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IWA World Water Congress

& Exhibition 2014

Shaping our water future

Congress programme
& exhibition catalogue
21 - 26 september, 2014
Lisbon, portugal
www.iwa2014lisbon.org

Get the World Water


Congress 2014
mobile app now!

Principal Sponsor

Platinum Sponsor

Institutional Sponsor

PLANTING
THE SEEDS OF GREAT
IDEAS IS EASIER
TO DO TOGETHER.

Welcome to Lisbon

& the IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition 2014

MAKING THE PLANET


SUSTAINABLE
IS THE BEST JOB
ON EARTH

Thats why SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT has already organized five idea


competitions in France and in Morocco to provide solutions that
best meet citizens expectations. As a result, the Group and local
government agencies were able to exchange ideas on themes
as varied as the fight against illegal dumps and the reintroduction
of water and nature into a neighborhood. Discover more examples
of citizen involvement on emag.suez-environnement.com

SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT Tour CB 21 - 16 place de lIris, 92040 Paris La Dfense Cedex RCS Nanterre 433 466 570

We are delighted to welcome you to the IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition, being held for the first
time in Portugals beautiful, cultured and ancient capital, Lisbon.
During the coming week, water professionals from around the world will meet, greet and exchange new
ideas about the latest innovations, best practices and emerging trends in the water sector and beyond.
There will be opportunities, both formal and informal, to connect with other water professionals, build your
networks and form partnerships to address the challenges facing the water sector around the world.
Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative approaches and the adoption of new
paradigms and technologies. The Congress programme, diligently put together by the Programme
Committee and IWA Secretariat, will challenge the status quo and provide insight and inspiration for
cooperation and collaboration on research and practical applications.
The five thematic tracks, with over 300 technical sessions, provide opportunities to address a range of
issues covering the entire water cycle. Many of these sessions will help you to update your knowledge with
the latest findings, developments and innovations. Congress workshops fulfil a complementary role, helping
participants to quickly review progress on an issue and gain insight into future trends.
The Congress constantly seeks to innovate and to build on the successes of previous years. In Lisbon
we have expanded the number of dedicated Leadership Forums. Bringing leaders of specific thematic or
geographic areas together facilitates in-depth discussion of the major issues, explores cross-disciplinary
collaboration and enables solution finding.
A first at this Congress is the Water Regulators Forum. Regulators from around the world will discuss the
actions required by principle water stakeholders, to establish good regulation as part of a sound water
governance system and to stimulate innovation. Similarly, Keynote Speakers are thought leaders from within
and beyond the water sector; they will spark debate and set the daily agenda.
For exposure to technology and to connect with the people with the solutions, the IWA World Water
Exhibition is the place to be. A one-stop-shop showcasing over 200 world-leading companies and
institutions, the Exhibition provides a unique opportunity to network and learn about innovative applications,
integration of solutions and new business opportunities.
The IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition is primarily about bringing people together in an environment
that is creative and productive. Our sponsors and partners, including the Lisbon organising committee, make
this possible. We would like to thank them for their continued support, and their leadership and commitment
to the water sector and its professionals.
The IWA, and the World Water Congress, are ready to address the water challenges we collectively face.
We come together in Lisbon to innovate and shape a better water future for all. We hope you will enjoy and
benefit from joining us on this journey.

Glen Daigger, President, IWA, & Jaime Melo Baptista, Congress President

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

Overvview

Welcome
to EPAL

Programme Overview
As a result of over 140 years of history, EPAL is the reference
water supply company in Portugal, providing drinking water to
3 million people (30% of the population) as well as rendering
other services related to the urban water cycle, combining a
set of skills of recognized quality and innovation. EPAL has
developed a new management strategy, driven by the use of
best practice methods with the objective to improve overall
efficiency of the company and attain sustainable management
from social, environmental and economic point of view.
It is for this reason that EPALs participation in the WWC, the
largest and most prominent international water sector event, is
especially important for the company, allowing us to share our
technological and efficient solutions with the water community.
Climate change impact on water resources, reducing water
losses within distribution systems and increasing customer
water use efficiency are areas in which EPAL has been
demonstrating continuous innovation.
The Lisbon WWC will also be a tap water congress with the
distribution of reusable bottles and tap water systems installed
within the conference venue. This is only possible due to the
safe, high quality water supplied by EPAL, subject to more than
a thousand analyses per day.
We look forward to seeing you in Lisbon!

Jos Sardinha, President,


Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres (EPAL)

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Programme Overview

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change


Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources
Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

monday 22

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

Auditorium 2

Room 1.07

09:00 - 10:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

10:00 - 10:30
10:30 - 12:00

Coffee Break

session 1

12:00 - 13.30
13:30 - 15:00
session 2

15:00 - 15:30
15:30 - 17:00
session 3

Room 1.08

Room 5A

Room 5B

Room 5C

Room1.09

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling (Gapminder Institute)
2. Panel Discussion

regulators
forum

Auditorium 8

Auditorium 3

Auditorium 4

Room 3B

Room 3C

Auditorium 6

Auditorium 7

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

New Techniques
for Water Quality
Assessment

Can Water & Sanitation


Save Humankind Once
Again

Optimizing Wastewater
Treatment Processes

Biological Phosphorus
Removal

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Optimising Water
Resources

Can Water & Sanitation


Save Humankind Once
Again

Biological Wastewater
Treatment Processes

Membrane Experience:
from past to future

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Next Generation
Technologies for
Wastewater Treatment

Membrane Bioreactors

Auditorium 6

Auditorium 7

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Aerobic Granular
Sludge Reactors

Biological Nutrient
Removal

WS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Aerobic Granular
Sludge - mapping
application & needs

Nitrogen Removal

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Managing Wastewater
Sludge

Future of Desalination

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling (Gapminder Institute)
2. Panel Discussion

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Investments for 2020


in Portuguese-speaking
Countries

Modelling Processes
& Systems

Lakes & Reservoirs

Advanced Membrane
Technologies for Water
Reuse

Phosphorus Recovery

Energy & Carbon


Neutral Utilities

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Policies for Water


Resource Management

Benchmarking of
Control & Monitoring
Strategies for the Urban
Wastewater System

Managing the Coastal


Zone

Potable Reuse
Schemes

Successful Nutrients
Removal

The Energy Gain from


Wastewater

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Decision Support
Systems

Managing Water across


Boundaries

Benefits & Problems of


Water Recycling

Value from PHA & other


Chemicals

New Routes to Energy


Recovery

water & industry


forum

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Cities Under Climate


Change

Objective Evaluation
Systems for Level of
Water Service Delivery
by Cities

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Managing Urban Floods


& Harvesting Rainwater

Innovative Contracting
for Service Delivery

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Urban Resilience &


Adaptation to Climate
Change

Management Models
for Water Utilities

Lunch
regulators
forum

water & industry


forum

Coffee Break
regulators
forum

Pricing Policies &


Effective Governance as
Key Elements for Water
Services Sustainable
Financing

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:15 - 18:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenaries

water & industry


forum

Human Right to Water


& Sanitation the IWA
Manual

Optimising Water
Resources

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenaries

1. Observing earth & looking forward: radically rethinking our options for the future. Dennis Bushnell (NASA)
2. The future impact of freshwater management in small-scale agriculture. Jeremy Bird (IWMI)

1. Observing earth & looking forward: radically rethinking our options for the future. Dennis Bushnell (NASA)
2. The future impact of freshwater management in small-scale agriculture. Jeremy Bird (IWMI)

tuesday 23
Auditorium 2

Room 1.07

09:00 - 10:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

10:00 - 10:30
10:30 - 12:00

Coffee Break

session 1

regulators
forum

UTILITY LEADERS
FORUM

session 2

15:00 - 15:30
15:30 - 17:00
session 3

Room 5B

Room 5C

Room1.09

Auditorium 8

Auditorium 3

Auditorium 4

Room 3B

Room 3C

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

1. Utilities & the need for efficient and sustainable water services. Sue Murphy (Water Corporation of Western Australia)
2. Panel Discussion

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Impact of Regulations
on the Implementation
of Water Reuse
Projects

Big Data & Analytics for


the Water Sector

Connecting
Watersheds with the
Urban Landscape

Tackling Water Loss

Energy & Resource


Recovery from Waste
Water & Biosolids

Biogas, Co-Digestion &


Co-Generation

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

WS:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Is Regulation Improving
Water Services?

Using Data to Drive


Improvement

Connecting
Watersheds with the
Urban Landscape

Safe & SuRe Networks

Lessons from Portugal

Biogas, Co-Digestion &


Co-Generation

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
ALTERNATIVE
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

From Lisbon to Korea:


the 7th World Water
Forum

Greenhouse Gas
Emissions from
Wastewater Treatment
Plants

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Eco-Efficient Industrial
Water Use & Reuse

Moving to Sustainability
- Urban Systems

Infrastructure Asset
Management

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Water Recycling for


Industry

Moving to Sustainability
- Modelling

Infrastructure Asset
Management

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Removing Inorganics
from Industrial Water
Supply

Moving to Sustainability
- Case Studies

Infrastructure Asset
Management

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

Drinking Water Systems

Disinfection Byproducts

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

Microbial Impacts on
Drinking Water Quality

Disinfection Processes
& By-products

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

Water Cascades Fit for


Purpose

Disinfection Processes

Lunch
UTILITY LEADERS
FORUM

RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Coffee Break
UTILITY LEADERS
FORUM

Financing Innovation in
the Water Cycle

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:15 - 18:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

Room 5A

1. Utilities & the need for efficient and sustainable water services. Sue Murphy (Water Corporation of Western Australia)
2. Panel Discussion

Auditorium 1

12:00 - 13.30
13:30 - 15:00

Room 1.08

Using Data &


Technology to
Overcome Water
Management
Challenges

Planning to Cope with


Floods

1. The social dimensions of innovation in water. Dipak Gyawali (Nepal Academy of Science & Technology)
2. Panel Discussion

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Decisions Now for


Water Networks in
2030

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

1. The social dimensions of innovation in water. Dipak Gyawali (Nepal Academy of Science & Technology)
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

Programme Overview

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change


Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources
Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

wednesday 24

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

Auditorium 2

Room 1.07

09:00 - 10:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

10:00 - 10:30
10:30 - 12:00

Coffee Break

session 1

Room 1.08

session 2

session 3

Room 5C

Room1.09

Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech & Innovation

CLEANTECH
FORUM

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

Auditorium 8

Auditorium 3

Auditorium 4

Room 3B

Room 3C

Auditorium 6

Auditorium 7

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

WS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Drinking Water Quality Contaminants


& Cures

Water Safety Plans

Activated Sludge
Systems

Alternative Technologies
to Improve Microbial
Control of Drinking
Water

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

WS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Micropollutants

Water Safety Plans


Decade

Anaerobic Digestion

Nanotechnology
in Urban Water
Systems: Application,
Implications, &
Analytical Needs

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

WS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Micropollutants

Sanitation Safety
Plans: An Emerging
Framework for Improved
Health

Anaerobic Ammonium
Oxidation

Innovative Adsorbents

Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech & Innovation

AFRICA FORUM

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Groundwater
Management & Risk

Efficient Use of Water

Resource Recovery
Innovations

Greenhouse Gas
Emissions from BNR
Wastewater Treatment
Plants

Pharmaceutical
Industrial Wastewater

Transitioning Urban
Water Systems to
Meet New Imperatives
Through 2050

Performance
Assessment &
Benchmarking Learning from Best
Practices

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Dealing with
Groundwater
Contamination

ReachIing a Reliable
Efficient Water Supply

Biosolids Treatment &


Beneficial Reuse

Solutions Across the


Water-Energy-Food
Nexus

Agro-industry
Wastewater Treatment

Integrating Water
System Design
with Long-term
Urban Planning &
Development

Right Price, Best


Performance

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Ecological Restoration
Projects

Reaching a Reliable
Efficient Water Supply

Biosolids Treatment &


Beneficial Reuse

Optimising WaterEnergy-Food
Interactions

Metals

Water Sensitive Urban


Infrastructure

Right Price, Best


Performance

Lunch
CLEANTECH
FORUM

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

AFRICA FORUM

Tariffs & Affordability Trends & Challenges

15:00 - 15:30
15:30 - 17:00

Room 5B

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenary

Planning & Pricing


Water Services

12:00 - 13.30
13:30 - 15:00

Room 5A

Coffee Break
CLEANTECH
FORUM

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

AFRICA FORUM

Water Governance
& Stakeholder
Engagement

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:15 - 18:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote PlenarY

Auditorium 1: Keynote PlenarY

1. Policy & structural reform for innovative water services in the emerging economies. Francisco Nunes Correia (Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon)
2. Panel Discussion

1. Policy & structural reform for innovative water services in the emerging economies. Francisco Nunes Correia (Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon)
2. Panel Discussion

thursday 25
Auditorium 2

Room 1.07

09:00 - 10:00

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenaries

10:00 - 10:30
10:30 - 12:00

Coffee Break

session 1

session 2

MENA FORUM

WS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

Room 5B

Room 5C

Room1.09

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

Monitoring and Control


Systems

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Biotechnology &
its applications
(Biocluster)

TS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Implementing Demand
Management

From Push to Pull in


Practice

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

WS:
RE-CHARTING THE
COURSE OF WATER
RESOURCES:

Dealing with the


Complex Interrelation
of Intermittent Supply &
Water Losses

Rethinking the Future:


Making Resource
Recovery Happen

Auditorium 8

Auditorium 3

Auditorium 4

Room 3B

Room 3C

Auditorium 6

Auditorium 7

Auditorium 1: Keynote Plenaries

1. Breakthroughs from the new molecular biology: how can we apply novel molecular methods in water engineering? Per H Nielsen (Aalborg University)
2. Resource recovery: putting new ideas into practice. Willy Verstraete (University of Ghent)

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Biofilm Processes

Advanced Water
Treatment

Urban Stormwater on
the Road to 2050

Cooperation for WASH


Sector Capacity
Development

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

WS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Biofilm Processes

The Latest
Developments in Low
Pressure Membranes

Resilient &
Decentralised Urban
Systems

Knowledge & Capacity:


Strengthen it. Retain it.
Gain from it.

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

Cyanobacteria

Risk Assessment

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

TS:
WATER QUALITY,
SAFETY & HUMAN
HEALTH:

Nanoparticles

Health Related Water


Microbiology

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Advanced Oxidation
Processes

Particle Separation

TS:
Treatment
& Processes:

WS:
Treatment
& Processes:

Absorption Processes

Advanced Processes
for the Removal of
Micro Pollutants:
Lessons Learned From
Full-scale Plants &
Remaining Issues

Lunch
MENA FORUM

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

TS:
GOOD GOVERNANCE,
SUSTAINABLE
FINANCE & ICT:

Customer
Communication
Creating Better
Services

Modelling & Systems


Analysis

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:30 - 17:00

Auditorium 1: closing ceremony

Room 5A

1. Breakthroughs from the new molecular biology: how can we apply novel molecular methods in water engineering? Per H Nielsen (Aalborg University)
2. Resource recovery: putting new ideas into practice. Willy Verstraete (University of Ghent)

Stakeholder
Engagement - Can
the Water Sector
Learn From the Energy
Sector?

12:00 - 13.30
13:30 - 15:00

Room 1.08

WS:
CITIES, UTILITIES
& INDUSTRIES:

Industrial Application
of Microbial-EcologyFocused Monitoring
Tools for Wastewater
& Drinking Water
Treatment

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 1: closing ceremony

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

Floor Plan

Information
Practical & Useful

Room

Room

0.05

3D

Room

Room

0.03

0.04

Ground Floor

Room

3B

Useful Information

Room

0.02

Hall 1

Room

0.01

Auditorium
VII

casa das
mquinas

MEDICAL
SERVICE

Posto
Mdico

Hall 3

arrumos

Loja

Arrumos

Foyer E

Room

3D

Room

Room

0.03

0.04

Room

3B

Room

0.02

HallEXHIBITION
1

W.C.

W.C.

Room

Foyer B

0.01

Auditorium
VII

W.C.-D

casa das
mquinas

Room

0.07

Posto
Mdico

Foyer E

Room

MEDICAL
SERVICE

Loja

Bar

MB

Arrumos

0.06

0.08

Bar

Room

0.07

Room

Foyer C
P

W.C.

W.C.

Hall 2

W.C.-D

Foyer B

Foyer A

despensa

2,80m

Hall 2

Foyer A

EXHIBITION

Ground
Floor Floor
Ground
S.L.A.T.

Roa
om
5C .
Sala
3.C.
Sal
5.C
5C

copa

Room

First Floor

Hall 5

PAVILHO 5

Room

Sala5B
5.B .

Posters

Room 5B

Auditorium
IV

Auditorium
I

Servios

Sala5A
5.A.
Room

Room 5A

Room

Room

1.09

1.14
W.C.

Hall 4

esc.7

Room

1.15

Room

1.13

Sala 1.13

Roa
om
5C .
Sala
3.C.
Sal
5.C
5C

copa

Room

Foyer D

Hall 5

PAVILHO 5

Room

Sala5B
5.B .

W.C.

secretaria

Auditorium
III

W.C.

Auditorium
VIII

Servios

Sala5A
5.A.

Auditorium
AuditrioII II

arrumos

W.C.

1.07
Room

1.06

Posters

1.11

Sala 1. 11

Room

Room

Hall 4

Room

1.12
Room

Auditorium
I

Room

1.05

Room

Room

1.09

1.14

Hall 4Room

esc.7

Foyer E

Room

1.15

1.13

Sala 1.13

Foyer D

C
secretaria

Galeria Hall 2 Floor 1

secretaria

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

W.C.

W.C.

arrumos

W.C.

W.C.

Sala1.10
1.10

Room

1.08

Room

GALERY

Posters

Room

1.11

Sala 1. 11

Room

1.04

arrumos

Room

1.07

Hall 4

Room

1.12

Sala 1.12

1.06

Room

1.03
Room

Room

1.02

1.05

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

Auditorium
AuditrioII II

W.C.

W.C.
W.C.

Galeria Hall 2 Floor 1

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

GALERY

Sala1.10
1.10

Room

1.04

arrumos

Room

1.03

GALERY

Room

1.02

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

W.C.

W.C.
W.C.

W.C.

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL


GALERY

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

C
STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

10

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

W.C.

W.C.

Room

A taxi desk will be located in Foyer C in


the registration area.
Wifi access

Shuttles/Transfers

In your conference bag you can find a


flyer with the shuttle information.

Free WIFE will be available throughout


the Convention Centre

Sightseeing tours

The agency Abreu has a desk in Foyer


C in the registration area to book
sightseeing tours.

Congress mobile app

Contacts

Congress Director

Want the IWA World Water Congress


& Exhibition at your fingertips? Get the
official mobile app. A one-stop-shop for
the entire Congress, the app offers a
comprehensive guide to every workshop,
technical session, presentation, event
and exhibitor. Search for and connect
with other delegates using the in-built
networking tool; navigate your way
around using the interactive floor plan;
and share your thoughts and insights
using the social media widgets.

IWA Global Operations

Keith Robertson
International Water Association
phone: + 31 70 315 07 81
email: keith.robertson@iwahq.org

NewBabylon DenHaag
Anna van Buerenplein 48, 11th floor
2595 DA Den Haag
The Netherlands
phone: +31 70 315 07 88
email: water@IWAhq.org

Technical Programme
Paul Nagle / Joo Grilo
International Water Association
phone: +31 70 315 57 82
email: programme2014lisbon@iwahq.org

Social media

Planning to use social media while at the


conference? Join the conversation:

Room 5A

W.C.

Room

Morning coffee, lunch and afternoon


coffee is served in the exhibition areas in
Hall 2 and 3

Room

1.08

Sala 1.12

Posters

Room 5B

secretaria

Auditorium
IV

Medical assistance is located on the


ground floor in Hall 1.

Practical Information

S.L.A.T.

Foyer E

On the ground floor you can find 2


ATM machines; 1 in Foyer C where the
registration area is and 1 in Foyer A
where the lunch buffet is installed, which
you can reach through exhibition hall 2.

MB

MB

Auditorium
VIII

Medical assistance

You can find a lunch voucher per day in


your registration envelope.

Auditorium
III

ATM

Abreu will also be able to advise you


about Lisbon.

Catering and refreshments


P

EXHIBITION

0.06

At the registration desk you can book


any extra tickets for social events.

despensa

EXHIBITION
Room

Hall 3

arrumos

2,80m

0.08

Auditorium
VI

ENTRANCE

Room

Extra tickets

For questions about accommodation,


you can go to the registration desk.

Taxi

Foyer C

Room

0.05

Accommodation queries

MB

ENTRANCE

Auditorium
VI

#iwa2014lisbon
#waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/
internationwaterassociation
www.linkedin.com/company/
international-water-association

Press and media


Paul Bell
International Water Association
phone: +31 6 46 60 77 71
email: paul.bell@iwahq.org

Disclaimer

The information contained in this


programme guide is believed to be
correct at time of publication. The
organisers reserve the right to alter
or remove from the programme as
circumstances dictate. The organisers
take no responsibility for any errors,
omissions or changes. The organisers
assume no responsibility for opinions or
facts expressed by contributors to the
programme.

