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Food Processing March 2011 Dave Fusaro |
Clean Your Wastewater Before the City Does Pretreatment technologies can pay for themselves in surcharge savings. |
Food Processing April 2009 |
MRO Q&A: Fruit and Vegetable Water Waste In terms of effluent and water waste, what does the fruit and vegetable sector have to measure for? Does the industry have to report this information to anyone? |
Food Processing July 2008 |
Food processing plant experts answer your questions July's MRO Q&A answers questions about middle management, fresh produce recalls and environmental concerns in the food processing industry. |
Food Engineering April 1, 2008 Kevin T. Higgins |
Anaerobic gas and cash Soaring energy prices and the greening of corporate America couldn't have come at a better time for mobilized film technology for wastewater. |
Food Engineering January 1, 2008 Kevin T. Higgins |
Water Gets Its Due The sustainability bandwagon is groaning under the weight of corporations climbing aboard. The time for water resource management has never been better. |
Food Engineering July 30, 2009 Kevin T. Higgins |
Water Efficiency: Don't Let Your Liquid Assets Go Down the Drain Food processors confront both financial and behavioral issues when they implement green water practices. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2006 |
29th Annual Plant Construction Survey Measuring Up to a Higher Standard Today's food processors are focusing on the fundamentals -- clean, safe, economical -- but with a twist. The stakes -- and responsibilities -- are much higher. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2007 John S. McClenahen |
Facilities Management: Waste Not Want Not? Processing water plays a large role in the manufacturing process, and the equipment and services involved in that process have grown to become a multibillion-dollar market. Learn what U.S. manufacturers need to do to be competitive players. |
Food Processing March 2006 Mike Pehanich |
Cleaning without chemicals Sometimes a cleaning and sanitizing solution is not a solution, it's steam, gas or a silver bullet. |
Food Engineering July 30, 2009 Carolyn Chapin |
The Changing Face of Site Selection Food and beverage manufacturers must plan for change when selecting processing facility sites in today's volatile economy. |
Food Processing March 2013 David Phillips |
Food Manufacturers Seek Alternatives for Wastewater Treatment In-plant wastewater and odor treatment continues to migrate to a biological systems approaches. |
Food Engineering April 2, 2007 |
The New Lagoon A General Mills frozen pizza facility finds an innovative treatment solution for difficult surface water. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2007 Joyce Fassl |
30th Annual Construction Survey Projects Go Green New construction projects are at their highest level since 2002, as processors demand energy-efficient, environmentally friendly plants. |
Chemistry World October 31, 2011 Phillip Broadwith |
Pee-powered fuel cell turns urine to energy Urine-powered fuel cells could generate electricity and reclaim essential nutrients directly from human and animal waste, say UK scientists. |
Food Engineering November 4, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Tech Update: The Economics of Filtration A number of factors, economic and sanitary, are prompting food companies to upgrade filter systems and, in some cases, replace other technologies with advanced filtration. |
Technology Research News March 24, 2004 |
Bacteria make clean power The Penn State researchers' microbial fuel cell is fueled by wastewater skimmed from the settling pond of a treatment plant, and the process of drawing electricity from the microbial action taking place in the wastewater also cleans the water. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2007 John S. McClenahen |
Dirty Water Water treatment industry growing as national housing starts have increased over the past decade.. |
Food Processing May 2005 Mike Pehanich |
How to retrofit an aging plant Food processors looking to retrofit aging facilities to get more out of their capital budgets should heed these "rules of retro" before they bring their plants into the 21st century. |
IndustryWeek October 1, 2008 Jill Jusko |
Putting Waste to Work Forget the landfill. Manufacturers are getting better at finding ways to reuse their waste. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 17, 2005 Garry Emmons |
Turning on the Tap: Is Water the Next Oil? Many competing forces lead some experts to believe that water will replace petroleum as the twenty-first century's core commodity, with nations rich in water enjoying enormous social and economic advantages over those that are not. |
Wired May 22, 2009 Nate Berg |
