According to the World Health Organization, groundwater and surface water are commonly contaminated with heavy metals and other emerging contaminants. For instance, arsenic is present in very high concentrations (more than 10 micrograms per liter) in groundwater in the United States, Mexico, Argentina, Vietnam, India, and China, affecting the drinking water of about 140 million people. An additional 220 million people are at a high risk of exposure to high concentrations of arsenic and other recalcitrant contaminants in groundwater.
Large-scale water treatment and common effluent wastewater treatment plants often use outdated and ineffective processes to remove heavy metals and recalcitrant contaminants from treated effluents that are being released into bodies of water and groundwater. Advanced wastewater treatment technologies such as foam fractionation, non-thermal plasma, catalytic ozonation, ion exchange, and bioremediation processes for efficient separation and degradation of toxic contaminants can minimize the effects on the environment and human health.
The research study for the efficient removal of recalcitrant contaminants includes
• an overview of physical, chemical, and biological-based water and wastewater treatment technologies, current trends, and factors driving the development and use of water management technologies;
• a look at the major stakeholders in the treatment technology landscape;
• a techno-economic analysis of water management technologies for the removal and degradation of recalcitrant contaminants; and
• the patent landscape and growth opportunities enabling water and wastewater treatment technologies.
The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on the Emerging Contaminants Treatment Industry
Innovative Business Model
- Why: Municipal authorities in several developing markets have been selling nutrient-rich sludge and digestate waste, which acts as a good fertilizer, to farmers. However, the nutrient-rich sludge and digestate waste contain toxic emerging contaminants that will slowly accumulate in the environment and enter the food value chain.
- Frost Perspective: Various innovative business models have emerged, including decentralized and cost-effective chemical and bioremediation-based wastewater and sludge management processes to remove emerging contaminants. The decentralized systems will enable the municipal authorities to reduce the sludge disposal and other maintenance expenditures significantly. The system will also allow authorities to generate additional revenue by selling soil amendments.
Disruptive Technologies
- Why: Conventional technologies using incineration and activated carbon filtration (granular and powdered activated carbon [PAC]) result in the ineffective removal of emerging contaminants from wastewater influent. This inefficiency necessitates integrating additional pre- and post-treatment processes, increasing capital and operational expenditures associated with wastewater treatment.
- Frost Perspective: The industry has seen technical advancements in using foam fractionation (FF), non-thermal plasma (NTP), ion-exchange (IX) treatment, and other bio-based remediation techniques to effectively remove emerging contaminants from wastewater by integrating them into wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). These processes ensure efficient characteristics remain valid within the maximum permissible limits and aid plant operators in enhancing the water management value chain. The processes mitigate harmful chemicals entering the environment, impacting the negative impacts on human health and the environment.
Transformative Mega Trends
- Why: Innovating to Zero, health wellness and well-being, and the future of energy are transformative Mega Trends associated with the water management value chain. The plant operators must upgrade the wastewater treatment processes to enable risk-free discharge of effluents into water bodies.
- Frost Perspective: Integrating advanced treatment technologies such as FF and electro-oxidation or electrokinetic remediation (EKR) with phytoremediation ensures significant removal of recalcitrant pollutants and other emerging contaminants from treated effluents, enabling Innovation to Zero. The effective removal of heavy metals, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) compounds, and other emerging contaminants significantly reduces the accumulation of toxic and carcinogenic compounds in the water value chain, enhancing health and wellness.
Scope of Analysis
- The existing large-scale water treatment, municipal, and common effluent WWTPs use outdated and ineffective treatment processes to remove recalcitrant contaminants from the treated effluents. These WWTPs face scrutiny owing to the non-adherence to regulatory wastewater guidelines as many heavy metals, recalcitrant contaminants, and other persistent organic pollutants (POPs) go into the water bodies and groundwater. Hence, installing efficient wastewater treatment technologies to remove toxic contaminants while complying with stringent guidelines has a lot of scope.
- Using advanced wastewater treatment technologies such as FF, NTP, catalytic ozonation, IX, and bioremediation processes for efficient separation and degradation of toxic contaminants and minimizing the negative impact on the environment and human health is important.
Segmentation
This research analyzes the technologies required for removing POPs, heavy metals, and other emerging contaminants that conventional treatment methods in industrial and municipal WWTPs do not treat effectively. The study identifies treatment technologies for removing contaminants within large-scale WWTPs in all regions while enabling the treatment plant operators to comply with stringent discharge guidelines.
Processes such as adsorption and membrane filtration are seeing extensive usage as part of physical technologies to remove/separate POPs and other emerging contaminants from wastewater. However, chemical and biological methods can degrade POPs into less toxic waste.
Treatment Technologies for POPs and Other Recalcitrant Contaminants
Separation & Degradation
Physical
- FF
- Gamma Ray Irradiation
- Plasma Technology
- EKR
- Electro-oxidation
Chemical
- Photocatalysis
- UV-ozone
- Supercritical Treatment
- Catalytic Ozonation
- IX
Biological
- Bioremediation
- Mycoremediation
- Phytoremediation
Growth Drivers
Harmful Effects on Human Health:
Continuous accumulation of toxic pollutants such as PFAS in the water that humans consume increases the occurrence of several waterborne diseases, cancer, thyroid, cholesterol, hypertension, hormone imbalance, and other health-related problems.
