis

    WATERTRAK Sea Water Reverse Osmosis system uses spiral wound polyamide membrane technology to treat sea water up to 46,000 ppm TDS. The SWRO features state of the art energy recovery and can easily be integrated into a two pass or larger system.

  • WATERTRAK™ Ultrafiltration These filtration systems use hollow fiber membranes to remove particulate down to 0.1 micron (SDI normally <1). These systems normally operate at 90-95% recovery and can be offered as dead end or in cross flow configuration.
  • Potable Water Storage Unit: MSU-40

    Minimize potable water hauling costs with modular onsite storage units from newterra – the leader in advanced camp water solutions.

  • Why Should We Care About NSF/ANSI 61 Certification?

    According to National Sanitation Foundation (NSF) and the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), it's a set of standards relating to water treatment and establishes criteria for the control of equipment that comes in contact with either potable water or products that support the production of water.

  • BioBarrier® Membrane BioReactor (MBR) & HSMBR

    Bio-Microbics introduces a new generation of wastewater treatment solutions, the BioBarrier® HSMBR® (High Strength Membrane Bioreactor), to help meet the increasingly stringent needs of specialized applications. The membranes and processes used in this advanced system act as an impenetrable physical barrier for nearly all common pollutants found in wastewater today. The advanced technology offers the highest quality effluent possible on the market.  The BioBarrier® MBR was the first system to be approved for water reuse (NSF/ANSI Std 350, class R) by the NSF (National Sanitation Foundation) International.

DRINKING WATER VIDEOS

In this clip from In The Flow, Anne-Louise Christensen talks about some of the ways that Denmark is expanding technologies and explains that even though some of these strategies are expensive, they will hopefully become more cost-efficient in the future.