Exhibition
Roy Agterbos
Match+
IWA Exhibition Management
phone: + 31 70 382 00 28
email: info@iwa-exhibitions.com

restaurante

STAIRS TO THE MAIN HALL

restaurante

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11

Congress Focus

Business Forums
Business Forums are special sessions providing delegates with an opportunity to interact,
discuss and learn about the new developments (products, services, research, challenges,
and strategic direction) of commercial organisations, companies and countries.

monday 22

Business Forum Room 1

Business Forum Room 2

10:30 - 11:15

Japan Water Works Association

European Investment Bank

11:15 - 12:00

Masdar

IDB & IWA

12:45 - 13:30

Lunch

Lunch

13:30 - 14:15

Pure Technologies

SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT

14:15 - 15:00

Takadu

15:30 - 16:15

KWR / Watershare

Syrinix

16:15 - 17:00

Scinor

Frezite Energy and Environment

10:30 - 11:15

XYLEM

Japan Water Works Association

11:15 - 12:00

FastSpA

Argal Chemical Pumps

12:45 - 13:30

Lunch

Agilent Technologies

13:30 - 14:15

Naldeo

KWR / Watershare

14:15 - 15:00

EPAL

BiAqua BV

15:30 - 16:15

CNAIA

guas do Noroeste (guas de Portugal


Group) - vora University

16:15 - 17:00

CNAIA

guas do Noroeste (guas de Portugal


Group) - vora University

10:30 - 11:15

XYLEM

JDL Environmental Protection Co.

11:15 - 12:00

Likuid Nanotek

A2O - gua, Ambiente e Organizao Lda.

12:45 - 13:30

Lunch

Lunch

13:30 - 14:15

Naldeo

Kiwa N.V.

14:15 - 15:00

EPAL

Kiwa N.V.

15:30 - 16:15

KWR / Watershare

Danish Water Technology Group


(Danish Export Association)

16:15 - 17:00

Scinor

Danish Water Technology Group


(Danish Export Association)

10:30 - 11:15

XYLEM

LG Sound BV

11:15 - 12:00

Aquasis - Smart Water Systems need


Smart Information Technology

AQUALOGUS / Urbanwater Consortium

12:45 - 13:30

Lunch

Lunch

13:30 - 14:15

Portuguese Water Partnership

IWA Project Innovation Awards Winners

14:15 - 15:00

Portuguese Water Partnership

IWA Project Innovation Awards Winners

Congress Focus:
Keynotes, Forums &
Thematic Tracks

tuesday 23

wednesday 24

thursday 25

Congress Focus:
Shaping a water future that is sustainable, equitable and creates
benefits well beyond the water sector is a major challenge for the
water sector and water professionals in the coming decades.
The IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition bridges the space
between science, practitioners and industry to share knowledge,
collaborate and develop partnerships to deliver solutions that will
shape our water future for decades to come.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

The water future we shape

Imagine a world in 2030 in which universal and equitable


access to safe and affordable drinking water, and universal
access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene are a
reality. A world in which water quality is improved and pollution
is drastically reduced, eliminating dumping and sharply
minimizing release of hazardous chemicals and other materials.
Imagine a world in 2030 in which untreated wastewater
is a rarity and in which recycling and safe water reuse has
sharply increased. Think of a world in which water use is
highly efficient, and sustainable withdrawals and supplies of
freshwater are secured across all sectors. Now imagine, for a
moment that this has truly happened.

Awards
VENCEDOR

GREEN PROJECT AWARDS

NG

HA

E
WAT

AN

PORTUGAL

C
D EN RGY E X
E

2 13

ENCONTRO NACIONAL DE ENTIDADES GESTORAS


DE GUA E SANEAMENTO

SELO DE QUALIDADE
Qualidade Exemplar
da gua para Consumo Humano

GESTO EFICIENTE
DE RECURSOS

www.epal.pt

relationships and interactions are addressed in a range of


technical sessions and during the Water and Industry Forum.
How can we foster further cooperation between industry,
science and technology to accelerate change?
Throughout the Congress, you will discover new scientific
findings and technological breakthroughs that could start
a new innovation cycle and be transformative for the water
industry: energy-positive utilities, new approaches to deal
with bio-solids, and the latest on nutrient removal, resource
recovery and the DNA revolution in water engineering.

If it sounds over ambitious, or just a far-fetched dream, for


those officials that have put together the basic elements for
the global Sustainable Development Goals it is an aspiration
within reach. This week 193 governments will agree upon the
Sustainable Development Goals at the United Nations General
Assembly in New York. Here in Lisbon we have set ourselves
a complementary task, to make this vision of water and
sustainability a reality by 2030. How can it be done?

But we must ask ourselves: Will these many elements form


a whole capable of delivering solutions for the challenges we
face - at scale and on time? We know we need to re-chart the
management (and mis-management) of water resources world-wide. The Congress will focus on new practices in agriculture
capable of dramatically impacting upon water resources and
water quality. Tackling the waterenergyfood nexus is a
critical aspect to be covered. The development of alternative
water resources, forming part of portfolios for water resource
management strategies, will be debated.

Throughout the IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition you


will see many examples of the future is already here, this
is what sustainability could look like and this is what we
should be doing to get there. With rapidly increasing urban
populations, we have to establish more water-centred cities
that understand how to manage their water and material flows
more wisely. The opening keynote address and one of the
thematic tracks during the Congress will address how urban
water systems can meet these new imperatives by 2030 and
beyond.

Major innovations are needed to achieve this at scale: not only


at the technical level, but also in terms of policy, regulation
and institutions. The Regulators Forum, together with a range
of technical sessions and workshops, will bring forward new
ideas for governing and managing our water resources and
services. They go hand-in-hand with developing the capacities
within the sector to manage resources wisely, deliver high-quality services and absorb innovation more quickly.

Key actors in making this transition happen through innovation


and best practice are water operators. New governance
arrangements, modern asset management and innovative
technologies are just some of the opportunities for utility
managers to innovate in delivering high-quality services. During
a range of technical sessions and workshops many aspects of
modern utility management will come to the fore, not least at
the Utility Leaders Forum and the Cleantech Forum.

Increasing awareness beyond the water sector for the need


to act, and act now, means this Congress and Exhibition
could not be timelier. The outstanding quality of the technical
programme is matched only by the fantastic people attending
- all water leaders in their own right. We have a tremendous
opportunity to inspire each other this week. I hope that your
Congress will be a source of inspiration for you and, with the
new connections you make, that it carries far beyond your days
here. Have a great Congress and enjoy your time in Lisbon!

However, utilities cannot do the job alone. Water end-users


in various economic sectors have a tremendously important
contribution to make. To do so, requires water stewardship
across industries: in food and beverage, energy, oil and
gas, minerals and mining, to name a few. The need for new

Dr. Ger Bergkamp


Executive Director , International Water Association

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15

Keynote Speakers

Plenary Session: Utilities of the Future, performance & sustainability

Transforming utilities to deliver efficient & sustainable water services

Agenda setting thought leadership

Sue Murphy,

Opening Ceremony

Chief Executive
Officer, Water
Corporation of
Western Australia

Sunday 21 September, 16:00, Auditorium 1


Jorge Moreira
da Silva
Minister of
Environment, Spatial
Planning & Energy,
Portugal

Jorge Moreira da Silva is the first Vice President of the Executive Board of Partido
Social Democrata (PSD), the party chaired by the Prime Minister of Portugal, Pedro
Passos Coelho. He is the Founder and Chairman of the think-tank Platform for a
Sustainable Growth (a Lisbon- based non-profit and independent think-tank launched
in October 2011 that aims at identifying policy and measures to foster a sustainable
growth in Portugal). He is also the co-chairman of the European Peoples Party (EPP)
Working Group on Energy & Climate Change.

Vice-chairman
of Committee of
Population, Resources
and Environment,
CPPCC National
Committee, PR China

Dr. Qiu Baoxing, Vice-chairman of Committee of Population, Resources and Environment,


CPPCC National Committee, PR China. He is president of the Chinese Society for
Urban Studies, president of the Urban Planning Society of China, and Chairman of the
IWA China Committee. A PhD in Economics and in Urban Planning, he is a senior urban
planner and visiting professor, adjunct professor or PhD supervisor at universities, such
as Chinese Academy of Social Science, Tongji University, Tsinghua University and Cardiff
University. Publications include Coping with Opportunities & Challenges: Main Problems
and Solutions in Strategic Research of China Urbanization, and Reform of Urban
Planning During the Course of Chinas Urbanization.

Plenary Session: Development perspectives on water, people & health

Monday 22 September, 09:00, Auditorium 1

Water as the driving force for development & health benefits?


Hans Rosling
Professor International
Health, Karolinska
Institute & Chairman,
Gapminder
Foundation

As a young doctor working in Mozambique, Hans discovered the paralytic disease


that his research team named Konzo. For the next 20 years, Hans studied global
health and the links between health, economic development, agriculture and poverty.
He has advised the World Health Organization and UNICEF, and co-founded
Mdecins Sans Frontires in Sweden and Gapminder Foundation. Gapminder
converts statistics into interactive, engaging, moving graphics, and promotes a factbased world-view.

A graduate in Civil Engineering from the University of Western Australia, Sue won the
Clough Scholarship and joined Clough Engineering, commencing a 25-year career
with them. Twelve years in the field as a site engineer and project manager led to
corporate roles with a focus on human resources, safety and engineering design
management. She became the first woman on the board of Clough Engineering Ltd.
Each year from 2009 2013, Sue was listed in the top 100 most influential engineers
in Australia by Engineers Australia.

Plenary Session: Water innovations & changing societies

Director, Nepal
Conservation
Foundation & Pragya
of the Royal Nepal
Academy of Science
& Technology

As Nepals Minister of Water Resources, Dipak was responsible for power, irrigation
and flood control. A cultural theorist upholding the idea of institutional pluralism, he
initiated the communitization of electricity in rural Nepal; the internal unbundling
of the monopoly electric utility; and the privatization of a generation component, to
date, Nepals largest controversy- free privatization. He chairs quantitative social
science research firm, Interdisciplinary Analysts, and the newly founded Nep School
of Social Sciences and Humanities. He directs research at the non-profit Nepal Water
Conservation Foundation.

Plenary Session: Water innovations, policies & regulations

Monday 22 September, 17:15, Auditorium 1

Observing the earth & looking forward radically rethinking our water future

Francisco Nunes
Correia

Francisco was the Minister of Environment, Spatial Planning and Regional Development
of the Portuguese Government, 2005-09. He instituted important reforms, notably a new
Professor of Environment Water Law and related institutional changes, including water resources, water services
& Water Resources,
and a new framework for territorial administration. He is President of the Department of
Portugal Instituto
Civil Engineering, Architecture and Georesources. Co-ordinator of several European
Superior Tecnico;
President of the
research projects, including EUROWATER and WATER 21, he is author or co-author of
Portuguese Water
9 books and over 130 articles, chapters and technical reports.
Partnership

Chief Scientist,
Langley Research
Centre, NASA

Dennis has 49 years experience as Research Scientist, Section Head, Branch Head,
Associate Division Chief and Chief Scientist. Technical specialties include flow modelling
and control across the speed range, advanced configuration aeronautics, aeronautical
facilities and hypersonic airbreathing propulsion. He is responsible for technical oversight
and advanced program formulation for a major NASA research center. He has made
significant contributions in biofuels/biomass as petroleum replacements sourced from
wastelands, and saline/waste water via halophytes and algae.

Water use in agriculture threats & opportunities

Professor of
Biotechology,
Department of
Biotechnolgy, Chemistry
and Environmental
Engineering, Faculty
Engineering and Science,
Aalborg University

Director General,
International Water
Management Institute

16

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Jeremy specialises in water resources policy, management and institutions. He joined


IWMI in 2012 having been CEO of the Mekong River Commission. The conventional
image of irrigation in developing and emerging economies is that of reservoirs feeding
a hierarchy of inefficient canal systems managed by the public service. Water is
flooded onto fields to grow relatively low value cereal crops of high water demand
and traded at subsistence prices. In many areas this is still the case, but this image
misrepresents the breadth of irrigation systems and the advances of recent years.

Per Nielsen heads the multidisciplinary Center for Microbial Communities. For over
25 years, his research group has been active in leading environmental biotechnology
research. He will discuss the unprecedented development in DNA technologies over the
past 10 years, which has revolutionised the capabilities to investigate and understand the
human genome, and why it is now time to focus on the microbes in water engineering.

Resource recovery: new realities & leading practices


Willy Verstraete

Jeremy Bird

Thursday 25 September, 09:00, Auditorium 1

The DNA revolution in water engineering: the secret lives of the microbes that drive these systems
Per Nielsen,

Dennis Bushnell

Wednesday 24 September, 17:15, Auditorium 1

Land-use planning & regional development policy & regulatory reforms


for innovative water management in emerging economies

Plenary Session: Frontiers of bio-engineering in water & wastewater


Plenary Session: Shifting the water-agriculture paradigm

Tuesday 23 September, 17:15, Auditorium 1

Social dimensions of water management innovations at scale


Dipak Gyawali,

Qiu Baoxing

Tuesday 23 September, 09:00, Auditorium 1

Emeritus Professor
of Environmental
Biotechnology,
Faculty of Bioscience
Engineering, Ghent
University

Willy obtained a PhD degree in the field of microbiology at Cornell University; his
R&D focuses on microbial research managementand resource recovery. Willy has
been instrumental in the creation of several successful spin-offs in the field of applied
microbial ecology. He has won many national and international awards. The whole of
his scientific work totals at a h-index of 70. Willy was co-chair of the Working Party on
Environmental Biotechnology of the European Federation for Biotechnology, GeneralSecretary of the European Environmental Research Organisation, and president of the
Belgian branch of IWA. He is a member of many scientific boards.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

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17

Forums

Forums

Water & Industry


Forum

Water Regulators
Forum

Utility Leaders
Forum

Water & Cleantech


Forum

Africa Forum

Mediterranean &
Middle-East Forum

Monday, 22

Monday & Tuesday, 22 & 23

Tuesday, 23

Wednesday, 24

Wednesday, 24

Thursday, 25

10.30 - 17.00 / Auditorium 8

Monday: 10.30 - 17.00 / Auditorium 2


Tuesday: 10:30 - 12:00 / Auditorium 1

10.30 - 17.00 / Auditorium 2

10:30 - 17:00 / Auditorium 2

10:30 - 17:00 / Room 1.08

10:30 - 15:00 / Auditorium 2

Industry leaders around the world are


increasingly viewing water, quantity,
quality overall management as a critical
risk to their future success. The IWA
Water & Industry Forum brings together
early adopters within business that have
put water management at the heart of
their strategic planning.

Regulators in the water sector oversee


tariffs, investments, public health and
environmental quality. Regulation of
water services is assuming an increasing
importance worldwide due to the need
for establishing a stable environment for
the adequate provision of these essential
services. Water services regulators are
seen as important players who intervene
in the relations between governments,
local authorities, utilities and consumers,
bringing more rationality and balancing
the interests of all the stakeholders in
the sector.

Water operators around the world are


at the forefront of decision making
on current and future water services.
Quality, reliability and sustainability
are key aspect of delivering services
that customers want and can afford.
Changing demographics and lifestyles,
rapidly expanding urban areas and
declining infrastructure are some of the
key issues utility leaders need to deal
with on a daily basis.

The Cleantech Industry covers a


diverse range of products, services,
and processes that harness renewable
materials and energy sources,
dramatically reduce the use of natural
resources, and cut or eliminate
emissions and wastes. Cleantech is the
fastest growing industry world-wide and
includes, for example, renewable energy,
recycling, information technology and
green transport and chemistry. Water
and waste-water handling form part of
the Cleantech Industry when byproducts
and wastes are turned into a valuable,
new resource.

Throughout Africa, significant


investments in infrastructure and
capacity development are required to
closethe gap and reach full access to
safe drinking water and sanitation. Rapid
urbanization require the development
and implementation of new approaches
to water, sanitation and waste water
treatment. Utilities have to become a
catalyst to accelerating the transition
needed working with other stakeholders.
Key for this is the mobilisation of reliable
funding for utilities from water userfees,
government funds and donors. To
innovate, utilities across the continent
need to foster a closer cooperation with
national research institutions to develop
new and tailored water solutions.

The Mediterranean and Middle-East


regions have a very diverse set of
water challenges and opportunities.
Increasing population and climate
change are exacerbating the impact
of drought and extreme rainfall events.
Yet, rapidly developing technologies
such as desalination provide new
opportunitiesto create reliable water
supplies at increasingly lower costs.

These businesses are pioneering a new


water paradigm within their sector,
having established a water management
function or articulated a vision for good
water management. All have lessons and
successes to share with their peers.
The Forum will focus on three industrial
sectors: food & beverage, oil & gas
and mining. These industries all have
their specific issues but what they
share is that their major use of water,
if left unmanaged, has a huge impact
on future business and the societies
and environments in which business
operates.
Participants in the Forum are drawn
from industrial sectors and from water
related services, technology businesses
and regulatory authorities. Joining the
Forum are selected academics, social
scientists and economists to ensure a
well-informed perspective is available at
the table.
Joining the IWA Water & Industry Forum
provides you with an opportunity to
exchange ideas with a wide range of
professionals.

The Water Regulators Forum, a high


level meeting, will be the first global
event bringing together water services
regulators from around the world. It will
be particularly important to discuss the
current status of regulatory frameworks
and future trends in their development
that will have great impact on water
services provision.
The Water Regulators Forum provides a
critical opportunity to share experiences
and opinions on the latest developments
in the water sector to which regulators
must respond pro-actively to foster
innovation, equity, citizens health and
environmental protection. It enables
participants to contribute to developing
key principles of good regulation for the
water sector worldwide. With a large
diversity of participants and views, it will
be a golden networking opportunity.
Organised in cooperation
with ERSAR

Leaders from the worlds leading water


and wastewater utilities will meet to
discuss how to make utility management
fit for the future in an international
environment. The Utility Leaders Forum
will provide a programme that focuses
on strategic issues related to managing
utilities.
A mixed format with keynote
presentations, panel discussions, quick
ice-breakers and group discussions, will
create a dynamic learning environment,
as well as facilitating networking and
interaction amongst participants.
The World Caf creative process will
facilitate collaborative dialogue and the
sharing of knowledge and ideas.

Join top utility executives, entrepreneurs


and leading technology consultants to
learn more about the interface of water
and wastewater services and Cleantech.
How quickly can utilities adopt new
strategies and mobilise investments
in turning waste into a new resource,
producing bio-energy and lower their
costs?
Through panels and round tables the
Water & Cleantech Forum will ensure
all participants can take part in well
moderated and interactive group
discussions.

Nine tables will host a separate


discussion focusing on one of three
themes value of water, innovation
and private sector engagement and
competition - from one of three different
perspectives: finance and institutional
management; governance and
regulation; and stakeholder engagement.

Join utility managers, policy makers,


researchers, donors and city planners at
the Africa Forum to discuss the unique
challenges and solutions for African
nations and cities. Leading African
scholars and practitioners provide new
insights in the opportunities for water
solutions arising within Africas growing
economies. The Africa Forum is a great
opportunity to network with participants
from Francophone, Lusophone and
Anglophone Africa. The Africa Forum will
solicit clear commitments and follow-up
actions from its participants to ensure
progress is being catalysed.

More than ever, significant improvements


in water use and management across
the Mediterranean, Middle-East and
North Africa regions require resource
mobilisation, leveraging funds, and
commercialisation, built on partnerships
between the sectors traditional
stakeholders and the private sector.
The Forum will explore the challenges
faced by water and wastewater utilities
and the competing demands on water
resources. Specifically there will be
a focus on how to create and expand
water smart technologies in the region.
The workshop will bring together the
private sector with donors, governments,
researchers, and other key water sector
stakeholders to initiate a dialogue that
leads to concrete actions, partnerships
and eventual deal making.
The U.S. Agency for International
Development, the Arabic Countries
Water Utilities Association, the
Mediterranean Water Institute and the
International Water Association will
jointly convene the Mediterranean &
MENA Forum.

Co-hosted by Watershare
and VEWIN

18

The Water & Industry Forum is an


invitation event. Please contact
Ganesh Pangare:

The Water Regulators Forum is an


invitation event. Please contact
Carolina Latorre:

The Utility Leaders Forum is an


invitation event. Please contact
Tom Williams:

The Water and Cleantech Forum is


an invitation event. Please contact
Keith Robertson:

For more information on the


Africa Forum please contact
Sarah Tibatemwa:

For more information on the


Mediterranean and Middle-East Forum
please contact Tom Williams:

ganesh.pangare@iwahq.org

carolina.latorre@iwahq.org

tom.williams@iwahq.org

keith.robertson@iwahq.org

sarah.tibatemwa@iwahq.org

tom.williams@iwahq.org

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

19

Thematic Tracks
Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative
approaches and the adoption of new paradigms and
technologies. The IWA World Water Congress Thematic
Tracks bring together top water professionals from over
ninety countries around the world to challenge the status quo.
Thematic Tracks are all about presenting innovate approaches,
the latest science, newest technologies and leading practices.
Participating in technical sessions including oral and poster
presentations, brings you the latest findings and allows
you to connect to new developments. Attending workshops
will provide insight and inspiration for cooperation and
collaboration on research and practical applications. The
workshops and technical sessions provide a unique opportunity
for connecting with peers from across the water sector.

