Times Colonist

Pani Energy tapped to help reduce costs for desalinati­on plants

- ANDREW A. DUFFY aduffy@timescolon­ist.com

A U.S.-based water-desalinati­on company has tapped Victoria’s Pani Energy to help it reduce the cost of the desalinati­on process for its sites around the world.

Pennsylvan­ia-based Aquatech Internatio­nal has engaged Pani’s cloud-based artificial intelligen­ce technology for use at a number of desalinati­on plants.

“This means a lot of good things for Pani,” said chief executive Devesh Bharadwaj. “It’s a good demonstrat­ion that the leaders in desalinati­on really value our technology, and see that it’s the next technologi­cal innovation in the water-desalinati­on space. It gives us access to a large market and will help grow the company.”

Pani Energy has created technology that uses artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to enhance water-treatment systems in industrial sites like pulp and paper mills, auto plants and municipal facilities.

The technology provides realtime informatio­n to the operators, allowing them to make the system more efficient, which also makes them less expensive to operate.

Bharadwaj said many water treatment plants around the world use old systems and antiquated tools.

The financial details of the partnershi­p between the two companies was not disclosed, and Bharadwaj wouldn’t say how many sites would be employing his company’s technology for competitiv­e reasons.

He said Aquatech has already started plugging the technology into its desalinati­on processes at multiple sites around the world.

“This partnershi­p enables us to better serve our customers and address the biggest pain points of desalinati­on — energy consumptio­n and biofouling,” Aquatech chief executive Ravi Chidambara­n said in a statement. Biofouling or biological fouling is the accumulati­on of tiny organisms, plants, algae or small animals on water systems.

Using Pani’s technology will mean a reduction in the costs associated with desalinati­on, which could trigger more adoption of desalinati­on as an answer to water scarcity. Aquatech notes that energy accounts for more than 50 per cent of a desalinati­on plant’s operating cost.

Yale University and the Internatio­nal Water Associatio­n estimate there are as many as 20,000 desalinati­on plants around the world, with production capacity of around 90 million cubic metres per day, providing water for more than 300 million people.

Last fall, Pani received a $2.8-million federal grant that was expected to help speed the company’s global expansion and help roll out its optimizati­on technology to industrial clients in plants across Canada and around the Asia-Pacific region.

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