The Herald (South Africa)

Aspen mulls water supply options

Pharmaceut­ical giant looking into alternativ­e sources in PE, including purificati­on and desalinati­on

- Siyabonga Sesant sesants@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

‘ We are committed to . . . feasible water conservati­on and recycling projects

WITH supply dams at a crisis level, one of Nelson Mandela Bay’s biggest employers is investigat­ing alternativ­e water sources such as purificati­on of borehole water and the desalinati­on of seawater as back-up options.

Aspen Pharmacare used 188 000kl of water in the last financial year, 62 000kl shy of filling a 10-lane Olympic-sized swimming pool.

The pharmaceut­ical giant said while all its water was provided by the municipali­ty, it was exploring other options for the near future.

“The municipali­ty has an integrated network of supply dams that supplies the Korsten area, where the Port Elizabeth site is located,” Aspen group chief executive Stephen Saad said.

“The Port Elizabeth site is investigat­ing long-term alternativ­e water sources including purificati­on of borehole water and desalinati­on of seawater.

“The site has engaged with the municipali­ty with respect to identifyin­g potential solutions together with neighbouri­ng companies.”

Water is a vital resource in the company’s manufactur­ing processes.

“Water scarcity is a global risk and one that we have increasing­ly been exposed to due to the severe drought conditions in the Western and Eastern Cape.

“As a scarce resource, and in line with our environmen­tal management principles, we are committed to using water responsibl­y by implementi­ng feasible water conservati­on and recycling projects.

“As the saying by Peter Drucker [worldrenow­ned for his innovative thinking in business management] goes, ‘you can’t manage it if you can’t measure it’,” he said.

Saad said all Aspen sites were responsibl­e for measuring and reporting all the water consumed and discharged from its site.

This, he said, created a practical base for setting effective SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and time-bound) projects to reduce water consumptio­n.

Aspen earlier this month launched a new R1-billion high-containmen­t facility in Port Elizabeth, creating 220 new jobs. The JSE-list- ed company said the high-containmen­t facility and a sterile facility that is under constructi­on would together create 500 jobs.

The next investment phase – the multibilli­on-rand sterile facility – would create 280 jobs.

At the launch, Nelson Mandela Bay mayor Athol Trollip said the investment gave the municipali­ty’s credit rating a significan­t boost.

“It’s fantastic that the city’s credit rating has improved [because] that can only happen when people believe there’s economic stability and obviously the running of our finances in the city has led to that,” he said.

 ??  ?? STEPHEN SAAD
STEPHEN SAAD

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