T.1 - Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change


Water Centred Cities of the Future

Resilience and sustainability are central to the water


sensitive urban infrastructure of the future. Case studies and
discussions highlight the pros and cons of both centralised
and decentralised urban water systems. Critical views are
presented on the effectiveness of adapting to climate change
and creating urban water resilience through urban storage and
drainage, storm water management and rainwater harvesting.
Workshops and technical sessions provide great opportunities
to network with specialists focused on the transition of urban
systems. The latest modelling and case studies on moving
towards sustainability are presented. They provide the basis
for reflecting on how urban water systems can meet new
imperatives through to 2050. Can integration of the design of
water systems with the long-term planning and development of
urban areas be achieved?
Leading Utilities

New management models for utilities, new approaches to


asset management and innovative contracting practices are
transformating water service delivery. They form a basis for
more effective, efficient and sustainable services. Workshops
and technical sessions focus on the latest advances in utility
performance assessment and benchmarking based on learning
from best practices.
Outcomes from new assessments of the capacity gap in the
water sector of emerging economies are presented. These
facilitate the strategic planning of training and professional
learning. At the utility level this translates into better workforce
planning and improving the quality of skilled staff. Utility
managers from around the world will find opportunities to
exchange ideas and share experiences to improve utility
management in practice.

20

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Industries in Transition

Industries from all sectors now see eco-efficiency, water and


materials recycling as essential to their success. Leading
industrial water management practices are minimising
environmental impacts by achieving zero waste discharge.
Workshops and technical sessions provide examples from
agriculture, refineries, automotive manufacturing, mining, food
and beverages, and the pharmaceutical industry. In addition, an
agenda-setting workshop will highlight the industrial application
of microbial-ecology focused monitoring tools for wastewater
and drinking water treatment.

T.2 - Re-Charting the Course of Water Resources

Resource & Energy Recovery

T.4 - Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Water and wastewater are valuable sources of nutrients,


materials and energy. The latest developments in capturing
nitrogen and phosphorus are featured in technical
presentations and a series of posters. These focus on solutions
in both the municipal and industrial sectors. Full-scale
programmes that meet environmental discharge standards and
recover nutrients effectively are highlighted.

Safety is at the heart of water supply services. A number of


sessions demonstrate that Water Safety Plans are increasingly
widespread. More and more the conversation focuses on the
assessment of effective implementation of these plans and on
the development of Sanitation Safety Plans.

Technologies are now being developed that enable energy to


be captured from wastewater. Biogas production through codigestion and co-generation schemes, microbial electrolysis,
fuel cells and pressure-retarded osmosis are amongst the
technologies that could dramatically change the energy
profile of our industry. A number of technical sessions and
workshops highlight how the focus on energy is combined with
real progress in understanding and tackling the production
of greenhouse gases in the water cycle. This is making a
significant contribution to the mitigation of climate change.

Resource Resilience

Building resilience into resource management strategies


requires institutional and technological development. New
strategic frameworks are being introduced, enabling successful
management of resources across political boundaries:
connecting watersheds and urban centres. These new
approaches focus on managing the current state of the
resource base, but also support the restoration of damaged or
over-exploited ecosystems.
In parallel, a number of resource management technologies are
under development. Latest research findings of the underlying
physical, chemical and ecological processes are presented.
Using modelling, fuzzy logic and other techniques, these
findings have the potential to substantiate new risk-based
assessment approaches for sustainable resource management.
A variety of new methods, applied to different ecosystems
from coastal zones, wetlands and groundwater, to lakes and
reservoirs, are presented.
Alternative Resources

Competing water demands and water scarcity are driving the


development of alternative water resources, such as water
efficiency gains through reducing leakage or re-using water for
potable and non-potable use. A series of workshops highlight
where and how new technologies are shaping the future of
alternative water resource development. Special attention
is given to how the interactions between regulation and
stakeholders significantly impacts on the development of these
resources.
Technical presentations, that underpin the development of
alternative water resources, highlight the latest findings of
advanced membrane technologies including ultrafiltration and
reverse osmosis. A series of case studies examine the success
of water reuse for potable water and aquifer recharge.

T.3 - Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Good Governance

Effective institutions and regulation are essential to enable the


reliable and sustainable management of water servicesand
water resources. Through technical presentations and
discussions we examine how regulation is impacting water and
wastewater services and water reuse. Other sessions analyse
the effectiveness of different national and transboundary
water- sharing governance arrangements. You can examine
stakeholder engagement, customer relations and whether
the water sector can learn from other sectors. Are there
transferable lessons from the energy sector and can better
customer communications improve outcomes?

Water Safety & Human Health

The safety of water supplies based on traditional disinfection


has encountered several problems, such as disinfectant byproducts. Bromates, chlorates and nitrosoamines are now
being assessed far more accurately, with potential health
impacts better understood and new techniques for their
removal advanced. A series of sessions address developments
in health-related water microbiology, micro-pollutants, metals,
nanoparticles and cyanobacteria.
Monitoring & Managing Water Quality

Developing an approach to establish water cascades for different


purposes is dependent on identifying the correct water quality
for the specific water use. A series of sessions will explore
differentiated standards for uses such as irrigation and cooling,
which can be done with non-potable water. Technical sessions
demonstrate that improved detection and better assessments can
deliver a fit for purpose approach to water quality management.
Leading specialists elaborate on how new molecular- biological
tools are expanding our knowledge about environmental conditions
and tracing pollution sources, leading to improved resource
management. Learn how powerful analytical techniques are
enabling the detection of pharmaceuticals and priority pollutants
throughout the water cycle, including in distribution systems.

T.5 - Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatments


Sustainable Finance

Sound finances are critical for the water sector. Taxes,


tariffs and transfers together form the basic ingredients for
sustainable financing. In reality, utility managers, regulators
and other practitioners must address a number of (competing)
objectives when establishing tariff structures and pricing levels.
What tariffs are most appropriate in terms of sustainability,
affordability and equitability? A range of speakers and
panellists review the use of different sources of finance to
cover capital and operational costs in different settings.
Information & Communications Technologies

The continuing rapid development of ICT is driving radical


change in the water sector. The impacts of implementing new
algorithms, monitoring technologies and decision support
systems on service delivery and resource management
effectiveness are examined. Finally, the potential of big data
and analytics for transforming the water sector and overcoming
critical challenges in water management are reviewed.

Wastewater & Bio-solids

Research and practice on the safe and sustainable management


of wastewater and derived sludge (bio-solids) continues to
develop. Technical sessions highlight latest findings in optimising
wastewater treatment processes and the next generation of
technologies. A special focus is given to Aerobic Granular
Sludge, which has advanced rapidly and is set to become the
new standard for aerobic treatment of industrial and municipal
wastewater. One workshop will stimulate a closer cooperation
of the leading practical and academic fields, and develop a
collaborative research roadmap.
Nutrient Removal, Membranes & Desalination

The latest findings of nutrient removal in large-scale wastewater


plants are presented. The effectiveness of a range of biological
phosphorus and nutrient removal processes, including Anammox, are
examined with experiences from both temperate and warm climates.
Membranes have transformed the water and wastewater sector in
recent years. A series of technical sessions provide deeper insight
into past and future membrane experiences, including membrane
bioreactors. In addition, speakers elaborate on the future of
desalination and the feasibility of biological desalination.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

21

Technical Tours

Congress Programme

Connecting you to leading practice & large-scale applications.


Book your place for one of the Friday 26 September full or half-day Technical Tours.

Alcantara wastewater
treatment plant

EPAL water treatment plant:


Castelo de Bode subsystem

Hosted by EPAL

Hosted by EPAL

Hosted by Xylem Inc.

09:00 13:00 Friday 26 September

09:00 17:00 Friday 26 September

FridaySaturday, 2627 September 2014

Price: 25.00 + 23% VAT p.p.

Price: 40.00 + 23% VAT p.p.

The Alcantara wastewater treatment


plant receives domestic wastewater from
more than 750,000 people in districts of
Lisbon, and neighbouring council areas
of Amadora and Oeiras. Now operated
by SIMTEJO, the plant entered service
in 1989 with primary treatment and
chlorine disinfection, then was upgraded,
and expanded works in October 2009.

The two pumping stations at Castelo do


Bode are capable of raising 625,000
cubic metres per day to the Asseiceira
Water Treatment Plant, equipped with a
group of variable speed electric pumps.
The water supply system, first used in
1987, runs for over 2,100 kilometers from
Castelo do Bode to the city of Lisbon.

Sunday

Serzedo (guas Noroeste) &


Santa Eufmia (Vimagua) water
plants and Guimaraes

Price: 196 + 23% VAT p.p.


Combine business with pleasure in this
2-day tour to the north of Portugal. On
day one, you will visit two wastewater
treatment plants and stay overnight
in the medieval city of Guimaraes. On
day two, you will explore the sights of
Guimaraes and enjoy lunch at a local
restaurant.

EPAL Water Museum


Guia wastewater treatment
plant and submarine
discharge point

Hosted by EPAL

09:00 17:00 Friday 26 September


Price: 40.00 + 23% VAT p.p.

Hosted by EPAL

09:00 17:00 Friday 26 September


Price: 25.00 + 23% VAT p.p.

Ozone technology at Serzedo


wastewater treatment plant

At the Serzedo wastewater treatment


plant, they collect and treat domestic
and industrial wastewater from the cities
of Guimaraes, Fafe and Felgueiras.
Ultrafiltration at Santa Eufemia de
Prazins drinking water treatment plant

The Santa Eufemia de Prazins drinking


water treatment plant, which is managed
by Vimagua, is unique in Portugal.

SANEST is a public sanitation


companyone of the biggest in
Portugaland manages and operates a
wastewater treatment plant located at
Guia, on the west coast of Lisbon.
The Guia system serves a population
of around 220 square kilometres,
or 800,000 people, treating around
150,000 cubic metres per day of
wastewater. It includes nine pumping
stations and 2.75 kilometres of a
submarine discharge sewer into the
Atlantic Ocean.

The EPAL Water Museum showcases four


historical buildings which are inextricably
linked to the history of water supply to the
city of Lisbon.

Alqueva Dam

Hosted by EPAL

09:00 17:00 Friday 26 September


Price: 40.00 + 23% VAT p.p.
Located on the River Guadiana in
the Alentejo region, 190 kilometers
from Lisbon, the Alqueva Dam is the
largest man-made lake in western
Europe, covering more than 250 square
kilometres.

Sunday:
Start building your networks early at the Opening Ceremony and
Welcome Reception.
This is a key opportunity to connect with other water sector
professionals and discuss current trends, latest research,
guiding strategies and leading practice in a relaxed and informal
environment.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

22

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Reception & Awards

Opening Ceremony, IWA Personal Leadership Awards


& Welcome Reception
Opening Ceremony

LETS BE THE

EFFICIENCY

16:00 - 18:00

Auditorium 1, Lisbon Convention Centre


Start building your networks early at the Opening Ceremony and Welcome
Reception. The IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Opening Ceremony is a must
see event, including Keynote Speakers from the Governments of Portugal and China.

The Harremos Lecture

EXPERT FOR

Keynote speaker:
Jorge Moreira da Silva

Keynote speaker:
Qiu Baoxing

Minister of Environment,
Spatial Planning &
Energy, Portugal

Vice-chairman of Committee
of Population, Resources and
Environment, CPPCC National
Committee, PR China

NATURES WATER

DEPARTMENT.

IWA Personal Leadership Awards

Global Water Award

Young Water Professionals Award

Presented to:

Presented to:

Qiu Baoxing

Inga Jacobs

Vice-chairman of Committee of Population,


Resources and Environment, CPPCC National
Committee, PR China

Women in Water Award

The IWA Global Water Award is one


of the water sectors most prestigious
prizes. It recognises outstanding
achievement, vision, leadership and
knowledge in driving change within the
water sector.

Xylem takes great responsibility in rewriting the limitations on where water can go and how it gets there.
Were improving the reliability and reach of the worlds water supply. Energy-efficient pumping systems
from brands such as Flygt, Godwin, Goulds Water Technology, Lowara, Sanitaire, Wedeco, Leopold, AC Fire,
YSI and WTW are pushing water to realize its potential. So lets champion maximum productivity, minimal
waste and the smart movement of water. See what were solving now at Xyleminc.com.

Welcome Reception

Presented to:

Marsi Steirer

Professional Development Award


Presented to:

Maynilad Water Services

18:00 - 19:30

Foyer D, Lisbon Convention Centre


The Welcome Reception is a key opportunity to connect with
other water sector professionals and discuss current trends,
latest research, guiding strategies and leading practice in a
relaxed and informal environment.
Sponsored by Xylem

xyleminc.com
2014 Xylem Inc. Flygt, Lowara, Sanitaire, Wedeco, Leopold, YSI and WTW
are trademarks of Xylem Inc. or one of its subsidiaries.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

25

YWP Programme

YWP Programme

The IWA YWP Forum provides a lively and interactive platform for Young Water Professionals (YWP) to
come together from all over the world, to meet and network with their fellow peers in the sector. Alongside
senior water professionals in the water community, the day provides learning and career development
opportunities for YWP. It is also a forum to discuss how YWPs can inspire the change to secure an
equitable water future for all.

YWP meeting place - room 1.14

The IWA YWP Forum provides an opportunity to share experience and knowledge, to connect and network
with other YWPs and senior professionals and to gain specific skills, vital to your future career.

IWA YWP Discussion

IWA YWP Discussion

12:30 13:30 / Room 1.06:

17:00 / IWA stand #221

Develop your network in-country and


organise YWP activities. A discussion
for YWPs interested to develop and
implement YWP activities at country
level through the formation of YWP
chapters. Max. 40 participants.

Senior and young water professionals


will answer the questions: How we
can empower YWPs in the respective
countries? What is the role of YWPs and
what is the role of senior professionals?

The YWP Forum

Young Water Professional Forum

Sunday, 8:00 - 14:30

Lisbon Convention Centre, Auditorium 2


Part 1 & 2

08:00 - 10:30

Week Events

To connect, to meet, to ask questions, to get involved or sign up IWA YWP Networking,
Social events and the Biomimicry workshop.

Monday 22 September

Workshop Facilitators:

Tobias Barnard (YWP Chair 2012-2014)


Randolf Webb (YWP committee 2014-2016)
& Norhayati Abdullah (YWP Chair 2014-2016)
Registration - 08:00 - 08:30

PART 1: Opening & Welcome


Opening, Welcome & Schedule for the Day - 08:30 - 08:40

Tobias Barnard, University of Johannesburg, South Africa (YWP chair 2012-2014)


Welcome by IWA Presidents - 08:40 - 09:00

Glen Daigger (IWA president 2012-2014)


& Helmut Kroiss (IWA president 2014-2016)

PART 2: Career Development Workshop


Moderator: Tobias Barnard
Tailoring YWPs for Careers in the Water & Sanitation Sector - 09:00 - 09:05
Panel Member Presentations - 09:05 - 09:45

Banu Ormeci (Carleton University, Canada), Allestair Wensley (DWA, South Africa),
Joo Feliciano (AGS, Portugal), Sungpyo Kim (Korea University, South Korea)
Plenary Discussion on Tailoring YWPs for Careers - 09:45 - 10:30

Break

10:30 - 10:45

Part 3

10:45 - 12:30

Networking Session Inga Jacobs, WRC, South Africa - 10:45 - 11:15

PART 3: Making the Network Work for You


Making the IWA Work for You - Set the Scene! - 11:15 - 11:30

Norhayati Abdullah, UTM Malaysia (YWP Chair 2014-2016)


IWA Young Water Professionals Having Made the Network Work? - 11:30 - 12:30

Panel members: Maria Caicedo, Universidad Politcnica de Valencia (Colombia); Arlinda


Ibrahimllari, WSSC Korca (Albania); Randolf Webb, Accenture (USA); Tobias Barnard,
University of Johannesburg (South Africa); Inga Jacob, WRC (South Africa)

Lunch

12:30 - 13:30

Part 4

13:30 - 14:50

PART 4: YWPs Valuing Water Moderator: Randolf Webb - 13:30 - 13:40


YWPs Valuing Water - Group discussions - 13:40 - 14:20

IWA YWP Discussion (members only)

IWA YWP Networking

IWA YWP Discussion

09:00 10:00 / Room 1.06:

12:00 13:30 / Room 1.14:

15:00 15:30 / Room 1.14

IWA YWP members discussing


transformational steps to increase
YWP membership 10 fold in 4 years.
Max. 40 participants.

Want to meet a senior in your field of


expertise?
Sign up at YWP meeting room 1.14 and
we will match you up.
Meet your mentor in the room and take
them to lunch!

Using online and social media to change


water practices in your work, and in
society to change water practices.
Max. 20 participants.

IWA YWP Networking


17:00 18:00 / Room 1.14

YWP Twinning - meet your peers.

Wednesday 24 September

Thursday 25 September

Facilitators Nora Hanke, Nepadcoe (South Africa); Yussuf Noor Hussein, NCWSC
(Kenya); Hiroshi Yamamura, NIPH (Japan); Arlinda Albrahimllari, WSSC Korca (Albania);
Christian Loderer, AquaConsult (Austria); Julian Carrillo, UNAM (Mexico).

IWA YWP Report Launch

IWA YWP Discussion

IWA YWP Workshop (sign up)

12:30 13:30 / IWA stand #221

17:00 / IWA stand #221

12:30 13:30 / room 1.06

Plenary discussion - 14:20 - 14:50

World of Opportunities
Be the first to get a copy of IWAs new
booklet showcasing the varied and
interesting career opportunities in the
water sector.

How to ensure cross-sectoral linkages?


Join the discussion on how YWPs think
we should enhance the cross sectoral
linkages to improve water practices

Max 30 participants
Biomimicry: Drawing inspiration from
nature for shaping our water future.

Closing & Week Schedule

26

Tuesday 23 September

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

14:50 - 15:00

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

27

Specialist Groups

Congress Programme

IWA specialist groups, task groups & clusters


IWA Specialist Groups are central to IWAs work and mission.
Group members are engaged in activities such as organising
conferences, seminars and workshops; writing books, reports,
newsletters and journal papers. Working groups also produce
scientific and technical reports, manuals of best practice and
position papers.

Schedule for open meetings

22 - 25 September

Tuesday 23

Wednesday 24

Thursday 25

Small Water &


Wastewater Systems
10:30 - 12:00
Room 0.07

Membrane Technology
10:30 - 12:00
Room 0.06

Design, Operation
& Costs of Large
Wastewater Treatment
Plants
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.06

Water Security &


Safety Management
10:30 - 12:00
Room 0.06

Pretreatment of
Industrial Wastewaters
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.06

Groundwater
Restoration
& Management
10:30 - 12:00
Room 0.07

Instrumentation,
Control & Automation
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.07

Assessment &
Control of Hazardous
Substances in Water
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.07

Sludge Management
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.07

Diffuse Pollution
10:30 - 12:00
Room 0.08

Water Safety Planning


12:15 - 13:00
Room 3C

Modelling & Integrated


Assessment
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.08

Intermittent Water
Supply TG
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.06

Public & Customer


Communication
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.06

Benchmarking
& Performance
Assessment
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.06

Water Efficiency
Metrics:
Efficient Urban
Water Management
& Benchmarking
& Performance
Assessment
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.07

Microbial Ecology &


Water Engineering
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.08

Water Reuse
12:00 - 13:30
Room 0.07

Efficient Urban Water


Management
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.07

Water Loss
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.07

Sustainability in
the Water Sector
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.06

Watershed & River


Basin Management
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.08

The Use of Water


Quality & Process
Models for Minimising
Wastewater Utility
Greenhouse Gas
Footprints TG
13:30 - 15:00
Room 0.07

Strategic Asset
Management
15:30 - 17:00
Room 0.06

Sustainability in the
Water Sector
15:30 - 17:00
Room 0.06

Water & Wastewater in


Ancient Civilisations
15:30 - 17:00
Room 0.07

Statistics & Economics


15:30 - 17:00
Room 0.08

Life Cycle Assessment


of Water & Wastewater
Treatment
17:00 - 18:30
Room 0.07

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Launch Reception: IWA Resource


Recovery Cluster

Monday

Monday 22

Design, Operation
& Maintenance
of Drinking Water
Treatment Plants
15:30 - 17:00
Room 0.07

28

During the IWA World Water Congress, many specialist


groups, task groups and clusters have open meetings to which
all congress delegates are welcome. This provides a unique
opportunity to connect and network with specialists and
leaders in their respective fields, and to update your knowledge
on the issues that interest you.

Monday 22 September
12:30-13:30
IWA Stand / Exhibition Area
We live in a cyclic economy. Producing
drinking water and treating wastewater
offers a number of opportunities to
upcycle resources with positive impacts
on the environment and water utility
bottom lines. Yet to date, this has not
been a major focus area for water
professionals. Learning the tricks of the
resource recovery trade and connecting
it to markets with a proper added value
are critical for the water sector. The
special IWA Resource Recovery Cluster
will to explore how and when the water
industry should deal with recycling.
Join us at the IWA stand for
the launch of the newly
established IWA Resource
Recovery Cluster!

Monday:
Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative
approaches and the adoption of new paradigms and technologies.
Participating in technical sessions including oral and poster
presentations, brings you the latest findings and allows you to
connect to new developments. Attending workshops will provide
insight and inspiration for cooperation and collaboration on
research and practical applications. The workshops and technical
sessions provide a unique opportunity for connecting with peers
from across the water sector.
Social media

More information
There are many additional benefits to
being a member of an IWA Specialist
Group. IWA Specialist Groups, Clusters
and Task Groups organise a programme
of meetings, workshops and other
activities during the Congress. You can
also organise small meetings with the
group leaders individually. Please contact
Hong Li to find out more information on
our Specialist Groups, Task Groups &
Clusters.

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

Monday Spotlight
Plenary Session

09:00 - 10:00, Auditorium 1

Panel moderator: Robert Bos, IWA


Panellists: Annette Prss-Ustn, WHO

Water as the driving force for


development & health benefits?

