Pollution pays
The Mahajans, a family of four who live in Vasant Kunj, South Delhi, daily waste 240 litres of water to get 30 litres from their reverse osmosis (RO) purifier six times a day. “I bought the purifier thinking it will end all our water woes. It gives us clean drinking water but I feel guilty about the waste,” says Meenakshi Mahajan. ‘Experts’ have informed the family that the wastage is quite normal for such water-cleaning gadgets.
“I first had a candle filter for Rs 600 but there were problems. I then bought a purifier with ultra violet (UV) technology in the mid-1990s for Rs 5,500, but I was not happy because I noticed a white layer on top of the purified water. I then started buying bottled water for Rs 50 per 10 litre,” says Meenakshi.
Bottled water didn’t seem safe so the family changed their device again. “I bought the RO purifier for Rs 22,000. We have to pay the company Rs 3,200 each year for maintenance,” she says.
The total dissolved solids (TDS) in the water Mahajans drink is now 20 ppm (parts per million). In other words, the family is drinking water as pure as distilled water, but which is also shorn of any minerals, and so nutritive properties. Is this the best the Indian water treatment industry has to offer?
New trade
Govt can’t clean, companies step in
Water treatment is an upcoming business in developing countries like India. As water gets more and more contaminated, treating it has become an industry. Delhi-based consultant firm EQMS India (P) Ltd estimates that India’s environmental service market is worth about US $2.5 billion to $3 billion, of which treating wastewater (including sewage) alone can fetch US $1.5 billion (Rs 150 crore).
“Municipalities have failed to provide clean drinking water and our water resources are becoming polluted. Pesticides seep into groundwater, which is then supplied to households. We keep hearing of drinking water mixing with sewage. People do not want to take any risk and prefer treating water at their end,” says Rajesh Sharma, managing director of Mumbai-based Ion Exchange (India) Ltd, one of India’s largest water treatment company. Municipalities provide chlorinated water but this only takes care of bacterial contamination. The new threat to drinking water, however, comes from chemicals, pesticides and other toxic compounds. Municipalities don’t check for these, and the guidelines they follow for water treatment aren’t mandatory (see: Down To Earth, ‘Colanisation’s Dirty Dozen’, August 15, 2003).
The unsafe water supplied by municipalities has brought great business to private companies, which offer all kinds of water treatment solutions. The total market for household water treatment is India is estimated to be Rs 700 crore (see graph on next page: Unorganised sector). A market very lucrative to multinational companies (MNC), which don’t have a household water treatment market in their own countries. So, they make tie-ups with Indian companies. The deal is: MNCs provide the technology and Indian companies use it in their devices.
“We started in 1964 as the subsidiary of a UK-based company but by 1984 we diversified and became an Indian company. Today we offer all kinds of water treatment solutions,” says Sharma. Eureka Forbes, which launched its Aquaguard Classic in 1982, used to import the devices but then started manufacturing them in India. But the technology remains foreign.
Watching the success of these companies, many new ones have joined the bandwagon. “The unorganised sector has about 200 companies which manufacture household gadgets for purifying water. Most of them have imported the technology and assemble the units here,” says Ajay Popat, vice president, corporate marketing, Ion Exchange.
B K Agarwal, chief of operations at Delhi-based Triveni Engineering and Industries Ltd, says, “We import the technologies from our parent company, United States Filter Corporation, in the US and manufacture the devices here.”
Ceramic-based candle filters, ultra violet disinfection, resin filters and membrane filters are some of the devices which these companies offer for clean water (see table: Pick your water cleaner). “Three years back, we launched RO-based filters as pesticides in water have become a big challenge. Pristine, a four-column filter based on RO and activated carbon, is able to rid water of such pollutants,” claims Sharma.
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Today, marketing water treatment devices has become a science. “A gadget cannot be sold just over the counter. Water quality differs from place to place. It is important to first test water and then take a decision. Before selling a product, our engineers test the water quality at a household and then recommend the best option. If this isn’t done, it can choke the membrane and supply unclean water,” says Sharma.
These companies expect a huge business in membrane technology and activated carbon process, especially after the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) proved that bottled water and soft drinks contain pesticide residues. Discussions are on with Pepsico India Holdings Private Limited and Coca-Cola India to set up RO systems at their bottling plants, says Popat. Ridding water of pesticides will be next step in the treatment business.
Pesticides: Tastes like profit
Till now, treatment companies had never thought that they would have to deal with pesticides. Sharma says, “To be very frank, we had never tested if our products can deal with pesticide residues. It is only after CSE"s report that we tested our Pristine filter.” The tests in August 2003 found some reduction in levels of pesticides.
Indian Railways too claims that its bottling plant for Rail Neer
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