Stringent Regulatory Guidelines:
Various government regulatory bodies impose stringent guidelines to meet the prescribed water quality discharge criteria. Compliance with stringent regulations mandates the use of advanced wastewater treatment technologies to remove toxic pollutants from the effluent.
Increasing Water Pollution:
The growing population and rapid industrialization have resulted in the generation and disposal of wastewater with substantial amounts of toxic pollutants, including pharmaceuticals, pesticides, synthetic dyes, and chemicals, into the surrounding water bodies. This increases the presence of POPs, heavy metals, and other emerging contaminants detrimental to marine ecosystems.
Growth Restraints
High Capital Expenditure: Commissioning large-scale advanced technologies for municipal and wastewater treatment technologies to efficiently remove POPs and other recalcitrant contaminants requires significant initial investment owing to complex equipment utilization. Installation of such technologies in small-scale industries is economically non-viable. Moreover, operational and maintenance expenditures are high, as they involve energy consumption, catalyst replacement, and schedule maintenance.
Lack of Awareness: Several municipal and industrial WWTP operators are unaware of the effectiveness of advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) and electrochemical technologies in removing POPs and other toxic contaminants. Remote communities and small-scale industries are likelier to use ineffective bio-based treatment technologies to treat specific contaminants. Thus, POPs and other toxic contaminants predominantly go untreated, resulting in lower water quality of the treated effluent.
Why Is It Increasingly Difficult to Grow?The Strategic Imperative 8™: Factors Creating Pressure on Growth
The Strategic Imperative 8™
The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on the Emerging Contaminants Treatment Industry
Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine
Research Methodology
Scope of Analysis
Segmentation
Growth Drivers
Growth Restraints
Water Management and Treatment Technology Value Chain
Technologies for the Removal of Hard-to-Treat Contaminants from Wastewater
Easy Removal of Highly Enriched PFAS Compounds from Industrial Wastewater and Landfill Leachate Using FF Process
Plasma Consisting of High-Energy Photons, Electrons, and Radicals Rapidly Breaks Down Short- and Long-Chain Contaminants
Electrokinetic Mechanism for the In-Situ Removal of PFAS Contaminants from Groundwater
Defluorination and Mineralization of Emerging Contaminants by Cobalt (CO) and Cesium (Cs)-sourced Gamma (Γ-ray) Irradiation
Photocatalysts Offer High Bond Dissociation Energy to Decompose PFAS Contaminants Efficiently
Catalytic Ozonation Enhances OH Radical Formation to Energy Efficiently Degrade Various Emerging Contaminants
Ex-Situ IX Treatment Offers Higher Volume Removal of PFAS Compared to GAC-Based PFAS Removal
Environmentally Friendly Method for the Removal and Biodegradation of Emerging Contaminants
Filamentous and Fruiting-Body Forming Fungal Species Enhance Effective Mycoremediation of Several POPs
Removal of PFAS, Heavy Metals, and Other Emerging Contaminants through Bioaccumulation in Plants
Comparative Cost-Benefit Analysis of Treatment Technologies
Comparative Analysis of Treatment Technologies
Developed Markets Dominate Funding and Policy Initiatives
China Leads the Recalcitrant Contaminants Treatment Patent Landscape
Important Players in FF, IX, and EKR for the Treatment of Emerging Contaminants
Important Players in Bioremediation, Plasma Technology, and Phytoremediation for the Treatment of Emerging Contaminants
Growth Opportunity 1: Engineered Nanomaterials to Enhance Degradation Rates of Emerging Contaminants
Growth Opportunity 1: Engineered Nanomaterials to Enhance Degradation Rates of Emerging Contaminants
Growth Opportunity 2: Hybrid Technologies to Separate and Degrade Emerging Contaminants
Growth Opportunity 2: Hybrid Technologies to Separate and Degrade Emerging Contaminants (continued)
Growth Opportunity 3: Decentralized Point-of-Use/Point-of-Entry Treatment
Growth Opportunity 3: Decentralized Point-of-Use/Point-of-Entry Treatment (continued)
Technology Readiness Level (TRL) Explanation
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| Deliverable Type | Market Research |
|---|---|
| Author | Sharath Thirumalai |
| Industries | Environment |
| No Index | No |
| Is Prebook | No |
| Keyword 1 | Water Management Technologies |
| Keyword 2 | Water Contaminant Removal Trends |
| Keyword 3 | Environmental Technology Trends |
| Podcast | No |
| WIP Number | DADA-01-00-00-00 |
Growth Opportunities in Water Management Technologies for Efficient Removal of Recalcitrant Contaminants
Technological Innovations Enable Adherence to Wastewater Regulations
11-Jan-2024
Global
Market Research