Paul Hunter UEA, J Water & Health

Plenary Keynote:
Hans Rosling,
Gapminder Institute
Professor International
Health, Karolinska
Institute & Chairman,
Gapminder Foundation

Plenary Session

17:15 - 18:00, Auditorium 1

Observing the earth & looking forward


radically rethinking our water future

Water use in agriculture


threats & opportunities

Plenary Keynote:
Dennis Bushnell

Plenary Keynote:
Jeremy Bird

Chief Scientist,
Langley Research
Centre, NASA

Director General,
International Water
Management Institute

IWA World Water Exhibition, 09:00 - 18:00, Hall 1 & 2


Join the worlds leading companies working in sustainable
water management. The IWA World Water Exhibition is a onestop-shop where you can connect and do business with the
leading industry and technology providers.

Poster session & reception, 18:00 - 19:30, Pavilion 4 & 5


An exciting opportunity to have a special preview of the IWA
World Water Congress Poster Presentations. Meet, connect
and network with the presenters as they explain their work and
have your questions answered in person. Drinks will be served.

Young Water Professionals Discussion

12:30 - 13:30 Room 1.06 Interested in developing and


implementing YWP activities at country level through the
formation of YWP chapters? This session will help you to
develop your network in-country and organise YWP activities.
17:00 IWA stand #221 Senior and young water professionals
will answer the questions: How we can empower YWPs in the
respective countries? What is the role of YWPs and what is the
role of senior professionals?

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

31

Programme

Programme

Monday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

Auditorium 1

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 2

Investments for 2020 in


Portuguese speaking Countries

Topics covered in session one include: Applying better regulation in the water
services sector: governance, independence and regulatory impact analysis
and progressive models for economic regulation with contributions from
OFWAT and OECD.

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Modelling Processes & Systems


Chair: Lluis Corominas ICRA Spain

Strong development in Portuguese-speaking countries has led to major


investment in the water supply and sanitation sectors. In the next few years
countries such as Angola, Brazil and Timor-Leste will register significant
progress in the water services sector, particularly through the construction
and rehabilitation of infrastructures, but also in the development of
institutional and management frameworks. This workshop will explore
the main issues affecting Lusophone countries up to 2020. Leading the
discussion will be Pedro Conceio (United Nations Development Program,
Portugal), Nuno Mota Pinto (World Bank, Portugal), Artur Cima (African
Development Bank, Portugal), Fernando Frutuoso de Melo (Development
and Cooperation, European Union, Portugal), and Lucrcio Costa (National
Direction for Water, Angola).

10:55 A Model Based Comparison of Different Reject Water Treatment Processes

10:55 Study of Pollutant Discharge Coefficients of the Aquaculture in Taihu Lake

Sewer Overflow Pollution Loads Bertrand Vallet, Aquafin (BE)

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Policies for Water Resource


Management
Chair: Pat Bakir Consultant, Jordan

Room 1.07
Track 3
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Environmental & Water Related Actions & Awareness: the Relation with

14:35
14:55

Subjective Well-being Marta-Celia Surez-Varela Maci, University of


Granada (ES)
Managed Aquifer Recharge: the Widening Gap Between Law & Policy in
India Markus Starkl, Centre for Decision Aid in Environmental Management
(AT)
Public-Private Water Partnerships in Fragile Areas Marianne Beisheim,
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik/SFB 700 Governance (DE)
Territorial Policies for Managing Urban Stormwater: the Experience of Twenty
Communities in France Nathalie Le Nouveau, Certu (FR)
Closing Summary

Benchmarking of control &


monitoring strategies for the
urban wastewater system
Chairs: Magnus Arnell Urban Water Management, Sweden
& Ulf Jeppsson Lund University, Sweden

Interest in benchmarking operational strategies of WTPs has never been greater.


The IWA Task Group is focused on a possible Benchmark Simulation Model 3
(following BSM 1 & 2), with further process descriptions, such as greenhouse
gas, micropollutants, physico-chemical reactions, and with spatial extensions to
catchment, sewer system and receiving waters. Ulf Jeppsson (Lund University,
Sweden) reviews the Task Groups output and plans; Peter Vanrolleghem
(Universit Laval, Canada) examines how greenhouse gases emissions can be
incorporated; Xavier Flores-Alsina (Technical University, Denmark) considers
plant-wide phosphorus & pH models; and Magnus Arnell, (Urban Water
Management, Sweden) focuses on plant-wide energy efficiency.

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Topics covered in this session include: Drinking water quality regulation and
the interaction with water services regulation and Environmental regulation
and the interaction with water services regulation with contributions from the
World Health Organisation and the European Environment Agency.

Pricing Policies & Effective


Governance as Key Elements for
Water Services Sustainable Financing

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Chair: Roberto Zocchi Acea/EUREAU, Belgium


How powerful is the 3T framework (Tariffs, Taxes, Transfer) as a tool to
attain secure sustainable infrastructure financing?

Water is a capital-intensive industry requiring large investments for water and


wastewater utilities to succeed. The 3Ts framework developed by the OECD
and applied by EUREAU, is a powerful tool for understanding the sources of
funds that underpin capital and operation costs. Roberto Zocchi, (EurEau/Acea,
Italy) introduces the workshop with a European Commission perspective. He is
followed by Aziza Akhmouch (OECD, France) discussing water governance;
Alberto Biancardi (AEEGSI/WAREG, Italy) on regulation; and Gunda Rstel
(Stadtentwsserung Dresden, Germany) on utility aspects. The focus is on the
3Ts approach to different European countries, and how the framework supports
policy-makers and governance bodies in determining effective pricing policies.

Decision Support Systems


Chair: Eduardo Ayesa, CEIT, Spain

Zambrano, Uppsala Universitet (SE)

15:55 Decision-making Web-tool to Optimise the Eco-efficiency of Urban Water


Cycle Management Desire Marn, CETaqua (ES)

16:15 Operational Decision Support System for Integrated Urban Wastewater


Systems Pedro Pvoa, guas de Portugal SGPS, SA (PT)

16:35 Decision Support System for Metabolism-based Transition to Urban Water


Systems of Tomorrow Mark Morley, University of Exeter (UK)

16:55 Closing Summary

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 1

Room 1.08
Track 3
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Fault Detection & Isolation of Sensors in Aeration Control Systems Jesus

Break

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Room 1.08
Track 3
WS

How can enhanced benchmarking in treatment plant operation optimise


the urban wastewater system and expand its scope beyond the plant?

Coffee Break

Auditorium 2

Central Anatolia Lake, Turkey Selim Sanin, Hacettepe University (TR)

Evaluated with LCA Methodolgy Closing Summary Magnus Rahmberg, IVL


Swedish Environmental Research Institute (SE)
11:15 Hydrodynamic-Biokinetic Model Integration Applied to a Full-scale WWTP
Usman Rehman, Ghent University (BE)
11:35 Impact of High Temperature in Vertical Subsurface Flow Constructed
Wetlands: HYDRUS Modelling Study Jorge Rodriguez, Masdar Institute of
Science & Technology (AE)
11:55 Closing Summary

12:00 - 13:30

14:15

Chair: Shigeo Fujii Kyoto University, Japan

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Seasonal CH4, N2O & NH3 Fluxes from Air-water Interface of a Eutrophic

Lunch

13:55

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

Lakes & Reservoirs

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Extension of The BSM2 Influent Generator Model to Describe Combined

12:00 - 13:30
Auditorium 2

Room 1.08
Track 3
TS

Auditorium 1

Chair: Cludio Jesus guas de Portugal Internacional, Portugal


What are the future funding strategies of major donors for the Lusophone
countries in the period 2014-2020?

Lunch

Topics covered in this session include: Regulation as a tool for implementing


the human right to water and sanitation in a context of rapid urban growth
and quality of service regulation and benchmarking. With contributions from
the UN Special Rapporteur for the Human Right to Water & Sanitation and
the World Bank.

32

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Water Regulators Forum

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Water Regulators Forum

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Monday

09:00 - 10:00

Water Regulators Forum

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Basin Yi-Min Zhang, Nanjing Institute Of Environmental Science (CN)

11:15 Eutrophication of Lake Sete Cidades & Response to Management Measures:


a Long Term Investigation Maria Conceio dos Santos, FCT -UNL (PT)

11:35 Dissolved & Sediment Phosphorus Loadings Uncertainty Using Fuzzy Logic
Supiah Shamsudin, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (MY)

11:55 Closing Summary

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

Managing the Coastal Zone


Chair: Amit Chanan State Water Corporation NSW, Australia

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Coupling of Watersheds, Estuaries & Regional Seas Through Numerical
13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Modelling for Western Iberia Francisco Campuzano, Maretec - Instituto


Superior Tcnico - Universidade de Lisboa (PT)
How Subsurface Water Technologies Provide Robust, Effective & Costefficient Freshwater Solutions Koen Zuurbier, KWR Watercycle Research
Institute (NL)
Management of Anthropogenic Discharges in Coastal Areas Ramiro Neves,
IST- Instituto Superior Tcnico (PT)
Freshkeeper, an Innovative Approach Against increased Salinization of
Groundwater Wells In Florida Petra Ross, Arcadis Nederland BV (NL)
Closing Summary

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

Managing Water across Boundaries


Chair: Alan Vicory Stantec, USA

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Sustainable Water & Waste Management in Yinchuan New Town JosIgnacio Ramrez, Sweco Environment (SE)

15:55 Abatement vs. Treatment for Efficient Water Quality Management in


Transboundary Systems Maria Cunha, CESAM Department of Environment
& Planning, University of Aveiro (PT)
16:15 Intended Outcomes & Materialised Impact: Analysing the Aswan High Dams
Development & its Trajectory over Time Ineke Kleemans, UNESCO-IHE (NL)
16:35 A Practical Study on Reducing Energy Consumption by Supplying Water
Operation Reviews & the Electric Power Monitoring System in the Tokyo
Waterworks Bureau Seiji Kaneko, Tokyo Metropolitan Waterworks Bureau (JP)
16:55 Closing Summary

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

33

Programme

Programme

Monday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. World Water Data: for Advocacy, Action or Monitoring? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Holistic Approach for the Assessment of UF/MF Membrane Life-time:

the Case Study of Doha West WWTP Miguel Angel Sanz, Degrmont (FR)

Phosphorus Recovery
Chair: Mark van Loosdrecht TU Delft, Netherlands

Electrodialysis: Fouling & Scaling Christian Kazner, University of Applied


Sciences & Arts Northwestern Switzerland (CH)
11:15 Indirect Potable Reuse & Multiple Reuse Projects CONAGUA: the Case of
Valley of Mexico Claudia Hernandez, National Water Comission (MX)
11:35 A Comparative Study of the Influence of AOPs on UF & RO Membrane
Fouling in Water Reclamation Maria Amores, CETaqua, Centro Tecnolgico
del Agua (ES)
11:55 Closing Summary

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Effect of Oxygen on Simultaneous Uptake & Denitrification Pan Yu Wong,
10:55

10:55 Dewatering Reverse Osmosis Concentrate from Water Reuse by

11:15
11:35
11:55

CSIRO (AU)
Phosphorus Removal & Recovery from Municipal Wastewater Using Osmotic
Membrane Bioreactor (OMBR) Process Yen Peng Ting, National University
of Singapore (SG)
Full Scale P-recovery from Digested Waste Water Sludge in Belgium:
Economic Opportunities & Risks Marjoleine Weemaes, Aquafin NV (BE)
Coupling Nutrient Recovery with Meeting Low Phosphorus Discharge
Standards Bruce Jefferson, Cranfield University (UK)
Closing Summary

Room 1.09
Track 2
Chair: Corinne Trommsdorff IWA
WS
Can water & wastewater utilities be carbon & energy neutral by 2030?
Energy & Carbon Neutral Utilities

The workshop will capitalise on existing knowledge, and share experiences


of utilities and water sector professionals to build a toolbox of technologies
and concepts for consideration by utilities starting or continuing an energy
efficiency approach. This is an on-going process continuing after the
workshop. Gustaf Olsson (IEA Lund University, Sweden) discusses the water
cycle for energy saving avoidance and generation opportunities. A matrix of
solutions, initiated by IWA Water Climate and Energy Programme, will be
shared and developed. Sub-groups focusing on water treatment, distribution,
wastewater treatment and households led by Daniel Nolasco (NOLASCO y
Asociados S. A., Argentina), Jose Porro (University of Girona, Spain), Enrique
Cabrera (Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, Spain) and Steve Kenway
(University of Queensland, Australia). Benchmarking, indicators, technologies
and case studies are covered.

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Chair: Jrg Drewes TU Munich, Germany

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

Successful Nutrients Removal


Chair: Frank Rogalla Aqualia, Spain

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

The Energy Gain from Wastewater


Chair: Daniel Nolasco NOLASCO y Asociados, Argentina

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Incorporating Potable Reuse in Big Spring, Texas - a Case Study Terry Keep,

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Adding Value to Wastewater by Resource Recovery & Reformulation as

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Beyond Energy Neutrality & Into Net Positive Energy in a Wastewater Nutrient

13:55 Technology Selection in Futuristic Water Reuse Scenarios: a Fuzzy Set-

13:55 Resource Recovery from Wastewater in Austria - Wastewater Treatment

13:55 Plant Scale Development of a Microbial Electrolysis Cell Sarah Cotterill,

Trojan Technologies (CA)

Based Multi-Expert Technology Seyed Sadr, University of Surrey (UK)

14:15 Can We Trust in MAR to Deal with Emerging Contaminants Present in

Reclaimed Water? Marta Hernandez Garcia, Cetaqua, Water Technology


Center (ES)
14:35 Artificial Recharge Enhancement to Prevent Seawater Intrusion in the
Coastal Aquifer of Korba-Mida Teresa Leito, National Laboratory for Civil
Engineering (LNEC) (PT)
14:55 Closing Summary

16:35
16:55

Newcastle University (UK)

15:30 - 17:00

Mehran, Water Reuse Consulting (US)


What are the Real Benefits of Providing Recycled Water to Customers Via a
Third Pipe? Glenn Wilson, Yarra Valley Water (AU)
Water Reclamation with Ceramic Microfiltration: First Part of a Long-term
Pilot Study in Portugal Rui Viegas, LNEC National Civil Engineering
Laboratory (PT)
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Onsite Residential Graywater Recycling - a Case
Study: The City of Los Angeles Michael Stenstrom, University of California (US)
Closing Summary

Chair: Maria Reis Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal

15:55
16:15
16:35
16:55

Process Performance Maria Albuquerque, Veolia Environnement Recherche


Et Innovation (FR)
Polyhydroxyalkanoate Production Potential of Activated Sludge Bacteria
Daisuke Inoue, Kitasato University (JP)
Impact of Operational Conditions on Resource Recovery from Industrial
Wastewaters Gilda Carvalho, FCT-UNL (PT)
Nutrient Removal by Microalgae from Wastewater Treatment Plants Angela
Kinsella, Rowan University (US)
Closing Summary

New Routes to Energy Recovery


Chair: Diego Rosso University of California, USA

Potential Even Higher Jan Post, Wetsus / Wageningen University (NL)

15:55 Optimisation of Water Supply Networks for Combined Leakage Reduction &

Water & industry forum

Auditorium 8

The final session will be Synthesis: New Pathways. The IWAs President, Glen
Diagger, will provide a synthesis based on discussions and suggestions from
the roundtable session, addressing IWAs commitment to continue to work
with business, and to support and enable them to work towards sustainable
water management practices.

Hydropower Energy Generation Lucy Corcoran, Trinity College Dublin (IE)


Membrane Xiaoxiao Song, Nanyang Technological University (SG)

16:35 Research on the Energy Recovery of the Small Binary Cycle Generation in
the Sewage Treatment Plant Takayuki Ono, Japan Institute of Wastewater
Engineering & Technology (JP)
16:55 Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

The next session is a roundtable on Industries and Water Sustainability in


2030. This interactive session will seek to highlight some of the current
leading-edge practices in the three sectors that could be replicated and/
or scaled-up to have industry-wide transformative impacts on water
management. A panel will introduce issues related to the 3 sectors, after
which participants will deliberate on viable pathways and concrete actions.

16:15 Energy Recovery from Seawater Using Thin-film Nanofiber Composite PRO

17:00 - 17:15
Auditorium 1

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Free Energy From Salinity Gradients: Emerging Applications Make the Global

Break

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Auditorium 8

Treatment Moreno Di Pofi, GE Water & Process Technologies (CA)

Session 3

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Sludge to PHA Valorisation: Monitoring Enrichment Degree for Control of

Water & industry forum

14:55 Closing Summary

15:30 - 17:00
Room 5C
Track 2
TS

The forum will open with a session on Business Leadership and Water
Stewardship. This session will review the growing evidence around how
water is linked to economic growth and business results. Ger Bergkamp,
Executive Director of the IWA, opens with a panel from Water Stewardship
Alliance and Nestle amongst others.

Sanitation & Reclamation Michael Stenstrom, UCLA (US)

Session 3

Value from PHA & other Chemicals

Auditorium 8

14:35 The Role of Innovative Technologies in Achieving Energy-Neutral Wastewater

15:00 - 15:30

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

Water & industry forum

Auditorium 1

14:15 Optimised Decentralised Wastewater Systems for Better Energy Efficiency,

Coffee Break

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Nitrogenin Recycled Water: Threat to Groundwater Quality? Mohsen

16:15

Plants as Regional Energy Cells Florian Kretschmer, University of Natural


Resources & Life Sciences, Vienna (AT)
14:15 Extractive Nutrient Recovery, a Disruptive Resource Management Strategy for
the Basins of the Future Samuel Jeyanayagam, CH2M HILL (US)
14:35 Pathways to Nutrient Recovery from Waste - Views from Industry Heather
Smith, Cranfield University (UK)
14:55 Closing Summary

Removal Application Julian Sandino, CH2M HILL (US)

15:00 - 15:30

Chair: Hallvard Odegaard NTNU Oslo, Norway

15:55

Growth Media:Current Prospects Robert Lovitt, Swansea University (UK)

Coffee Break

Benefits & Problems of


Water Recycling

34

Auditorium 1

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Potable Reuse Schemes

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Franz Frechen University of Kassel, Germany

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Monday

09:00 - 10:00

Advanced Membrane Technologies


for Water Reuse

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

35

Programme

Programme

Monday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

Measures Based on Grid Kim Hwansuk, Korea University (KR)

Wolf Merkel, IWW Water Centre (DE)

11:15 Assessment of Structural Measures Effectiveness to Cope with Climate

Change impacts in Barcelona Pere Malgrat, University of Zaragoza (ES)


11:35 Municipal Water Management in Germany Facing Climate Change: Where to
Act & How to Act Dorothea Weingaertner, FIW E.V. (DE)
11:55 Closing Summary

Chair: Peter Vanrolleghem modelEAU - Universit Laval, Canada

Municipal organisations may excel in one or more aspects of water


management, but none can claim to be optimum across the board. Pooling their
experiences could reveal possible improvements for all involved. However, we
need better metrics to assess the shortcomings and recommend the best areas
for improvement in water service delivery. In this workshop: Paul Reiter (IWA)
overviews the need for evaluation systems for cities water services; Helena
Alegre (LNEC, Portugal) assesses current and future performance indicators;
Enrique Cabrera, (Universidad Politcnica de Valencia, Spain) describes the
AquaRating evaluation system for water and sanitation services and Peter
Vanrolleghem, (Universit Laval, Canada) introduces the 17 elements of aquaresponsibility. The session concludes with discussion on next steps.

Chair: Bingcai Pan Nanjing University, China

10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

Management at all Time Scales Andreas Farnleitner, Vienna University of


Technology (AT)
Source Apportionment of Wastewater Using Bayesian Analysis of
Fluorescence Spectroscopy Daniel Blake, Brigham Young University (US)
A DNA Sequence Database of Vertebrate Faecal Communities as a Basis
for Molecular Faecal Indication Andreas Farnleitner, Vienna University of
Technology (AT)
Evaluation of Benthic Macroinvertebrates in an Urban Basin as a Tool for Water
Resources Management Carla Bem, Universidade Federal do Paran (BR)
Closing Summary

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

Radar Suresh Babu Parasuraman, DHI Water & Environment (S) Pte Ltd (SG)
Representation of Daily Temperature & Precipitation In So Paulo Using a
Stochastic Weather Generator Michel Nobre Muza, Federal Institute of Santa
Catarina (BR)
Flood Protection & Water Resiliency for Critical Facilities in The New York
City Region Edgar Westerhof, Arcadis (US)
How do Typhoon & Dust Storm Affect Rainwater Harvesting Systems?
Jhy-Chern Liu, National Taiwan University of Science & Technology (TW)
Closing Summary

Innovative Contracting
for Service Delivery
Chair: Philippe Marin World Bank

Auditorium 4
Track 1
WS

How to mainstream innovative and outcome orientated service


contracts that reward good performance?

The range of contracting options for water supply & wastewater services is
expanding, reflecting a shift in the role of the private sector, the emergence
of new financial instruments and a focus on performance outcomes. Philippe
Marin (World Bank) will set the scene for PBCs in the water sector, followed
by case studies where PBCs have been applied in North America, Tegucigalpa
and the Philippines, with presentations from Harald Jensen (Veolia Water North
America, United States), David Michaud (World Bank) and Roland Liemberger
(Miya, Philipines) respectively. An expert panel rounds off the workshop with
experiences and lessons learned from Didier Carron (Naldeo, France), Siemen
Veenstra (Vitens-Evides International, Netherlands) and Henry Saint Bris
(SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT, France).

Optimising Water Resources


Chair: Erwin Vonk KWR, Netherlands

13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

China Baicheng Region Feng Feng, Yellow River Conservancy Technical


Institute (CN)
Climate Change & Drinking Water Resources in The Netherlands: Effects &
Strategies Susanne Wuijts, RIVM (NL)
Water Resources Management in the Brazilian Semiarid from the Ecological
Resilience Ticiana Studart, Federal Institute of Cear (BR)
Russia in Global Water Industry Tatiana Bibikova, Institute of Geography
RAS (RU)
Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Chair: Katharine Cross IWA

Auditorium 4
Track 1
Chairs: Alexandra Serra & Cludio de Jesus, Aguas de Portugal, Portugal WS
Management Models for
Water Utilities

How can cities and their utilities adapt to climate change


and build resilience to secure supplies?

Is there a best management model for a water utility?


If so, how do we identify the key elements of such a model?

Cities and utilities must consider the fundamental characteristics that build
resilience to changing weather patterns and available water. This includes
understanding the physical system attributes, actors and their normative
values and objectives, as well as the rules governing a system. Highlighting
approaches developed by cities and utilities to adapt to the impacts of climate
change, Filipe Duarte Santos (EPAL, Portugal) provides a global perspective
on climate change challenges, particularly the management of water resources
in urban water distribution/sanitation; while the Asian Development Bank
focuses on preparedness and resilience in Asian Cities. Klaasjan J. Raat
(KWR, Netherlands) and Joao Paulo de Carcomom (LNEC, Portugal) address
alternative solutions such as Subsurface Water Technologies and Managed
Aquifer Recharge to cope with water scarcity.

Effective management models are a necessary condition for sustainable


water services. There are many solutions with proven success, but what
are the critical factors that must co-exist in any model? The workshop will
debate key success factors of different management models. A panel of
water utilities leaders from inspiring national, regional and local utilities
come together to share experiences and ideas, compare different models
and discuss challenges. The panel will be Afonso Lobato Faria, (Aguas de
Portugal SGPS, Portugal), Maurice Neo (PUB Singapore, Singapore), Pedro
Paulino (Fundo do Investimento e Patrimnio do Abastecimento de gua,
Mozambique), Virgilio Rivera (Manila Water, Philippines), Liondio Ceita
(EPAL EP, Angola) and Aziza Akhmouch (OECD).

Optimising Water Resources


Chair: Hiroaki Furumai University of Tokyo, Japan

River Water Quality Jos Pinho, University Of Minho (PT)

15:55 Organic Carbon Modeling in Urban Rivers: is The Right Parameter for Water

Resources Management? Heloise Garcia Knapik, Federal University of


Paran (BR)
16:15 Cost-effective integrated Optimization of the Eindhoven Wastewater System:
Stepwise Implementation of Selected Measures Ingmar Nopens, Ghent
University (BE)
16:35 Methodology for the Definition of Protection Limits at Surface Source Water
Intakes Antnio Rodrigues, Universidade Nova De Lisboa (PT)
16:55 Closing Summary

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Performance Assessment of Different Dam Discharges Schemes Influencing

Break

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Optimised Allocation of Eco-compensation of Flood Resources in Northeast

Coffee Break

Auditorium 3
Track 1
WS

Room 3B
Track 4
WS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 New Framework for Faecal Pollution Analysis Supports Water Resource

Lunch

Urban Resilience & Adaptation


to Climate Change

36

New Techniques for


Water Quality Assessment

12:00 - 13:30

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Urban Flood Management System for Singapore Using Hydrological (X-Band)

14:55

Auditorium 4
Track 1
WS

Lunch

Chair: Gerard van den Berg KWR, Netherlands

14:35

Objective Evaluation Systems


for Level of Water Service
Delivery by Cities

How can cities identify and strive for optimum water service performance?

10:55 Securing Safe Drinking Water Supply Under Climate Change Conditions

14:15

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

Auditorium 1

Coffee Break

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Assessment of Flood Vulnerability Considering Climate Change & Adaptation

13:55

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Managing Urban Floods


& Harvesting Rainwater

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Gerard van den Berg KWR, Netherlands

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Monday

09:00 - 10:00

Cities Under Climate Change

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Auditorium 1

Basic Water & Sanitation


Infrastructure Services
Chair: Marianne Kjelln, SIWI, Sweden

Auditorium 1

Room 3C
Track 4
WS

Can water and sanitation infrastructure save humankind once again?

Continuing the morning keynote from Hans Rosling (Gapminder Institute,


Sweden), Annette Prss-stn (WHO) presents trends related to the
global environmental burden of disease, this is followed by taking a look
at the role of infrastructure services within this context. Julian Doczi
(Overseas Development Institute, UK) sets the scene by looking at water and
infrastructure services in a post-2015 world, this is followed with an overview
of global governance and finance trends from Jennifer de France (WHO) and
human resource capacity development needs from Kirsten de Vette (IWA).
Robert Bos (IWA) and Eleanor Allen (Arcadis, United States) join the panel
discussion. The following session of this workshop looks at examples and
opportunities for transformational change in water and sanitation services.

Basic Water & Sanitation


Infrastructure Services
Chair: Marianne Kjelln SIWI, Sweden

Room 3C
Track 4
WS

Can water and sanitation infrastructure save humankind once again?

Following the morning session that examined the macro drivers and
trends, this workshop focuses on case studies and lessons learned for
transformational change in the water and sanitation sector. Francisco Nunes
Correia (Portuguese Water Partnership, Portugal) illuminates the story of how
Portugal emerged from the 1970s and improved the water and sanitation
sector; followed by the emerging success story in sanitation services in
Dakar from Mbaye Mbeguere (ONAS, Senegal); and a presentation from
GWOPA on addressing inequalities in urban water supply. A high-level panel
discussion with contributions from Jack Moss (AquaFED, France) and Sergio
Campos (IDB) concludes the workshop.

Human Right to Water


& Sanitation the IWA Manual
Chair: Robert Bos IWA

Room 3C
Track 4
WS

How do practitioners particularly utilities and regulators implement


and provide oversight on the human right to water and sanitation?

In response to international recognition of the Human Rights to Water and


Sanitation (HRWS) in 2010, the IWA is producing an HRWS Manual for
water and sanitation practitioners. Focusing on the practical implications
of the progressive realisation these rights, the manual will be the focus
of discussions. Gerard Payen (AquaFED, France), will introduce the
subject, followed by Michael Rouse (former President IWA) looking at the
roles and responsibilities of different actors and Neil McLeod (e-Thekwini,
South Africa) presenting a case study from South Africa where HRWS has
been incorporated into service provision. The workshop concludes with a
discussion on the opportunities for supporting implementation of the HRWS.

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

37

Programme

Business Forums

Keynote Plenary

Business Forum Room 01

Business Forum Room 02

10:30 - 11:15 Japan Water Works Association

10:30 - 11:15 European Investment Bank

Japanes Innovative Technologies to work on Global Water Issues

Innovative financing for innovative water projects

Presented by: Toshio Kato, METAWATER Co., Ltd and 2 presenters form
KUBOTA Corp and TAISEI KIKO Co., Ltd

Presented by: Monica Scatasta (Head, Water and Waste Management


Division), Thomas van Gilst (Senior Water Sector Specialist), Alexis Gazzo
(E7Y Partner Cleantech & Sustainability) Robert Schrder (Policy Office EC
DGEnv/EIP Water)

Monday

Monday

09:00 - 10:00

1. Water as the driving force for development and health benefits? Hans Rosling, Gapminder Institute
2. Panel Discussion

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 6
Optimising Wastewater
Track 5
Treatment Processes
TS
Chair: Shang-Lien Lo National Taiwan University, Chinese Taiwan
10:30 Introduction
10:35 Affordable Wastewater Treatment & Resources Recovery through Optimal
10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

Technology Integration Shihu Hu, The University of Queensland (AU)


A Practical & Sound Calibration Procedure Applied to the WWTP of
Eindhoven Youri Amerlinck, Ghent University (BE)
On-line Sensors for the Control & Optimisation of an Adsorption-style HRAS
Pilot Study Mark Miller, HRSD/Virginia Tech (US)
1-STEP Filter at WWTP Horstermeer (NL): First Year Full-scale Results
Manon Bechger, Waternet (NL)
Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Biological Wastewater
Treatment Processes
Chair: Dilek Sanin Middle East Technical University, Turkey

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

Biological Phosphorus Removal


Chair: Maite Pijuan ICRA, Spain

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 A Dynamic Model for Physicochemical Phosphorus Removal: Validation &
Integration in ASM2d Glen Daigger, CH2M HILL (US)

10:55 Effect of Covered & Uncovered Fermenters on the Microbial Diversity & VFAs

in the EBPR Process Maggy Momba, Tshwane University of Technology (ZA)

11:15 Metabolism & Ecological Niche of Tetrasphaera & Accumulibacter in

Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Adrian Oehmen, FCT-UNL (PT)


11:35 Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal in Warm Climates : Long Term
Performances, Kinetics & Model Philippe Ginestet, Degremont (FR)
11:55 Closing Summary

Membrane Experience:
from past to future
Chair: Christian Kazner RWTH Aachen, Germany

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Influence of Operating Parameters on the Fate & Removal of Three Estrogens

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Membrane Asset Management: Lessons Learnt from Full-scale Plants to

13:55 Proteomics Reliability for Micropollutants Degradation Insight into Activated

13:55 An Innovative Membrane-Aerated Biofilm Reactor (MABR) for Low Energy

in Lab-scale AAO System Yujie Feng, Harbin Institute of Technology (CN)

Sludge Systems Gianluigi Buttiglieri, Catalan Institute for Water Research (ES)
14:15 Biodegradation of Diethylketone by Two Fungi Filomena Costa, University of
Minho (PT)
14:35 Linking TFT-LCD Wastewater Treatment Performance to Microbial Population
Abundance Yi-Ju Wu, National Cheng Kung University (TW)
14:55 Closing Summary

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Next Generation Technologies


for Wastewater Treatment
Chair: Guoren Xu Harbin Institute of Technology, PR China

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Manammox - Mainstream Anammox at Sjlunda WWTP David Gustavsson,
15:55
16:15
16:35
16:55

VA SYD (SE)
Mainstream Deammonification & Comparisons with other BNR Activated
Sludge Process in Singapore Yeshi Cao, Pub (SG)
Nitrogen Removal from Wastewater by Coupling Anammox & Methanedependent Denitrification Processes Shihu Hu, The University of Queensland
(AU)
Modelling Simultaneous Anaerobic Methane & Ammonium Removal in a
Granular Sludge Reactor Mari Winkler, Ghent University (BE)
Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Maximise their Service Life Anne Brehant, Suez Environnement (FR)

Treatment of Municipal Sewage Moreno Di Pofi, GE Water & Process


Technologies (CA)
14:15 New Tool for Online Membrane Integrity Monitoring Andreas Hauser,
Tuv Sud (DE)
14:35 The Role of Organic Matter on Reverse Solute Diffusion in PRO Process
Jungwon Kim, Korea University (KR)
14:55 Closing Summary

Membrane Bioreactors
Chair: Val Frenkel EKI, USA

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 The Life Time of a Full Scale Hollow Fibers MBR, and its End-of-Life Triggers
Alessio Fenu, Aquafin (BE)

15:55 Start-up of Membrane Bioreactor & Hybrid Moving Bed Biofilm Reactor-

Membrane Bioreactor: Kinetic Study Juan Leyva, University of Granada (ES)

METAWATER has been conducting activities in order to contribute to urban


environmental conservation. It provides solutions for micro-organics removal from
the effluent of WWTP, using the combination of ozone and ceramic membrane. It
also provides solutions for CSO problems with high rate filtration system.

This session looks at water sector innovation, related financial tools and presents
the findings of a study on financing RDI. The EIB and the EC present new joint
financing mechanisms in support of RDI focusing on the water sector.

11:15 - 12:00 Masdar (Abu Dhabi Future Energy


Company)

11:15 - 12:00 Inter-American Development Bank


(IDB) & International Water Association (IWA)

Innovative water desalination technologies in Abu Dhabi

AquaRating market introduction of a new raint system for utilities

Discussion on Masdars Renewable Energy Desalination Program that aims


at developing and demonstrating innovations in desalination for the purpose
of both ensuring water security and reducing energy consumption. Target
audiences of the session are technology providers, entrepreneurs and other
members of the industry with innovative clean-tech ideas on desalination.

Presented by: Raimon Puigjaner


AquaRating will be open for business by end of 2014. It offers an independent
and integral assessment of water and sanitation services to any utility serving
urban areas, based on reliable (audited) information.

13:30 - 14:15 Pure Technologies

13:30 - 14:15 Suez Environnement

Advanced Risk Based Asset Mangement

AquadvancedTM, an innovative solution for optimising the performance of


drinking water networks

Presented by: Koen Kinsbergen


The session will focus on Pipeline Rehabilitation and Prioritisation (PRP).
A roadmap will be provided for CAPEX reduction through focus on highrisk pipelines and management of these critical assets through innovative
technology solutions.

14:15 - 15:00 TaKaDu

Presented by: Thierry Mallet, Executive Vice President in charge of Innovation


and Business Performance
Faced with urban population growth and the increasing need for water,
combating wastage and optimising the performance of water networks is a
priority. AqadvancedTM is a tool that allows local authorities to monitor their
drinking water networks in real time.

14:15 - 15:00

Integrated Water Network Management: Using Analytics for the Future

Presented by: Amir Peleg


TaKaDu is an Integrated Water Network Management solution enabling water
utilities to improve efficiency and make smarter decisions. Utility representatives
will share how they use TaKaDus solution to manage network concerns,
sharing examples of efficiency gains. Technical partners will discuss the
additional benefits utilities can gain by maximising the use of their raw data.

15:30 - 16:15 Watershare

15:30 - 16:15 Syrinix

Watershare Distribution

Intelligent Pipeline monitoring

Watershare is the collaborative platform for top applied research institutes in


the public water sector. Members share their best expert tools to assist enduser clients. Watershare experts can take the lead in their own countries in
offering advanced and very practical solutions to water utilities, municipalities
and water agencies, helping them meet their daily and long-term strategic
goals. Watershare: Sharing the knowledge, building the network and serving
the community. In three Business Forums we discuss Watershare Distribution
22nd / Watershare Water resources & treatment 23rd / Watershare
Sustainability 24th

Presented by: Emma Flack


Sophisticated smart water technologies are changing the way water networks
are monitored and controlled. As the cost of these technologies decreases and
the deployment process becomes easier and faster, more and more utilities are
adopting a smart approach. A Smart Water Network is a fully integrated set
of data-driven components and solutions, which allow water utilities to optimise
all aspects of their water distribution systems.

16:15 - 17:00 Scinor Membrane Technology Co., Ltd

16:15 - 17:00 Frezite - Energy and Environment

Environmentally Benign Membrane Manufacturing Materials science and


application breakthroughs

Innovation in stand-alone and energy solutions

16:15 Organic Loading Rate for Anaerobic Membrane Bioreactor Treating Synthetic
Municipal Wastewater Chun-Hai Wei, King Abdullah University of Science &
Technology (SA)
16:35 Performance of a Hybrid Moving Bed Membrane Bioreactor Treating Low
Alkalinity Wastewater Jose Vazquez Padin, FCC Aqualia (ES)
16:55 Closing Summary

1. Observing Earth & Looking Forward: Radically Rethinking our Options for the Future. Dennis Bushnell, NASA
2. The Future Impact of Freshwater Management in Small-scale Agriculture. Jeremy Bird, IWMI

38

Auditorium 1

Auditorium 1

Presented by: Dr. Richard Woodling & Dr. Lin Yakai


Modern high performance membranes are critical to resolving many environmental
challenges yet many of the processes utilised in the manufacturing of the
membranes themselves pose environmental challenges. In many cases, the higher
the performance, the worse the environmental challenge.
A TIPS manufacturing process will be described which is environmentally benign;
includes full recovery of all organic solvents and extracted reagents used in the
membrane formation while producing a High Quality/High Performance membrane
for water treatment applications. While full environmental concern has been
addressed, no membrane quality has been sacrificed.

Stand-alone solutions are one way of implementing energy efficiency! At many


different scales, whether participating in making water management more
efficient using photovoltaic technologies or just working together to make the
products and processes more efficient, FREZITE encourages the adoption of
efficient technologies.
The challenge for improving water-use efficiency in Agricultural, Water and
Sanitation industries require adopting more sustainable water management
practices and equipments. THINKING OFF-GRID!

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

39

Notes

Congress Programme

Tuesday

Tuesday:
Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative
approaches and the adoption of new paradigms and technologies.
Participating in technical sessions including oral and poster
presentations, brings you the latest findings and allows you to
connect to new developments. Attending workshops will provide
insight and inspiration for cooperation and collaboration on
research and practical applications. The workshops and technical
sessions provide a unique opportunity for connecting with peers
from across the water sector.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

40

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Tuesday Spotlight
Plenary Session

09:00 - 10:00, Auditorium 1

Moderator: Gerard Payen, Chair, IWA Strategic Council


Panellists: Angel Simon Grimaldos, SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT

Transforming utilities to deliver efficient


& sustainable water services

& Aguas de Barcelona


Afonso Lobato de Faria, Aguas de Portugal
Sandra Ralston, Water Environment Federation
Anderss Bkgaard, VCS Denmark

Plenary Keynote:
Sue Murphy,
Chief Executive
Officer, Water
Corporation of
Western Australia

Plenary Session

17:15 - 18:00, Auditorium 1

Moderator: Blanca Jimenez, UNESCO-IHP


Panellists: Paul Brown, University of South Florida

Social dimensions of water


management innovations at scale

Girish Menon, WaterAid


Menashe Kaslassy, Miya

Plenary Keynote:
Dipak Gyawali,
Director, Nepal
Conservation
Foundation & Pragya
of the Royal Nepal
Academy of Science
& Technology

IWA World Water Exhibition, 09:00 - 18:00, Hall 1 & 2


Join the worlds leading companies working in sustainable
water management. The IWA World Water Exhibition is a onestop-shop where you can connect and do business with the
leading industry and technology providers.

Lisbon night: dinner & Fado show, 19:30 - 22:30


An unforgettable evening of food, music and networking set
in a traditional Portuguese restaurant in one of Lisbons most
historic areas. Portuguese cuisine will be accompanied by the
haunting melodies of Fado. Fados mournful music originated
amongst the working class barrios of Lisbon, and is the most
famous and traditional of Portugals music genres.
Price: 65.00 + 23% VAT per person
Price includes dinner, fado show and transport

Young Water Professionals Networking & Discussion

12:00 - 13:30 Room 1.14 Meet your mentor in the room


and take them to lunch! Want to meet a senior in your field
of expertise? Sign up at YWP meeting room 1.14 and we will
match you up.
15:00 - 15:30 Room 1.14 Using online and social media to
change water practices in your work, and in society to change
water practices.
17:00 - 18:00 Room 1.14 YWP Twinning - meet your peers.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

43

Programme

Programme

Tuesday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

Auditorium 1

10:00 - 10:30

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 1

Continuation from yesterdays discussion and closing summary.

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Impact of Regulations on the


Implementation of Water Reuse
Projects

Big Data & Analytics for


the Water Sector
Chair: Daniel Shimie TNC, United States

Chair: Helena Marecos do Monte ISEL, Portugal


Will water reuse only be successful when regulation catches up with ambition?

Auditorium 2

The Forum kicks-off with a welcome from the Hosts: Watershare


and VEWIN and a keynote presentation from Angel Simon,
Deputy Chief Executive Officer in charge of Water Europe, Suez
Environnement. A panel discussion will follow focusing on
regional perspectives for fit-for-purpose utilities of the future.

Financial costs are seen as the main obstacle to water reuse projects that must
ensure public health and environmental protection. Technical factors and public
acceptance also hinder successful development of projects. These factors can
be addressed but the lack of regulations is a significant obstacle to water reuse
development. Agricultural irrigation is widely regulated, but other water reuse
applications, such as non-potable urban uses, industry and recreational uses
often lack regulatory support. Case studies will help evaluate how regulation can
aid the development of water reuse projects. Helena Marecos do Monte, (ISEL,
Portugal) will coordinate the discussion with Josef Lahnstein, (WABAG, Austria),
Shane Snyder, (University of Arizona, USA), and Jrg E. Drewes (TU Mnchen,
Germany).

Upstream management of water resources is an essential investment in


securing water for drinking and other uses in urban areas. Catchment
management improves water supply downstream both in terms of quantity and
quality and increases water services integrity. The workshop highlights effective
models and generates recommendations for connecting catchment and urban
water management, with a focus on the roles of water service operators and
regulators within river basin management processes. The Nature Conservancy,
US, provides an overview of natural infrastructure opportunities, followed by
ASTEE, France, with a case study of river restoration in an urban context. A
panel discussion will provide further insight to the practical actions taken by
utilities to improve upstream management.

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Continuing the utilities of the future theme, utility leaders will work in groups
to discuss the way forward for utility strategies addressing key themes
including: valuing water, innovation and private sector engagement and
competition.

Room 1.07
Track 3
TS

Chair: Jan Janssens JJC, Switzerland

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Regulation of the Water Service Quality Paula Freixial, ERSAR - the Water &
Waste Services Regulation Authority (PT)

Using Data to Drive Improvement


Chair: Bruno Nguyen Eau de Paris, France

13:55

Mozambique Manuel Alvarinho, Conselho de Regulao de guas (MZ)

14:15

14:15 Is Water Pricing Facilitating Adoption of Advanced Irrigation Management


Technologies in Europe? Hakan Djuma, The Cyprus Institute (CY)

14:35

14:35 Institutional & Policy Analysis of Wastewater (re)use for Agriculture: Case
Study Hyderabad, India Cecilia Saldias, Ghent University (BE)

Room 1.08
Track 3
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 How Big Data can Enhance Multi-utilities Management? Joo Feliciano,

13:55 Regulation by Proxy: Adapting Water Regulation to Small Towns in

14:55

AGS SA (PT)
Adaptable Urban Water Demand Prediction System Goran Banjac,
University of Zagreb (HR)
Innovative Smart Metering Based Applications for Water Utilities Paula Vieira,
LNEC (PT)
Detecting Leaks through AMR Data Analysis Xavier Litrico, Lyonnaise des
Eaux (FR)
Closing Summary

14:55 Closing Summary

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Utility leaders forum

Auditorium 2

The final session of the Forum will include a panel discussion responding
to a presentation from the OECD on managing urban waters. In closing the
Forum, utility leaders will share their views on how the global utility community
can work together to ensure utilities are fit for purpose in the face of future
demands.

Financing Innovation
in the Water Cycle
Chair: Mike Farrimond ACQUEAU, United Kingdom

Using Data & Technology to Overcome


Water Management Challenges
Chair: Carlos Campos Suez Environment, France
How can data and technology be used to overcome
crucial water management challenges?

Worldwide, the water cycle faces a dramatic evolution due to demographic


growth and urbanisation, globalisation and wealth growth, spatial and temporal
pressure, and climate change. By 2030, the related challenges need to be
addressed proactively and responsively through innovative solutions. Funding
new technologies from research to commercial scale remains one of the
greatest challenges. ACQUEAU is the EUREKA Cluster programme supporting
innovative, industry-driven, pre-competitive R&D projects in water technologies.
Its mission is to overcome European water sector bottlenecks for innovation
financing and to boost competitiveness. Leading the discussion will be Mike
Farrimond, (ACQUEAU, UK), Cyrille Lemoine, (Volia Environnement, France),
Dominique Dfossez, (NXP Semiconductors, France), Sylvie Baig, (SUEZ
Environnement, France), and Thierry Sartorius, (Hydrelis, France).

ICT technologies have a strong and growing impact on water management. This
workshop will explore how city managers can harness the power of Advanced
Solutions (real time control, extensive use of predictive models, spatial data
analysis, social media integration, Software-as-a-Service delivery modes,
cloud-based services, to name but a few features) to protect the water resource,
improve operational efficiency of water systems and improve service-quality to
their constituents, whilst optimizing capital and operational expenditures. The
workshop will cover Advanced Metering Infrastructure, Advanced Solutions for
water networks as well as sewage and stormwater networks with contributions
from Thomas Perianu (Lyonnaise des Eaux, France), Jean-Franois Depierre
(Ondeo Systems, France) and municipal network managers.

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Room 1.08
Track 3
WS

How will future innovations in water cycle processes


and technologies be funded?

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

44

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Auditorium 1

Chair: Katharine Cross, IWA

From weather variability to crowd sourcing to consumer behaviour, vast amounts


of data are being collected and made available to inform water management. We
will look at examples of big data programmes that are affecting global and regional
policy, and impacting on the ground by influencing decision-making. Amir Peleg
(TaKaDu, Israel) discusses data analytics at the utility level, followed by Kala
Fleming (IBM Research, Kenya) introducing Cityforward, an open platform from
IBM that includes a range of city data; a look at data analytics in the catchment
level from Gert Holm Kristensen (DHI, Denmark) completes the overview of data
analytics at different scales. Group work will look at the opportunities for sharing
data and how greater sharing of data can lead to more informed decision-making.
Challenges and opportunities for collecting, sharing and analysing data will be
explored with key stakeholders from across the data value chain.

Lunch

Is Regulation Improving
Water Services?

Room 5A
Track 2
WS

Connecting Watersheds
with the Urban Landscapes
How to get results from connecting urban water interests
to wider watershed management?

12:00 - 13:30
Auditorium 2

Room 1.08
Track 3
WS

Auditorium 1

How is big data driving policy and decision-making on water and


what are the opportunities for sharing data across different scales?

Lunch

Utility leaders forum

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Utility leaders forum

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Tuesday

09:00 - 10:00

water regulators forum

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Room 5A
Track 2
Chairs: Alan Vicory Stantec USA & Trevor Bishop Environment Agency UK WS
Connecting Watersheds
with the Urban Landscapes

How can policy support effective water and wastewater utility


engagement in river basin management and natural infrastructure
investments?

The role of natural infrastructure in complementing grey infrastructure


solutions is of emerging importance for water quantity and quality. Policies
that enable such systems need to be informed by cost-benefit analysis and
adapted to context specific circumstances. TNC will explore investment
opportunities in natural infrastructure to secure water for urban areas, while
Solne Le Fur, (ASTEE, France) discusses the benefits of river restoration
and the process needed to improve urban water. Claudia Castell-Exner
(EUREAU, Germany) highlights lessons learned from the European
Framework Directive, specifically how it has affected water resources. Case
studies from ForestTrends and a range of utilities help identify enabling policy
for optimising natural infrastructure to secure water supplies.

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

Planning to Cope with Floods


Chair: Amit Chanan State Water Corporation NSW, Australia

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Dynamic Planning on Catchment Scale: Lessons Learned from a Multi
Sectoral Approach in Flood Safety Arjan Harmsel, Arcadis (NL)

15:55 Fuzzy Control Decision Support System for Flood Plane Protection &

Emergency Flood-Gate Operation Tarek Merabtene, University of Sharjah (AE)

16:15 Quantifying the Robustness of Optimal Reservoir Operation for the

Xinanjiang-Fuchunjiang Reservoir Cascade Erwin Vonk, KWR (NL)

16:35 How to Ensure Sufficient & Safe Water Supply During Periods of Flooding?
Gerard Berg, KWR (NL)

16:55 Closing Summary

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

45

Programme

Programme

Tuesday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

11:15
11:35
11:55

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

Auditorium 1

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

Room 5C
Track 2
WS

Energy & Resource Recovery


from Waste Water & Biosolids
Chairs: Elena Maneiro Franco FCC Aqualia, Spain;
Banu rmeci Carleton University, Canada

Biogas, Co-Digestion
& Co-Generation
Chair: Santino di Berardino LNEG, Portugal

Economic & environmental benefits are driving the search for new and effective
ways of energy generation and resource recovery in wastewater treatment. Jules
van Lier (TU Delft, Netherlands), Charles Banks (University of Southampton, UK)
and ngel Robles Martnez (University of Valencia, Spain) will focus on Anaerobic
Membrane Bioreactors (AnMBR) producing low levels of sludge and high levels
of methane. On the biosolids side, Tyagi Rajeshwar (INRS, Canada), Guoren
Xu (Harbin Institute of Technology, China) and Sebastian Schwede (Malardalen
University, Sweden) focus on the recovery of nutrients, materials and energy
through biological, physical & chemical processes. Case studies and a panel
discussion will reveal the future of energy and resource recovery, its challenges
and opportunities.

Emissions with COD Balancing Christian Schaum, TU Darmstadt (DE)

10:55 Siloxane Adsorption Design Investigated Using Online Analysis by FTIR

Spectroscopy Caroline Hepburn, Cranfield Water Science Institute (UK)

11:15 Three-Phase Thermophilic Co-Digestion at Inland Empire Utilities Agency in


California Ersin Kasirga, PARSONS (US)

11:35 Parameter Estimation for Modelling of Anaerobic Co-digestion Magnus


Arnell, Lund University (SE)

11:55 Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Chair: David Butler Exeter University, UK

Room 5B
Track 2
WS

What do we mean by Safe & SuRe and how can we use the
concept to link our network-related specialist groups into a cluster?

This workshop will launch the IWA Networks cluster which aims to develop
and share best practices in developing reliability, sustainability and resilience
across all urban networks: water supplies, sewerage and stormwater
systems. David Butler (Exeter University, UK) will introduce the network
cluster and basic concepts; Kevin Lansey (Arizona University, USA) will
discuss SuRe in the context of water supply and distribution; Wolfgang
Rauch (Innsbruck University, Austria) will outline current trends in network
research and Raziyeh Farmani (Exeter University, UK) will lead group
discussions on formation of the cluster, research opportunities and practice
needs.

Lessons from Portugal


Chair: Antonio Guerreiro de Brito University of Lisbon, Portugal

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Sorption Strategies for Metal Removal from Water: from Biowastes to
13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

Functionalised Nanoparticles Cludia Lopes, University of Aveiro (PT)


Innovative Solutions for Urban Wastewater & Agroindustrial Effluents on
Portuguese River Basins Joo Miguel, AdP Servios (PT)
Green Roofs as a Technology for Rainwater Retention Paula Lima Castro,
CBQFLaboratrio Associado, ESB- UCP (PT)
Wastewater Reuse: Strategic Planning as a Viability Factor Jos Fialho,
Simarsul, S.A.(PT)
Closing Summary

Biogas, Co-Digestion
& Co-Generation
Chair: Magnus Arnell Urban Water Management, Sweden

13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Reactors Yu Tao, Harbin Institute of Technology (CN)


Pulse Feeding of Anaerobic Digesters Treating Grease Waste to Increase
Community Resistance Ling Wang, North Carolina State University (US)
Model Evaluation & Identification for Improved Estimation & Data
Interpretation of BMP Tests Sten Strmberg, Lund University (SE)
Sludge Ozonation for Enhancement of Anaerobic Digestion- Contactor
Design & Gas-Liquid Management Asun Larrea, Praxair Inc (US)
Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Chair: Corrine Trommsdorff IWA

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

Room 5C
Track 3
WS

From Lisbon to Korea:


the 7th World Water Forum
Chair: Glen Daigger IWA

What does an efficient and effective water network look like


in 2030 and how do we get there?

What are the opportunities to further scale-up and/or replicate


technological innovations?

Global water demand is projected to outstrip supply by 2030, a problem


made more challenging given that over a third of that supply never reaches
its intended users. We must learn to do more with less. We want to identify
transformational solutions for water delivery and act now to ensure that
distribution networks in 2030 provide safe drinking water efficiently. The
workshop has three scene setters: Jose Porro (University of Girona, Spain)
looking at future energy demands; Francisco Cubillo (Canal de Isabel II
Gestin, Spain) on trends in declining demand in urban water systems
and David Butler (Exeter University, UK) on design implications of future
scenarios for networks. Group discussions focus on how to catalyse change
to design and operate networks in the future.

To raise awareness of the role science, technology and innovation play


in addressing water challenges and promoting water solutions, The 7th
World Water Forum (WWF7) has a new focus on science, technology
and innovation (co-led by the IWA). The focus is particular on synthesising
scientific information and technologies used by early adopters and the early
majority. Baesung Kim (Secretariat, WWF7, Korea) introduces WWF7; Glen
Daigger & Ger Bergkamp (IWA) present specific details on the science
and technology process. Participants will discuss five areas for innovation:
water use efficiency, resource recovery, disasters and climate change, smart
technology and ecosystem services. The results will feed into the preparatory
process of the WWF7.

Greenhouse gas emissions from


Wastewater Treatment Plants
Chair: Maite Pijuan ICRA, Spain

Chair: Thomas Track, Dechema, Germany


Can we decouple water productivity from demand and
manage industrial water in an eco-efficient way?

Eco-efficient industrial water management is a major target for sustainable future


water use. The workshop discusses routes to an eco-efficient management
of water industries. Industry is a major water user and provides technologies
and solutions that realise better outcomes. The industry sector is of global
interest and is developing, demonstrating and implementing activities towards
a sustainable integrated management of industrial water. The workshop starts
with Niels Groot (DOW Chemicals, Netherlands) on alternative water sources,
followed by Sylvie Baig (Suez-Degremont, France) on the culture of eco-efficient water loops. Further contributions include valorisation of compounds &
energy from (waste) water streams from Eddy Linclau (Proctor & Gamble, USA)
and energy-efficient industrial water management Sven Geissen (TU Berlin,
Germany).

Water Recycling for Industry


Chair: Jrg Drewes TU Munich, Germany

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Towards Zero Waste Discharge in Water Treatment Bas Hofs,

Auditorium 8
Track 1
TS

KWR Watercycle Research Institute (NL)

13:55 Seven Years of Water Recycling at the Panipat Refinery, India Josef
Lahnsteiner, Va Tech Wabag (AT)

14:15 A Novel Biocathode Coupled Photoelectrochemical Cell-Configuration &


Performance Yujie Feng, Harbin Institute of Technology (CN)

14:35 Reliable & Cost Effective Greenhouse Water Production from WWTP

Effluent by Using Minimal RO Pre-treatment Sigrid Scherrenberg, Evides


Industriewater (NL)
14:55 Closing Summary

Auditorium 8
Track 1
TS

Removing Inorganics from


Industrial Water Supply
Chair: Ioannis Alexiou London, UK

15:55 Nitrous Oxide Emissions from One-step Partial Nitrification/Anammox

15:55 Water for Industry: Assessing Water Usage & Sustainability in the Automotive

16:15 Effect of Inlet NH4-N Concentration on N2O Emissions in One Anammox

16:15 Selenium Recovery from K Powder of Cement Manufacturing by Chemical

Aeration Management Taku Fujiwara, Kochi University (JP)

Processes Jingjing Yang, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) (SE)

Expanded Granular Sludge Blanket (EGSB) Reactor Wenjie Zhang, Guilin


University of Technology (CN)
16:35 Quantifying N2O Emissions from Five WWTPs in Australia through Online
Monitoring Zhiguo Yuan, The University of Queensland (AU)
16:55 Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 8
Track 1
WS

Eco-Efficient Industrial
Water Use & Reuse

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Mild Desalination of Various Raw Water Streams Cornelis Groot, Dow

17:00 - 17:15
Auditorium 1

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

Auditorium 1

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Comparing N2O Emissions from Full-scale Oxidation Ditches with Different

Break

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Metagenomic Insights into the Bio-functionality of 21 Anaerobic Biogas

Coffee Break

Decisions Now for


Water Networks in 2030

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Sewage Sludge Treatment: Evaluation of the Energy Potential & Methane

What is the future of energy & resources recovery for


wastewater treatment plants?

Program Roland Liemberger, Miya Asia (PH)


Leakage Action Plans to Comply with French Regulations: a Practical Guide
for Water Network Operator Eddy Renaud, Irstea (FR)
Resolving Water Loss through Pressure ManagementShowcasing the City of
Malangs Solution Jody Malo, Singer Valve (CA)
Water Loss Reduction & Asset Management: Practical Illustration from
French Stakeholders Eddy Renaud, Irstea (FR)
Closing Summary

Safe & SuRe Networks

46

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

10:30 Introduction
10:35 The First Seven Years of The Worlds Largest Non-Revenue Water Reduction
10:55

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Bambos Charalambous Hydrocontrol, Cyprus

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Tuesday

09:00 - 10:00

Tackling Water Loss

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Benelux BV (NL)
Industry Jack Polce, Arcadis-US, Inc. (US)
Leaching & Bioreduction Satoshi Soda, Osaka University (JP)

16:35 Biorecovery of Cr(VI) from Wastewater & its Catalytic Reutilisation Filomena
Costa, University of Minho (PT)

16:55 Closing Summary

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

47

Programme

Programme

Tuesday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1.Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

11:15
11:35
11:55

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

Service Luis Fernandes (AU)


Reflections on Urban Water Balance-Beijings Crises, Copenhagens
Challenges & Emerging Eco-cities Li Liu, University of Copenhagen (DK)
Development of a Climate Change Adaptation Strategy for the Major Water
Supply Company in Portugal Maria Cruz, Faculty of Sciences, Lisbon
University (PT)
Integration of an Odour Treatment Concept for the New Sewage System of the
Emscher Burkhard Teichgrber, Emschergenossenschaft/Lippeverband (DE)
Closing Summary

14:55

16:55

10:55 Using Natural Assets to Reduce the Cost of Drinking Water - an Australian

10:55 Fate of Nitrosamines & their Precursors during Microfiltration-Reverse

11:15 Importance of Multidisciplinary in Infrastructure Asset Management

11:15 Prioritising Emerging Chemicals for their Relevance for Drinking Water

11:15 Chlorine Decay & Trihalomethane Formation in the Presence of Pipe Deposits

11:35 Assessing the Degradation of Water Service Connections with Varying Levels

11:35 Treatment of a Non-conventional Drinking Water Source with a NF System:

11:55 Closing Summary

11:55 Closing Summary

a Water Supply Utility Maria Capela, EPAL, Sa (PT)


Tools Sergio Coelho, LNEC (PT)

Implementation Filipe Pinto, EMARVR (PT)

of Asset Knowledge Marie Drouillard, Lyonnaise Des Eaux (FR)

Infrastructure Asset Management


Chair: Sveinung Saegrov NTNU, Norway

Auditorium 4
Track 1
TS

Utilities Annemarie Van Wezel, KWR Watercycle Research Institute (NL)


Removal of EC & Salinity Alma Chvez, Instituto de Ingeniera-UNAM (MX)

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Pipeline Assets in Waterworks: Preventive Maintenance & Financial
Strategies Michiya Asano, Kubota Corporation (JP)

13:55 RAMS - A Tool for Improved Water Treatment Plant Performance, & Better

Investment Decision Making Rene Hoeijmakers, Arcadis Nederland BV (NL)


14:15 Assets Inspections - a Real Knowledge for Risk & Asset Management Nuno
Dos Reis, EPAL (PT)
14:35 Water & Sewerage Condition Assessment & Asset Performance Guidelines
Peter Way, Institute Of Public Works Engineering Australasia (AU)
14:55 Closing Summary

Microbial Impacts on
Drinking Water Quality
Chair: Gertjan Medema TU Delft, Netherlands

14:15 Nucleic Acid-Based Detection of Fecal Indicator Bacteria in (Drinking) Water

14:15 Evaluation of NDMA Formation & Removal by Chloramination, Ozonation RO

14:35 Mosquitoes as a Source for Enterococci in Drinking Water Samples Michael

14:35 Application of Polarity Rapid Assessment Method & Ultrafiltration to

14:55 Closing Summary

14:55 Closing Summary

from Source to Tap Gang Liu, Delft University of Technology (NL)


Tamara Krapf, ZHAW (CH)

Hgler, DVGW-Technologiezentrum Wasser (TZW) (GE)

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

in Lisbon, Portugal Jose Matos, IST-UL (University Of Lisbon) (PT)


Sustainable Urban Water Cycle Services in Developing Countries - a Case
Study in Mozambique Antnio Monteiro, Instituto Superior Tcnico (PT)
Performance Indicators for the WASH Sector in Developing Countries. The
Case Study of Cape Verde Rui Marques, Technical University of Lisbon (PT)
Implementation of the TRUST Roadmap in Water Scarcity Regions: the
Algarve Case Study Antnio Monteiro, Instituto Superior Tcnico (PT)
Closing Summary

Chair: Peter Way IPWEA Australia

Jan Vreeburg, KWR Watercycle Research Institute / Wur (NL)

15:55 Seismic Reliability Assessment of Water Distribution Networks - Extending


the ALA Guidelines Symeon Christodoulou, University of Cyprus (CY)

16:15 Infrastructure Rehabilitation, Maximizing Process Efficiency & Minimising


Environmental Impacts Paulo Grave EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa das guas
Livres, S.A. (PT)
16:35 Managing Green Assets for Environmental & Infrastructure Sustainability
David Sklar, MWH Global (US)
16:55 Closing Summary

Water Cascades Fit for Purpose


Chair Carolina Latorre IWA
How can we enable the use and reuse of water of different
qualities for different purposes?

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Room 3B
Track 4
WS

Population growth, industrial and agricultural activities and climate change


compound existing water quality challenges by threatening major alterations
to the hydrological cycle. Meeting these challenges requires a mix of water
supply and water demand management strategies. Case studies from Nilce
Ortiz, Marcelo Libanio (Institute for Nucelar & Energy Research, Brazil) and
Boris David (Veolia, France) explore current state-of-the-art water quality
instruments worldwide; and how the use of different water qualities can
address water quality deterioration, exploring the roles of innovation and
regulation. Discussions will be structured around how to incorporate water
quality dimensions into water resource planning and management using the
outcomes of the Global Compendium on Water Quality a joint initiative
between IWA and UNEP under the umbrella of UN Water.

