IT in Manufacturing


Addressing water scarcity with digitised solutions

January 2024 IT in Manufacturing


Devon Pillay.

Water scarcity is a global crisis; according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), at its current consumption rate, two thirds of the world’s population may face water shortages by 2025. Whilst 70% of the world’s surface is covered by water, only 3% is fresh water, and two thirds of that is tucked away in frozen glaciers, or otherwise unavailable for our use.

Industry is a major user of water; copious amounts are consumed across mining operations, petroleum refineries, smelting facilities, and food processing facilities, to name a few. According to research groups, the fashion industry alone uses 93 billion cubic metres of water per year, which is 4% of all freshwater extraction globally. This number is set to double by 2030. Some of the challenges facing the global water sector are high water demand and its declining supply, poor quality, pollution, climate change, urbanisation, aging infrastructure, spiralling energy costs, and evolving regulations.

South Africa’s water supply and scarcity challenges mirror our global peers; Cape Town and Gqeberha’s recent day zero challenges have fundamentally changed the way we look at the consumption of water in our country. Water sustainability strategy relies on infrastructure that enables data transparency. There are some important, mitigating steps that can be taken to set the world on course to preserving this precious resource. Digital transformation in water processing and delivery operations can begin to help provide lower energy consumption, higher sustainability, and less waste.

Sustainability starts with the ability to extract performance data from the physical infrastructure that supports core operations. In the water and wastewater (WWW) sector, digitisation leads to water processing and distribution network transparency, and traceability of assets as they move through municipal systems. To achieve transparency, core equipment such as motors drives, and pumps need to incorporate sensors to collect the necessary data. Then, cloud-based software tools can connect to the various data silos from different sources and consolidate and combine that data with legacy data.

Once data access is achieved, machine learning (ML) solutions can extract trends which can lead to faster and more sustainable decisions. For example, accurate decisions can be made on how water assets flow through the processes of recycling purification, transportation, and ultimately consumption.

The highest potential for achieving sustainability objectives lies with training intelligent algorithms, or artificial intelligence (AI) to make sustainability decisions in real time, incorporating the many data points that no human could process in a timely enough fashion, to yield autonomous decision making.

Looking at a practical application, UK-based Anglian Water partnered with Schneider Electric to prevent water loss, with a cloud-based holistic solution for water loss management that monitors incoming system performance data on a near real-time basis from multiple data sources.

The municipality now benefits from real-time detection of leaks and anomalies; work orders are dispatched, and repair works are effectively and efficiently executed, saving millions of litres of water per year.

When proposing solutions to water and wastewater firms worldwide, Schneider Electric often partners with major technology firms like Microsoft that share our passion for sustainable operations and support our cloud-based digitisation solutions. In fact, Microsoft has pledged to become water positive by 2030. In water-stressed regions, they have established a goal to replenish more water than is consumed by their operations.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Install and commissioning time cut by 50% thanks to digital twin insights
Rockwell Automation IT in Manufacturing
ECM Technologies, a world leader in the design and manufacture of innovative and modular low-pressure carburising industrial furnaces, has developed a solution that removes many of the installation and commissioning challenges relating to the development, testing and deployment of large-scale heat treatment plants.

Read more...
Centralised control rooms where growth is elastic, not physical
Schneider Electric South Africa PLCs, DCSs & Controllers
Modernised control rooms feature distributed control system architecture consolidated into centralised compute environments. replacing traditional PCs with thin clients.

Read more...
Real-time monitoring and predictive maintenance in African data centres
ACTOM Electrical Machines IT in Manufacturing
Running a data centre in Africa brings many challenges. Traditional maintenance strategies struggle to keep up with these realities. Predictive maintenance offers a different approach.

Read more...
How smart signalling can transform Africa’s manufacturing future
Schneider Electric South Africa Industrial Wireless
Imagine a factory floor where humans and machines communicate in real time with issues flagged instantly, workflows adjusted seamlessly and downtime reduced to near zero. This is the reality unfolding across Africa as manufacturers embrace the next generation of intelligent signalling technologies.

Read more...
Unpacking the technoeconomic case for cleaner power in wastewater plants
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Behind every reliable wastewater plant is an electrical system exposed to the effects of harmonics, voltage distortion and overloaded networks caused by fleets of variable speed drives on pumps and aerators.Together, they steadily drive up maintenance demands and elevate the risk of failure.

Read more...
Advanced DCSs preserve what must not change while enabling
Schneider Electric South Africa PLCs, DCSs & Controllers
Next-generation DCSs, such as Schneider Electric’s Foxboro, are preserving the best of the old while introducing the new in a less disruptive manner.

Read more...
Rethinking power for Africa’s data centres
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Africa’s digital economy is scaling faster than its power systems. If it wants resilient, competitive and sustainable data centres, the starting point must be a grid-to-chip architecture rather than a genset-first mentality.

Read more...
Siemens ecosystem strengthens data and AI integration
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has announced significant expansions to its Industrial Edge ecosystem, accelerating data and AI integration and releasing enhanced cybersecurity functionalities. These enable a seamless integration of IT and OT environments, optimise processes and reduce operational disruptions.

Read more...
Unifying building information into a sea of insight
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Facility managers realise that in order to gain the most from building automation, they can longer deploy and operate technologies in isolation. Modern, integrated building management solutions address this challenge by bringing data from multiple sources and dispersed locations like HVAC, lighting, access control, lifts, generators, field devices, energy and

Read more...
Why digital LV switchboards matter
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Today’s buildings account for up to 40% of global energy consumption and CO2 emissions. However, buildings are also expected to deliver higher availability and stronger safety performance while also being sustainable. Digital swirchboards make a difference in the way buildings are developed, upgraded and managed.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved