OTCQX:HEOFF - Post Discussion
Post by
Possibleidiot01 on Mar 25, 2023 8:00am
peecycling, it's a thing
World Water Day was this week and I came across a New Yorker that mentioned recycling urine .
I know H2O has a phosphate free cleaner for equipment to prevent phosphate blooms. This technology is cool and might make a good cheap addition to company
Clean TeQ Water launches new phosphate removal and recovery technology
Jan. 3, 2022
Clean TeQ Water announced the launch of its new PHOSPHIX technology, which selectively removes phosphate from water and recovers a solid phosphorus product that is suitable for reuse.
Clean TeQ Water announced the launch of its new PHOSPHIX technology. PHOSPHIX uses a combination of its Continuous Ionic Filtration (CIF) technology and chemical precipitation to selectively remove phosphate from water and recover a solid phosphorus product that is suitable for reuse.
Phosphate water pollution from fertilizer runoff, detergents and sewage is a major problem throughout the world, and elevated phosphate concentrations lead to eutrophication and algal blooms that can cause irreversible ecological damage. For these reasons, increasingly strict regulations are being placed on phosphate concentrations discharged to the environment by Governments and Environmental Authorities around the world.
Recovering phosphorus from wastewater to substitute phosphorus derived from finite phosphate rock is an increasing trend, with the EU currently recycling 50% of phosphorus from sewage and countries such as Switzerland and Germany having regulations governing the recovery and recycling of phosphorus in the wastewater treatment sector.
PHOSPHIX can achieve very low effluent concentrations (<0.1 ppm) with over 99% water recovery and provides phosphate recycling into hydroxyapatite, which can be used for fertilizer production. The solution provides reduced footprints and much lower chemical consumption leading to half the operating cost when compared to commonly used precipitation systems. The cost reduction makes phosphate recycling a more economically viable solution for treating water across industries.
Clean TeQ Water's CEO Willem Vriesendorp stated, "We are excited to launch our PHOSPHIX technology to the market to assist municipalities and industrial customers in removing and recycling phosphorus from their wastewater. It complements our portfolio of unique nutrient treatment and recycling solutions, which currently include BIONEX and BIOCLENS. We believe PHOSPHIX will open the door to a range of markets due to the significant benefits the technology provides, such as the EU where over 90% of phosphorus is imported."
PHOSPHIX is well placed to assist municipal and industrial customers to enhance their resource recovery and support the global shift toward circular nutrient flows.
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