Break

Auditorium 1

Chair: Steve Hrudey University of Alberta, Canada

13:55 Electrochemical Reduction of Chloroacetic Acids & Bromate Ions by Pd-

Development Coline Pessereau, CSTB (FR)

15:00 - 15:30

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Rehabilitation of Networks Significantly Cheaper when Smartly Redesigned

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Disinfection Processes
& By-Products

13:55 Planktonic Bacteria & Particle-associated Bacteria in Drinking Water System:

Coffee Break
Auditorium 4
Track 1
TS

for Drinking Water Distribution System Pei Hua, Institute of Urban Water
Management, Technische Universitt Dresden (DE)
11:35 Control of Disinfection By-products in the EPAL Water Supply System: a Tool
for Risk Evaluation Vitor Cardoso, Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres,
S.A. EPAL (PT)
11:55 Closing Summary

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Efficacy of Vacuum Ultraviolet Photolysis for Bromate & Chlorate Removal

15:00 - 15:30

Infrastructure Asset Management

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

Osmosis Membrane Treatment Haruka Takeuchi, Kyoto University (JP)

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Influence of Water Mineralisation on Pseudomonas AeruginosaBiofilm

Coffee Break

Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 40 Years on - What do We Know About Drinking Water Disinfection By-

-products (DBPs) & Human Health? Steve Hrudey, University of Alberta (CA)

Business Case Ed Beling, Arup (AU)

13:30 - 15:00

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

48

Netherlands Jan Hofman, KWR Watercycle Research Institute (NL)

Session 2

from Wastewater Facilities Burkhard Teichgrber, Emschergenossenschaft/


Lippeverband (DE)
How to Manage Urban Water Use Under Uncertainties? The Case of the City
of Braslia Ana Luisa Osorio, Universidade de Braslia (BR)
A Decision Support System for Integrated Semi-centralised Urban
Wastewater Treatment Systems Miroslawa Alunowska Figueroa, University
of Oxford (UK)
BEAM: An Economic Model for Water Use in Transboundary River Basin
Jesper Pedersen, COWI A/S (DK)
Closing Summary

Chair: Jiangyong Hu National University of Singapore

10:55 IGPI: National-scale Cooperative R&D Rollout of IAM Planning Methods &

13:30 - 15:00
Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Disinfection Byproducts

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Reduction of Pharmaceuticals in the Water Cycle in Limburg, The

Session 2

15:30 Introduction
15:35 A Non-traditional Approach to Assess Infiltration in the Largest Trunk Sewer

16:35

Chair: Josef Klinger TZW Karlsruhe, Germany

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

Auditorium 1

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Embedding Information Management into Asset Management - the Journey of

12:00 - 13:30

Chair: Dayanand Panse IWWA, India

16:15

Drinking Water Systems

Lunch

Moving to Sustainability Case Studies

15:55

Chair: Helena Alegre LNEC, Portugal

Auditorium 4
Track 1
TS

12:00 - 13:30

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Carbon Footprint: a Tool to Decrease the Emission of Greenhouse Gases

14:35

Infrastructure Asset Management

Lunch

Chair: Kees van Leeuwen KWR, Netherlands

14:15

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

Coffee Break

Moving to Sustainability Modelling

13:55

Auditorium 1

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

10:30 Introduction
10:35 The Unitywater Treatment Services Plan - a Future Vision of Wastewater
10:55

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Jan Janssens JJC, Switzerland

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Tuesday

09:00 - 10:00

Moving to Sustainability Urban Systems

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Naoyuki Kishimoto, Ryukoku University (JP)

modified Electrodes Jiuhui Qu, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN)


& UV Radiation Processes Paolo Roccaro, University of Catania (IT)

Characterise the Nitrosamine Chao Chen, Tsinghua University (CN)

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Disinfection Processes
Chair: Rhodes Trussell Trussell Technologies, USA

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Drinking Water Disinfection with Medium Pressure UV Systems Kirsten
Meyer, Xylem Services Gmbh (DE)

15:55 Development of Novel High-basicity Polyaluminum Chloride for Effective Virus


Removal Takuya Marubayashi, Hokkaido University (JP)

16:15 Effects of Chlorine & Chlorine Dioxide on Human Rotavirus Infectivity & Genome
Stability Junwen Li, Institute of Health & Environmental Medicine (CN)

16:35 Design of Chemical Disinfection of Combined Sewer Overflows (CSO) by

Peracetic Acid & Performic Acids Henrik Andersen, Technical University of


Denmark (DK)
16:55 Closing Summary

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

49

Programme

Business Forums

Keynote Plenary

Business Forum Room 01

Business Forum Room 02

10:30 - 11:15 XYLEM

10:30 - 11:15 Japan Water Works Association

Tuesday

Tuesday

09:00 - 10:00

1. Transforming utilities to deliver efficient and sustainable water services Sue Murphy, Water Corporation of Western Australia
2. Panel Discussion

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Aerobic Granular Sludge Reactors


Chair: Mark van Loosdrecht TU Delft, Netherlands

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

Biological Nutrient Removal


Chair: Willy Verstraete Ghent University, Belgium

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Full-scale Experiences with Aerobic Granular Biomass Technology for Urban &

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Immobilised Microalgae for Phosphorus Remediation Rachel Whitton,

10:55 The First Worldwide Conversion of a CAS to the Aerobic Granular Biomass

10:55 Nutrient Removal in Warm Climates: Return on Experience on Large

Industrial Treatment Andreas Giesen, Royal Haskoning DHV, Netherlands (NL)

Technology : Frielas WWTP Paulo Inocncio, Simtejo (PT)


11:15 Effect of Sludge Retention Time on Azo Dye Biodegradation in an Aerobic
Granular Sludge SBR System Rita Franca, Instituto Superior Tcnico (PT)
11:35 Aerobic Granular Sludge Sequencing Batch Reactor Performance Under
Fluorinated Pharmaceuticals Shock Loadings Paula Castro, Universidade
Catlica Portuguesa (PT)
11:55 Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Aerobic Granular Sludge mapping application & needs


Chairs: Mark van Loosdrecht Delft University of Technology
& Andreas Giessen Royal Haskoning DHV, Netherlands

Auditorium 6
Track 5
WS

How will aerobic granular sludge influence industrial


and municipal wastewater treatment?

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Managing Wastewater Sludge


Chair: Richard Tsang CDM Smith, USA

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Sludge Reduction by Uncoupling Metabolism: SBR Tests with Para15:55
16:15
16:35
16:55

nitrophenol & a Commercial Uncoupler Elena Zuriaga-Agust, Universitat


Politcnica de Valncia (ES)
Sludge Treatment Using Free Nitrous Acid to Enhance Performance of a
Wastewater Treatment Plant Zhiguo Yuan, The University of Queensland (AU)
Anaerobic Digestion of Highly-Concentrated Sewage Sludge for Sludge
Management in Small Cities Taira Hidaka, Public Works Research Institute (JP)
Improved Dewatering of CEPT Sludge by Biogenic Flocculants from
Acidithiobacillus Ferrooxidans Jonathan Wong, Sino-Forest Applied
Research Centre for Pearl River Delta Environment (HK)
Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Wastewater Treatment Plant Philippe Ginestet, Degremont (FR)


11:15 Enhanced Biological Nutrient Removal & Energy Saving in a Full-scale
Wastewater Treatment Plant Linlin Bao, Henan Normal University (CN)
11:35 Evaluation of Microalgae Membrane Bioreactor (MMBR) for Nutrient Removal
in the Wastewater Hee-Jeong Choi, Kwandong University (KR)
11:55 Closing Summary

Nitrogen Removal
Chair: Ong Say Leong National University of Singapore

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Do Plant Design & Industrial Load Shape the Denitrifying Community in

13:55 Combined COD & Nitrogen Removal from an Industrial Wastewater in a Two-

Best practices in their operations for Efficient Management

Presented by: Florian Axt and Christoph Kullmann


After only 8 months of construction, in March 2014 the largest Ultrafiltration
plant for drinking water production in Portugal was successfully started up. The
presentation will deal with the drivers of the technology selection and key hurdles
to overcome during project realisation. The second half of the forum will deal
with potential process combinations using UF / Ozone for even advanced water
treatment to address the most acute needs of drinking water. Lets solve water.

Presented by: Yuichi NISHIJIMA, Yokohama, Water Business Association


Kazuya NAITO, Director HR Tokyo Waterworks Bureau, Toshikazu Koike,
Director for Carbon Reduction Measures, Planning and Coordination Division,
Bureau of Sewerage, Tokyo Metropolitan Government
Co-exhibitors of water and wastewater utilities at the Japan Pavilion present
participants with their best practices for efficient management issues; prospects
and challenges with AMR systems; reconstruction of equipment in consideration
of energy saving and greenhouse gas reduction; and PPP practices.

11:15 12:00 FAST SpA

11:15 - 12:00 Argal Chemical Pumps

The best solution for active pressure management in a smart water network

Higher life span of pumps manufactured from fiberglass materials in salt


water - chemical water applications

stage MBBR System Marcia Dezotti, Federal University of Rio De Janeiro (BR)

Presented by: Pierpaolo Cavalli


For over 10 years Fast SpA has been working for optimal management of flows
and pressures in water distribution systems. The companys experience has
definitely shown that the best approach for advanced pressure management is
the Real-Time pressure control at Critical Point (RTCP). The RTCP System is
the innovative solution to adjust automatically and immediately the Critical Point
pressure depending on changes in water demand. It continuously monitors
network situation and pressure values at critical point, and in real-time acts
on PRV or pumps to minimise pressure and to prevent pressure transients.
Indeed optimal pressure values minimise water losses, energy costs and burst
frequency extending asset lifetimes and reducing operating costs.

Presented by: Marco Marini


Thanks to pumps manufactured from fiberglass materials, it is now possible to
extend the life span of pumps that are used for pumping salt water or chemical
corrosive liquids. Different resin materials have to be used according to different
pumped liquids. For this reason fiberglass materials have to be considered a
valid alternative to metal pumps. The resin transfer molding (RTM) process can
produce parts with excellent physical properties and good chemical inertia.
Different pumping technologies are now available in fiberglass material:
1. Centrifugal pumps
2. Air driven double diaphragm pump (world wide new)

13:30 - 14:15 NALDEO

13:30 - 14:15 Watershare

Defining modern and efficient PPP contracts

Watershare Water resources and treatment

After two decades of PPP contracts in the water sector, several studies have
shown their effectiveness but also their weaknesses, especially achieving
effectiveness of fair financial conditions for both parties.
A second generation of PPP contracts has been designed to include lessons
from the past. They include a series of new features ensuring an effective,
stable, transparent and fair contract. These new features will be presented.

Watershare is the collaborative platform for top applied research institutes in


the public water sector. Members share their best expert tools to assist enduser clients. Watershare experts can take the lead in their own countries in
offering advanced and very practical solutions to water utilities, municipalities
and water agencies, helping them meet their daily and long-term strategic goals.
Watershare: Sharing the knowledge, building the network and serving the
community.
In three Business Fora we discuss Watershare Distribution 22nd / Watershare
Water resources and treatment 23rd / Watershare Sustainability 24th

14:15 - 15:00 EPAL

12:45 - 13:30 Agilent Technologies

AQUAmatrix - Customising management technology solutions to improve


sustainability and customer satisfaction in water and wastewater utilities

Advanced Analytical Techniques for ensuring water quality

14:15 Start-up of Gel Immobilised Anammox Reactors with Different Biomass


Concentrations Muhammad Ali, Hokkaido University (JP)

14:35 Enhanced Nitrogen Removal from Municipal Wastewater in a Two-sludge


SBR System Shuying Wang, Beijing University of Technology (CN)

14:55 Closing Summary

Future of Desalination
Chair: Val Frankel EKI, USA

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Process Optimisation Test of Pilot-scale Fertiliser Drawn Forward Osmosis &

Presented by: Luis Branco


EPALs Customer Relations Management is driven by two main goals: customer
orientation and operational efficiency. Information technology plays a major role
in achieving both, supporting improvements in service quality and reducing
operational costs, allowing lower tariffs and greater customer satisfaction.
For over a decade EPAL has successfully implemented a software called
AQUAmatrix. Its success has enabled EPAL to commercialise externally and now
this state-of-the-art application is used in other Portuguese utilities, with a 30%
market share, as well as in Mozambique.
The suite is fully integrated, and inter-connected, with other information systems
that support operational functions namely WONE, GIS, ERP.

Nanofiltration Process Hokyong Shon, University of Technology Sydney (AU)

15:55 Fouling & Long-term Durability of a Combined Forward Osmosis & Membrane
Distillation System Rumana Riffat, George Washington University (US)

Presented by: Dr. Shane Snyder

14:15 - 15:00 BiAqua BV


Biofouling control of membrane systems by phosphate limitation: one-step
solution to resources savings

Presented by: Lute Broens (CEO)


BiAqua has developed a new technology to prevent biofouling in RO
membranes. Biofouling is prevented by starvation of microorganisms of a
critical nutrient: phosphate. The principle of BiAquas Phosphate Removal
Technology (PRT ) was validated through pilot-scale studies. Use of BiAquas
technology leads to a reduction of OPEX/CAPEX for water treatment plants.

16:15 Feasibility of RO-PRO Hybrid Process: a Numerical Approach Jihye Kim,


GIST (KR)

16:35 Feasibility of Biological Desalination Peter Blair, University of Cambridge (UK)


16:55 Closing Summary

1. The Social Dimensions of Innovation in Water Dipak Gyawali, Nepal Academy of Science & Technology
2. Panel Discussion

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Innovative treatment future technology trends: membranes and ozone

Cranfield University (UK)

Wastewater Treatment Plants? Aviaja Hansen, Aalborg University (DK)

Leading scientists and operators address the potential new standard treatment
for industrial and municipal wastewater: aerobic granular sludge. They share
expertise on current research like alginate recovery, the scale-up for treatment
of municipal wastewater in the Netherlands, retrofit of a continuous activated
sludge to granular biomass, data and lessons from international plants. Together
with the audience we will identify and prioritise needs for future work and to map
operators, designers and researchers on these subjects. The workshop includes
Mark van Loosdrecht, (Delft University of Technology, Netherlands), Cora
Uijterlinde, (Foundation for Applied Water Research (STOWA), Netherlands),
Paulo Inocncio, (Simtejo, Portugal), Andreas Giesen (Royal Haskoning DHV,
Netherlands), and Bart de Bruin, (Royal Haskoning DHV, Netherlands).

50

Auditorium 1

Auditorium 1

15:30 16:15 / 16:15 17:00


CNAIA (National Commission of IWA)

15:30 16:15/ 16:15 17:00


guas do Noroeste and University of vora

Urban Water Supply and Sanitation in Portuguese-Speaking African Countries


(POLOP, in Portuguese) Sharing Visions, Challenges and Solutions

China Forum Laying the foundations of a cooperation project on water


protection, conservation and management

Presented by: Jose Salhanha Matos and Rodrigo Proena Oliveira


In this Business Forum information will be presented about the current situation,
vision, main challenges and perspectives of the urban water sector (including
water supply, drainage and sanitation) in Portuguese-Speaking African Countries.
The event will foster the exchange of information and experiences among the
participants on critical issues for expanding infrastructures and up-grading
services, with discussion on difficulties, challenges and achievements, and ways
to move forward.
Presentations of Water professionals of PALOP, namely from Angola (EPAL),
Mozambique (AIAS), and Cabo Verde (ANAS).

Presented by: Martins Soares, President of guas do Noroeste, S.A. - guas


de Portugal Group, Jianhua Lee, Deputy Director of the State Key Laboratory
of Yantze River (China), Paula Dias, Agropolis International (France), Ana
Mendes, University of vora (Portugal)
The China Forum will be an excellent opportunity to network with participants
from China and Europe, although other countries are also invited. River and lake
restoration, water quality, river management, dam mitigation measures, phytoremediation, artificial wetland construction, water treatment techniques and
biodiversity management are some of the themes to be discussed.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

51

Notes

Congress Programme

Wednesday

Wednesday:
Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative
approaches and the adoption of new paradigms and technologies.
Participating in technical sessions including oral and poster
presentations, brings you the latest findings and allows you to
connect to new developments. Attending workshops will provide
insight and inspiration for cooperation and collaboration on
research and practical applications. The workshops and technical
sessions provide a unique opportunity for connecting with peers
from across the water sector.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

52

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Wednesday Spotlight
Plenary Session

09:00 - 10:00, Auditorium 1

Plenary Panel Discussion


Panel moderator: Paul OCallaghan, BlueTech
Panellists: Andr Dhawan, Xylem Inc.

Hongmei Wu, Scinor Membrane Technology Co., Ltd


Frank Rogalla, FCC Aqualia
Jonathan Clement, PWN Technologies

Plenary Session

17:15 - 18:00, Auditorium 1

Panel moderator: Michael Rouse, University of Oxford


Panellists: Catarina de Albuquerque, UN

Land-use planning & regional development policy &


regulatory reforms for innovative water management
in emerging economies

Jaime Baptista, ERSAR


Sergio Campos, IADB
Anthony Cox, OECD
Jennifer McKay, University of South Australia

Plenary Keynote:
Francisco Nunes Correia
Professor of Environment &
Water Resources, Portugal
Instituto Superior Tecnico;
President of the Portuguese
Water Partnership

IWA Project Innovation Awards Ceremony & Dinner, 19:00 - 22:00


Recognising the excellence, leadership and innovation which
IWA members and network participants bring to the water
sector. IWA Award winners are leaders in their fields, frequently
contributing years of research and practice to improving water
management across the globe. The Project Innovation Awards
is a prestigious global competition that celebrates excellence
in water engineering projects around the world. Join the
finalists and winners at the award ceremony in the astounding
surroundings of the Estufa Fria gardens and celebrate with them
the strides taken to innovate in the water sector.

IWA World Water Exhibition, 09:00 - 18:00, Hall 1 & 2


Join the worlds leading companies working in sustainable
water management. The IWA World Water Exhibition is a onestop-shop where you can connect and do business with the
leading industry and technology providers.

Young Water Professionals Networking & Discussion


The extraordinary dinner venue

A unique opportunity to experience the truly extraordinary


Estufa Fria gardens. A domed greenhouse, the Estufa Fria is in
Park Eduardo VII in the heart of Lisbon, and houses a unique
collection of Mediterranean and tropical plants.
Venue: Estufa Fria (garden and greenhouse venue)
Price: 90 + 23%VAT

12:30 - 13:30 IWA stand #221 World of Opportunities.


Be the first to get a copy of IWAs new booklet showcasing the
varied and interesting career opportunities in the water sector.

17:00 IWA stand #221 How to ensure cross-sectoral


linkages? Join the discussion on how YWPs think we should
enhance the cross sectoral linkages to improve water practices.
Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

55

Programme

Programme

Keynote Plenary

09:00 - 10:00

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 2

The Forum will start where the earlier plenary panel discussion stops and
open by articulating the position and importance of water within cleantech.
A series of short presentations featuring the perspectives of research,
utilities, consultants and technology suppliers and a panel discussion with
the audience will then focus on the need for developing partnerships and
coalitions to drive innovation.

Planning & Pricing Water Services


Chair: Pat Bakir Consultant, Jordan

Room 1.07
Track 3
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Utilising Water Services Vulnerability Assessments to Support Effective
10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

Planning & Efficient Investment Allestair Wensley, Department of Water


Affairs (ZA)
Water Services Sector Reform: Kosovo Experience Baton Begolli, InterMinisterial Water Council, Office of Prime Minister (KV)
Second Generation of Management Contracts in France Using the PBC
Approach Didier Carron, Naldeo (FR)
Social Tariffs for Water & Waste Services: an Impact Analysis David Alves,
ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (PT)
Closing Summary

Room 1.08

Africa Forum

The Future of African Cities, their water security and resilience: Rapid
urbanization requires the development and implementation of new
approaches to water, waste water treatment and sanitation. Utilities, working
with other stakeholders have to become a catalyst to accelerating the
transition needed for water & sanitation coverage in the fast growing cities
in developing countries. The session will have a keynote address from Chris
Heymans of WSP WB, followed by a panel discussion of a number of city
utility CEOs and a Mayor of one African city.

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Tariffs & AffordabilitY Trends & Challenges


Chair: Ed Smeets, Edmadi BV, Netherlands

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

How to use tariff structures to achieve cost recovery, equity & affordability?

Using recently published IWA survey information and case studies from around
the globe, this workshop will discuss how tariff structures may be used to
achieve utility pricing objectives, including achieving full cost recovery and
the need to keep tariffs equitable and affordable. Participants will be provided
with tools to evaluate tariff affordability, and different strategies to protect
low-income customers, while at the same time ensuring adequate revenue
recovery for the utilitys operation and capital investment needs. The panel
will be composed by Jan Hammenecker, (De Watergroep Brussels, Belgium),
Guillermo Donoso Harris, (Pontificia Universidad Catlica de Chile, Chile),
Teodor Popa and Augustin Boer, (Romanian Water Association, Romania), and
Eric Rothstein, (Galardi Rothstein Group, USA).

Room 1.08

Africa Forum

Policy, regulations and investments in Africas urban water sector: The


African water sector is continuously undergoing reform. Most of this reform
revolves around policy, regulation and investment. The key for the mobilisation
of reliable funding for utilities from water user fees, government funds
and donors is becoming critical. Major stakeholders including the African
Development Bank, AMCOW, a number of Regulators (CRA, NAWASCO),
will be present to discuss how to catalyse the transformations in the Africa
water sector for greater impact.

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Chair: Kari Elisabeth Fagerns Oslo Water, Norway

How does stakeholder engagement differ from public participation and


what makes it so important for coping with future water challenges?

Stakeholder engagement is not an objective in itself, but a governance


instrument that can help achieve efficiency, sustainability, transparency
and equity in policy outcomes. Despite many good practices to engage
stakeholders, there is a lack of proper analysis and policy tools to replicate
and scale-up successes. This workshop examines key findings of a survey
by the working group on stakeholder engagement of the OECD Water
Governance Initiative. Aziza Akhmouch (OECD, France) introduces the
main findings followed by a panel discussion with Milo Fiasconaro (Aqua
Publica Europe, Belgium), Lesha Witmer (The Butterfly Effect, Netherlands),
Ute Wehn (Unesco-IHE Delft, Netherlands) and Joannie Leclerc (Suez
Environnement, France)

Room 1.08

Africa Forum

Africas water transformation(s) requires capacity in science and practice;


to innovate, utilities across the continent need to foster a closer cooperation
with national research institutions to develop new and tailored water
solutions. This session will include a series of presentations of how best such
corporation has been expressed. This will be followed by a panel discussion
of a mix of members from utilities and research institutions.

