General Electric (GE) has added a fresh
environmental target to its high-profile
Ecomagination green initiative,
committing to cut its fresh water use by a fifth by 2012.
The engineering conglomerate said the goal represented one of the "most
aggressive corporate water-reduction targets to date" and is expected to save
7.4 million cubic metres per year, enough to fill more than 3,000 Olympic-sized
swimming pools.
GE chairman and chief executive Jeff Immelt said that the company would use
many of the water use assessment tools and water conservation technologies it
offers to customers to achieve the goal, including systems for re-using treated
waste water in boilers, heat exchangers, cooling units and manufacturing
processes.
As well as delivering environmental benefits there is also a strong business
case for deploying such technologies, according to Jeff Garwood, president and
CEO of GE's water and process technologies division. "Water conservation and
re-use can be a valuable tool for customers to reduce operating costs and create
new sources of revenue," he explained, adding that water-saving processes and
technologies allow firms to "minimise their exposure to water scarcity, reduce
costs and water footprints".
The announcement came as GE published a new white paper outlining a range of
best practices that the company believes should be adopted by policymakers to
promote water conservations.
The paper, entitled Addressing Water Scarcity Through Recycling and
Reuse: A Menu for Policymakers, urges regional and national policymakers to
provide more information on water saving to end users, offer more incentives to
encourage water conservation, and require higher levels of water recycling and
re-use.
"Policymakers are looking for ways to expand water recycling and re-use
initiatives, but until now finding information on how best to do that was tough,
" said Garwood. "By providing a menu of policy tools ranging from less-intensive
mechanisms, such as public outreach programs, to more proactive, regulatory
approaches, our paper will help governments, communities and businesses
effectively evaluate their options."
The move comes just a day after a major
new
report from the US government warned that many western states would face
serious water shortages over the coming decades as a result of climate change.
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