Another water purification company, Bluewater, has also worked on its own water treatment solutions. It has developed a device that turns almost all types of water into clean drinking water.
This solution is being used during the 2017/2018 Volvo Ocean Race to provide sailing crews and spectators with drinking water. It does so by treating non-potable water and turning it into water that is safe to drink. Besides that, the machines could technically make sewage water safe enough to be released into the environment.
“We can treat almost any water, except sea water. We do not desalinate, but we can do brackish water," says Anderson, the company’s chief executive officer, adding that the machine´s membranes catch everything, including some pathogens. This means it could be used to turn sewage water into water for irrigation or water that can be released back into the environment.
Besides being able to use almost all kinds of water, Bluewater’s machines have a high yield of 8 000 litres per day, which could serve smaller to medium-size settlements of a few thousand people with little waste.
“Normally, for every ten litres of polluted water you will get one litre of drinking water,” says Anderson. “Our technology has a 70 – 80 per cent clean water ratio. This is achieved with little energy. That is why the solution is suitable for Africa, an energy-starved continent. It can be connected to solar panels with battery storage,”
One of the key challenges in turning these and other alternative wastewater innovations into mainstream solutions is changing people’s minds around wastewater and where potable water should come from. This is particularly the case in developing countries where water recycling for drinking water is not common place.