PURIO PATENTED TECHNOLOGY

PurioModular, Transportable, Variable-capacityThe PURIO technology is an advanced water/suspended solids separation technology for many reasons. It is a pre-engineered modular design offering a wide range of flexibility in its application. It is transportable, thereby offering the advantage of addressing temporary or moveable requirements such as site camps. Among the most important reasons is its variable-flow capability (up to 200,000 liters per day per module) that allows it to accommodate varying flow rates during its quiet operation. It can be stopped and started without loss of efficiency. Its highly reliable mechanical process eliminates any necessity to maintain strictly controlled, delicate biological processes required by various biological systems offered by competitors.

INCREASING GLOBAL MARKET DEMAND

Purio operates to provide practical solutions to the growing global water crisis. The World Water Commission recently released startling facts in its recent 33 page report to further concern about the worlds growing water shortage. The report states that an estimated 1.1 billion people lack access to safe drinking water, three billion don't have the means to access sanitized water, and another 500 million live in countries with barely enough water for their people. Furthermore the recent report indicates that world water consumption will increase by 40% over the course of the next twenty years as demand for personal, industrial and agricultural uses increase worldwide. When linked together the figures surrounding this crisis are staggering.

Water treatment and processing is a $450 billion annual worldwide market, trailing only power generation and oil, according to Terrapin Asset Management. Helmut Kaiser Consultancy forecasts revenues generated by water treatment and processing will grow to $650 billionby 2025.

The water treatment infrastructure in the United States is aging rapidly; equipment that was installed following the Clean Water Act in 1972 is reaching the end of its lifecycle and there is a critical need for upgrading and retrofitting outdated water treatment equipment.According to the EPA, the United States will spend approximately $203 billion over the next 20 years treating polluted wastewater. Forbes Magazine estimates global spending for water systems will exceed $1.0 trillion over the next two decades.