Deja Poo: The Living Machine Sewage System Picture the lobby atrium of a new, green building, one filled with leafy plants and trees. Now imagine that those trees are growing in waste collected from the building's toilets. |
Inc. November 2008 Adam Bluestein |
Blue is the New Green The world is running out of clean water. The prospect of widespread shortages is creating a new kind of new economy. Meet 11 entrepreneurs who are ahead of the curve, finding opportunity in the largest emerging market the world has seen in some time. |
Chemistry World February 7, 2012 James Urquhart |
Treating hospital wastewater Researchers have found that hospital wastewater containing low concentrations of pharmaceutical compounds can be treated using a membrane bioreactor - an established method of biologically treating wastewater. |
Food Processing November 2011 |
MRO Q&A: Building a Successful Energy Cost Savings Program How can I build a successful energy cost savings program and get all areas within the organization working together on this critical effort? What have others organizations found to be the quickest items for results? |
Chemistry World September 2008 Maria Burke |
Something in the water Drugs have been finding their way into our water supplies for as long as they have been in use, so should we worry? |
Popular Mechanics February 14, 2008 Logan Ward |
Wastewater Could Help Fight U.S. Drought and Anthrax As the country's growing urban populations draw down scarce water supplies, wastewater is starting to look pretty appetizing to American city planners. |
Chemistry World March 4, 2011 Carl Saxton |
Real-world treatment for dye-contaminated effluents US scientists have found that a dye oxidation process using low levels of an iron catalyst could be used to degrade highly contaminated wastewater under ambient conditions. |
Food Engineering September 1, 2006 |
Plant Openings & Expansions Unilever North American Ice Cream to upgrade its Hagerstown, MD plant... Nestle selects site for $359 million factory and distribution center... Dakota Provisions opens new turkey processing plant... etc. |
Chemistry World June 12, 2015 Emma Davies |
Pill endocrine disruptor cleaned up by catalyst A family of iron-based catalysts could cut the cost of removing an endocrine disrupting synthetic estrogen used in oral contraceptive pills from water supplies in half. |
Popular Mechanics December 9, 2009 Adam Hadhazy |
Cutting Water Use to Curb Carbon Dioxide By taking water conservation further, and by thinking differently about how we treat and move water, analysts believe the U.S. can achieve dramatic reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions fairly quickly. |
Chemistry World September 2008 Victoria Gill |
Editorial: Liquid asset Many predict that the major conflicts of the coming century will be fought over water. And the unpredictable impacts of climate change mean that we cannot simply rely on surface water resources to continue to be replenished by rain. |
The Motley Fool December 14, 2011 Amanda Buchanan |
Something Valuable in the Water for Investors American Water and Aqua America are well-positioned to benefit from green initiatives. |
Chemistry World March 27, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
Sewage offers attractive source of precious metals Sewage sludge from water treatment plants contains precious metals like gold, silver and platinum, as well as industrial metals such as copper and zinc, researchers at the US Geological Survey have found. |
Chemistry World September 2008 Elizabeth Milson |
Sustainable water Water treated to an appropriate standard is required not only for drinking but also to satisfy all our domestic, industrial and agricultural needs. |
Information Today February 9, 2012 |
EPA Releases New Tool With Information About U.S. Water Pollution Developed under President Barack Obama's transparency initiative, the Discharge Monitoring Report Pollutant Loading Tool brings together millions of records and allows for easy searching and mapping of water pollution by local area. |
Chemistry World December 2007 Alasdair Maclean |
Comment: Before the Taps Run Dry Population growth, climate change and pollution are placing huge pressures on the global supply of clean water. Chemists can help. |
Chemistry World July 8, 2009 Lewis Brindley |
New solution for dye wastewater pollution Stopping chemical dye waste from polluting rivers and waterways could be much easier in future, thanks to a cheap and recyclable metal oxide cleaning system developed by researchers in the US and China. |
Chemistry World August 22, 2012 James Urquhart |
Turning wastewater into food German researchers have developed an efficient and environmentally friendly process to recover phosphate from wastewater for use in fertilizer. |