16:35
16:55

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Chair: Mohsen Mehran Rubicon Engineering, USA

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Preservation & Restoration Project for Important Cultural Properties in Japan

16:15

17:00 - 17:15
Auditorium 1

Ecological Restoration Projects

15:55

Break

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

Aquifer, in Northern Italy Ye Zhao, Politecnico di Torino (IT)

District,Central Java, Indonesia Syarif Ali, Syarif Ali (ID)

Session 3

The final session of the Forum will focus on the theme of innovation,
cleantech and finance and will be elucidated through short presentations
and panels from different sectors. In closing the Forum, industry leaders will
share their views on the critical interaction between the technology providers,
researchers, utilities, industry end-users and consultants in developing new
technologies and accelerating the adoption of technologies that clean-up and
help restore the environment.

Years of Field Experience Bruna Matturro, Water Research Institute (IT)

13:55 Hydro-geochemical Based Spatial & Temporal Distribution of Nitrogen in an

14:55 Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Chair: Klaasjan Raat KWR, Netherlands

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Biomonitoring of Chlorinated Solvents Contamination in Groundwater: Four

Sandra Borges Freitas, Delft University of Technology (NL)

Coffee Break

Water Governance &


Stakeholder Engagement

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

Dealing with Groundwater


Contamination

14:35 Hydrogeological Modelling of Contaminated Area in Pasarean Village,Tegal

15:00 - 15:30
Auditorium 2

Systems to Face Climate Change Marta Hernandez Garcia, Cetaqua, Water


Technology Center (ES)
Hydrological Impacts of Land-use Changes in a Peri-urban Mediterranean
Catchment Carla Ferreira, CESAM (PT)
A Risk Based Approach for a Better Protection of Drinking Water
Catchments in Flanders (Belgium) Simon Six, De Watergroep (BE)
Changes in Groundwater Temperature & Quality During in-situ Thermal
Loading & Natural Cooling in Two Aquifers, Japan Takeshi Saito, Saitama
University (JP)
Closing Summary

14:15 Sustainable Mitigation of Arsenic Contaminated Ground Water in Bihar, India

Coffee Break

WATER & CLEANTECH FORUM

10:55

11:55

Lunch
Auditorium 2

Chair: Jrg Drewes TU Munich, Germany

Room 5A
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Evaluation of the Preparedness of Surface Managed Aquifer Recharge

11:35

12:00 - 13:30

Auditorium 1

Groundwater Management & Risk

11:15

Lunch

The next session is a roundtable on identifying and taking new technologies


from invention to market. This interactive session will allow participants to
work in groups to identify inventions and/or innovations and their pathway
to market that could be have industry-wide transformative impacts on water
management. A panel will introduce issues related to the 3 issues, after
which participants will deliberate on viable pathways and concrete actions.

56

Auditorium 1

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

WATER & CLEANTECH FORUM

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

WATER & CLEANTECH FORUM

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Wednesday

Wednesday
Keynote Plenary

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

The Pumping Station Facilities in the Mikawashima Sewage Disposal Plant,


National Important Cultural Assets Tatsuya Watanabe, Tokyo Metropolitan
Government Bureau of Sewerage (JP)
Integrated Constructed Wetlands for Micropollutants Removal & Biodiversity
Conservation Ywann Penru, Suez Environnement (FR)
Treatment of Eutrophic Lake Water & Phosphorus Recovery by Reusing Alum
Sludge and/or Wood Masanobu Takashima, Fukui University of Technology (JP)
Recovery of Urban Water Bodies in Brazil, Programme Crrego Limpo
Juliana Silva, Escola Politcnica da Universidade de So Paulo (BR)
Closing Summary

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

57

Programme

Programme

Keynote Plenary

09:00 - 10:00

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Auditorium 1

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 GHG Emissions in Wastewater Treatment: a Simulation Tool to Asses &
Evaluate Mitigation Jose Matos, lST-UL (PT)

10:55 Energy Efficiency in Water Distribution Systems - a Path to an Ideal Network

Joo Feliciano, AGS, S.A (PT).


11:15 Energy Performance Indicators of Wastewater Treatment - a Field Study with
17 Portuguese Plants Catarina Silva, LNEC (PT)
11:35 The Operation of Water Distribution & Wastewater Collection Networks - an
Integral Solution Jorge Tavares, A2O (PT)
11:55 Closing Summary

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

Resource Recovery Innovations


Chair: Defeng Xing Harbin Institute of Technology, China

Greenhouse gas emissions from


BNR Wastewater Treatment Plants
Chair: Zhiguo Yuan AWMC, Australia

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Dynamic Modelling of Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Three Swedish Full-

11:15 Anaerobic/Ion Exchange Process for Wastewater Nitrogen Recovery Daniel

10:55 Nitrous Oxide Production Pathways of Nitrifying Activated Sludge in a

scale Sludge Liquor Treatment Systems Erik Lindblom, Lund University (SE)

Downstream Challenges Bruce Jefferson, Cranfield University (UK)


Smith, Applied Environmental Technology (US)

11:35 Development of Sulfur Cycle-associated Denitrifying Enhanced Biological

Phosphorus Removal Process Di Wu, The Hong Kong University of Science


& Technology (HK)
11:55 Closing Summary

Sequencing Batch Reactor Akihiko Terada, Tokyo University of Agriculture &


Technology (JP)
11:15 Green-house Gases Emission Response to Process Disturbances in Full-scale
Activated Sludge Maite Pijuan, Catalan Institute for Water Research (ES)
11:35 Greenhouse Gas Inventories Including CO2, CH4& N2O in STPs with
Different Treatment Process Shuhei Masuda, Akita National College of
Technology (JP)
11:55 Closing Summary

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Chair: Francisco Cubillo Canal de Isabel II Gestin, Spain

Room 5B
Track 2
WS

How do we reach an appropriate resources-demands balance in order to


make decisions for the planning and operation of water supply systems?

Alternative water resources will be critical to sustainable water supplies.


Francisco Cubillo introduces a global perspective of the issue; followed by
Glen Daigger (IWA) discussing state of the art AWR technologies - solutions
and emerging technologies. Stuart White (University of Technology, Sydney,
Australia) on the Methods of assessment for alternative water resources
- processes and criteria. A panel discussion with all presenters and In
Kim (Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea), Jrg Drewes
(Technische Universitt Mnchen, Germany) and Kris Villez (EAWAG,
Switzerland) present controversial issues and challenges for a common
methodology to assess alternative resources for different purposes.

Biosolids Treatment
& Beneficial Reuse
Chair: Banu Ormeci Carleton University, Canada

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

Solutions Across the


Water-Energy-Food Nexus
Chair: Mark Smith ICUN, Switzerland

Jaewoo Lee, Korea University (KR)

13:55 Role of Microbial Community in Thermophilic Digestion of Thermal Pretreated


Sludge Simona Rosseti, IRSA-CNR (IT)

14:15 Comparison of N-Bromination, Dye Complexation & UV-vis Absorbance


Methods for Measuring Polymer Concentration Banu Ormeci, Carleton
University (CA)
14:35 Removal of Nonylphenol & Heavy Metals from Anaerobically Digested
Sewage Sludge Using Ferrate Ion Ayumi Ito, Iwate University (JP)
14:55 Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Chair: Francisco Cubillo Canal de Isabel II Gestin, Spain

Room 5B
Track 2
WS

What alternative resources good practises currently exist in different


places in the world?

How do we move forward with the Alternative Water Resources Cluster


to promote a portfolio approach on alternative water resources? Several
cases will be presented: Mooyoung Han (Seoul National University, Korea),
on Multipurpose role of Rainwater Harvesting in urban water management;
Xiao Chang Wang (Xian University of Architecture and Technology, China),
on Alternative Water Resources in China - Needs and Perspectives; Bruno
Tisserrand (Veolia Environnement, France), on Alternative Resource needs
& solutions in Europe, and Bambos Charalambous (J2C Water, Cyprus), on
Reducing Water Losses An Alternative Source. To get a common resolution
and to establish a schedule for the IWA Alternative Water Resources Cluster,
Francisco Cubillo will present on Alternative Water Resources Cluster:
moving forward.

Biosolids Treatment
& Beneficial Reuse
Chair: Richard Tsang CDM Smith, USA

Room 5C
Track 2
TS

Optimising Water-Energy-Food
Interactions
Chair: Erik Lindblom Lund University, Sweden

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Iron Rich Drinking Water Residuals for Phosphate Removal in Waste Water or

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Water Reclamation Solving Irrigation Demands, Energy Management & Water

15:55

15:55

16:15
16:35
16:55

Surface Water Roberta Hofman-Caris, KWR Watercycle Research Institute (NL)


The Biodrying Concept: an Innovative Technology Creating Energy from
Sewage Sludge Mari Winkler, Ghent University (BE)
Biochar Production from Human Faeces Simulants Olivier Lefebvre, National
University of Singapore (SG)
Microwave & Hybrid Process: Effective for Enhancing Anaerobic Digestion
& Dewatering of Sludge? Yuansong Wei, Research Center for EcoEnvironmental Sciences,Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN)
Closing Summary

16:15
16:35
16:55

Environment in Okinawa Hiroaki Tanaka, Kyoto University (JP)


Background for Decision of Full Scale P-recovering in Aarhus Water Per
Kristensen, Grundfos (DK)
Analysis of Water-Related Energy in Australian Households Identifies
Efficiency Opportunities Steven Kenway, The University of Queensland (AU)
Heat & Water Recovery from Wastewater in a Passive House - Scaling Up
from Building to District Level Martina Winker, ISOE - Institute for SocialEcological Research (DE)
Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

Auditorium 1

Auditorium 1

Auditorium 8
Track 1
TS

Pharmaceutical Industrial
Wastewater
Chair: Ioannis Alexiou London, UK

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Microbial Community Functional Structure in Response to Antibiotics in
10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

Room 1.09
Track 2
WS

How do we optimise resources to secure water, food and energy


requirements in the long-term?
Water, energy and food are essential for human wellbeing and sustainable
development. Demand for all three will increase significantly under the pressure
of population growth, economic development, technological changes and
climate change. The Water-Energy-Food nexus has led to new demands for
infrastructure and technology to ensure security, and to balance competing
demands on natural resources whilst maintaining sustainable landscapes. The
workshop focus is on Cleantech across infrastructure systems supporting the
water, energy and food sectors. Rodrigo Villarroel Walker (University of Georgia,
USA) talks on innovative Cleantech that recover nitrogen and phosphorus. Brian
Mergelas (WaterTap, Canada) discusses success factors for promoting and
financing Cleantech that supports water-energy-food nexus solutions. CH2M Hill
and other technology companies and international organizations such as GIZ,
UNECE and IUCN share experiences.

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Simultaneous Recovery of Biodiesel & Biogas from Wastewater Sludge

Coffee Break

Reaching a Reliable
Efficient Water Supply II

Room 1.09
Track 2
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Bioelectrochemical Resource Recovery Martijn Bijmans, Wetsus (NL)
10:55 Full Flow Anaerobic Sewage Treatment with Nutrient Recovery: Resolving the

Lunch

Reaching a Reliable
Efficient Water Supply I

58

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Chair: Bambos Charalambous Hydrocontrol, Cyprus

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Efficient Use of Water

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Wednesday

Wednesday
Keynote Plenary

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Pharmaceutical WWTPs Yu Zhang, Research Center for Eco-Environmental


Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN)
Removal of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) from Wastewater - a
Review of Existing Treatment Solutions Achim Ried, Xylem Services Gmbh (DK)
Removal of Pharmaceutical Wastewater Containing Sulfamethoxazole under
Anaerobic Conditions Gozde Ozbayram, Istanbul Technical University (TR)
Treating Wastewater from a Pharmaceutical Formulation Facility by Biological
Process & Ozone Dror Avisar, Tel Aviv University (IL)
Closing Summary

Auditorium 8
Track 1
TS

Agroindustry Wastewater
Treatment
Chair: Ioannis Alexiou London, UK

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Filamentous Fungi & the Aquatic Environment: Potential for Biodegradation
13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

of Xenobiotics Beatriz Oliveira, Instituto de Biologia Experimental e


Tecnolgica, Instituto de Tecnologia Qumica e Biolgica (PT)
Volatile Fatty Acids Production though Anaerobic Digestion of Tuna Waste:
Effect of Ph Maria Veiga, University of A Corua (ES)
Performances & Characteristics of Aerobic Granular Sludge in Oily
Wastewater Treatment Process Shuo Wang, Jiangnan University (CN)
Wastewater Treatment Plant for Wastewater Reclamation in a Poultry
Slaughterhouse Eduardo Pires, Universidade de So Paulo (BR)
Closing Summary

Metals
Chair: Zdravka Do-Quang Suez Environnement, France

Auditorium 8
Track 4
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Manganese Dissolution & Micropollutant Removal by Ozone & Soil Aquifer
Treatment of Effluents Hadas Mamane, Tel-Aviv University (IL)

15:55 Textiles for the Clean-up of Chromate-polluted Ground Waters & the

Recovery of Noble Metals Klaus Opwis, Deutsches Textilforschungszentrum


Nord-West GmbH (DE)
16:15 Partitioning of Heavy Metals at the Influent & Effluent of Stormwater
Treatment Systems Marla Maniquiz-Redillas, Kongju National University (KR)
16:35 Recycling Iron from Waterworks Sludge in Wastewater Treatment Plants
Henrik Andersen, Technical University of Denmark (DK)
16:55 Closing Summary

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

59

Programme

Programme

Keynote Plenary

09:00 - 10:00

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Auditorium 1

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
WS

Transitioning Urban Water Systems


to Meet New Imperatives Through 2050

Performance Assessment
& Benchmarking - Learning
from Best Practices

Auditorium 4
Track 1
WS

Can performance assessment and benchmarking lead to the


improvement and increased reliability of water services?

Instead of revolutionary, in most cases change will be evolutionary and span


decades. The workshop explores different dimensions of this, the transitions
that need to occur and what is required to shape their realisation. Paul Brown
(University of South Florida, USA) provides an overview of resource limitations
and uncertainty in the context of sustainability and resilience. There will be an
opportunity for audience participation on key topics, each with a discussant lead.
This includes Steve Moddemeyer (CollinsWoerman, USA) on changing urban
design concepts, Rob Skinner (CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, Australia) on
integrating structural and non-structural solutions, Corinne Trommsdorff (IWA) on
optimising water and energy in utilities, Tim Waldron (Australia) on the integration
of smart systems at the urban level and Carol Howe (ForEvaSolutions, USA), on
institutional imperatives and constraints.

Drinking Water Quality Contaminants & Cures


Chair: Auguste Bruchet CIRSEE France

Benchmarking is a structured, continuous process to assess performance and


to identify and adapt best practices between different utilities. This workshop
explains the benchmarking process, methodology and key outcomes. How can
benchmarking lead to the improvement and increased reliability of water services?
How do we develop guidelines for an assessment system in developing countries?
Targetting water utilities, regulators and stakeholders, particularly those new to
performance assessment and benchmarking. Coordinated by Nuno Brco, (Aguas
de Portugal, Portugal), with Peter Dane, (European Benchmarking Cooperation,
Netherlands), Vijay Padmanabhan, (Asian Bank for Development, India), Lucrcio
Costa, (Direo Nacional de guas de Angola, Angola) and Manuel Alvarinho
(Conselho de Regulao de guas de Moambique, Mozambique).

10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

KWR (NL)
Assessment of Water Quality in Groundwater Resources of Iran Using
a Modified Drinking Water Quality (DWQI) Mohammad Reza Mohebbi,
National Water & Wastewater Engineering Company (IR)
Hydrolysis & Oxidation of Bisphenols & BADGE from Epoxies in Drinking
Water Distribution Systems Craig Adams, Utah State University (US)
Modelling Chlorine in Drinking Water Systems: the Effect of Water Flow
Velocity on Bulk Decay Rates Laura Monteiro, National Civil Engineering
Laboratory (LNEC) (PT)
Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
WS

Chair: Paul Reiter IWA


Can water system development be done more pro-actively and form an
integral part of urban planning?

Water system development mostly follows the planning and development process
for cities rather than being an integral part of the process. The result is lost
opportunities for resource use efficiency, aesthetic co-design of water function
and urban landscape, and optimisation of water and other elements of urban
infrastructure. Rob Skinner (CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, Australia) gives an
overview followed by case studies from Adam Lovell (Water Services Association
of Australia, Australia), Per Arne Malmquist (Stockholm International Water
Institute, Sweden), Armando Silva Afonso (Anqip, Portugal), Teng Chye Khoo
(Centre for Liveable Cities, Singapore), Paul Brown (University of South Florida,
USA) and Xiaochang Wang (University of Architecture and Technology, China).

Right Price, Best Performance


Chair: Peter Dane VEWIN, Netherlands

Auditorium 4
Track 1
TS

Micropollutants
Chair: Jiangyong Hu National University of Singapore

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Respirometric Characterisation of the Soluble COD Fractions After

13:55 Development & Evaluation of a Performance Indicators System Applied to Water

13:55 Dynamic Distribution of Oseltamivir & its Metabolite in the Yodo River, During

Ultrasonic Activated Sludge Disintegration Nico Lambert, KU Leuven (BE)

Treatment Plants (WWTP) Marta Carvalho, AdP Servios (PT)

Treatment Plants Marcelo Libanio, Federal University of Minas Gerais (BR)


14:15 Water Supply & Wastewater Treatment Tariff Breakdown: Portuguese
National Overview Nuno Brco, guas de Portugal (PT)
14:35 Assessing the Performance of the Urban Water Utilities in Mozambique:
a Composite Indicator Approach Jordi Gallego-Ayala, Water Regulatory
Council of Mozambique (MZ)
14:55 Closing Summary

Influenza Outbreak Takashi Azuma, Research Center for Environmental


Quality Management (JP)
14:15 Emissions Sources of Microplastics to Fresh Surface Waters as Entry
Route to the Marine Environment Annemarie Van Wezel, KWR Watercycle
Research Institute (NL)
14:35 Optimisation of Full-scale Ozonation - Biofiltration Tertiary Treatment for
Micropollutants Removal Ywann Penru, Suez Environnement (FR)
14:55 Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Chair: David Butler University of Exeter, UK

Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Monitoring Strategies for Quality-based Management of Urban Drainage

Right Price, Best Performance


Chair: Ed Smeets EDMADI, Netherlands

15:55

on Continuous Water Level Monitoring Geert Dirckx, Aquafin NV (BE)

16:15 Urban Wastewater & Stormwater Technologies in Ancient Roman Cities

Auditorium 4
Track 1
TS

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Impact of Water Commercial Losses on Operators Unit Costs & Price of

Systems Bruno Barillon, Suez Environnement - CIRSEE (FR)

15:55 Operational Optimisation Potential of Storage (sedimentation) Tanks Based

16:15

Giovanni De Feo, University of Salerno (IT)

16:35 Economic Viability of Urine Struvite Recovery Using Seawater for Toilet

16:35

16:55 Closing Summary

16:55

Flushing (SWTF) Andre Mbaya, The Hong Kong University (HK)

Services Antnio Ruivo, ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services Regulation
Authority (PT)
Best Practices in the Definition of Water Services Tariff Structures Cristina
Rodrigues, ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (PT)
Productivity of Wastewater Treatment Plants: a Malmquist-Luenberger
Approach Francesc Hernandez Sancho, University of Valencia (ES)
Promoting Efficiency in Water Services: a Simple Model Joo Silva, ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (PT)
Closing Summary

Micropollutants
Chair: Jiangyong Hu National University of Singapore

Chair: Adriana Hulsmann KWR Netherlands

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Water Safety Plans at EPALs Water Supply System-Tool to Prioritise
10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Investments & Mitigation Actions Rui Neves Carneiro, Empresa Portuguesa


das guas Livres, S.A. - EPAL (PT)
From the Water Safety Plan to the Water Cycle Safety Plan - EPALs
Experience Ana Luis, Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A. - EPAL (PT)
Identification of Methodologies, Risks & Opportunities for Improvement in
Building Water Systems Marco Fernandes Caetano, Empresa Portuguesa
das guas Livres, S.A. - EPAL (PT)
Emergency Response After Wild Fires Near Drinking Water Sources Rui
Sancho, guas do Algarve, SA (PT)
Closing Summary

Water Safety Plans Decade


Chair: Dominique Gatel Veolia, France
By 2024 Water Safety Plans should be effectively implemented
in all countries which have improved sources of water supply
what do we need to do and how?

Room 3C
Track 4
WS

Ten years after the introduction of Water Safety Plans (WSPs) in international
guidance documents, this workshop will reflect on lessons learned from
practice and policy, highlight key benefits and chart a way forward so that
WSPs are implemented globally to a standard that ensures drinking water
quality is assured to a growing population. Reflections and lessons learned
from a utility perspective, presented by Rui Sancho (guas do Algarve,
Portugal); a regulatory perspective, presented by Pranav Joshi (National
Environment Agency, Singapore); and small systems, presented by Bettina
Rickert (UBA, Germany) will set the scene for group discussions and debate
on the key questions.

Sanitation Safety Plans: An Emerging


Framework for Improved Health

Room 3C
Track 4
WS

15:55

Examining why health-based approaches are being promoted for sanitation,


particularly in reuse of wastewaters, Bruce Gordon (WHO) presents an
overview, followed by Ildio Magalhes (DRAP-LVT, Portugal) highlighting the
challenges and opportunities, demand for wastewaters and sludge potential
cost benefits. Margarida Sousa (guas do Ribatejo, Portugal) will describe
lessons and implications for scaling up SSPs in Portugal and lessons for and
Kate Medlicott (WHO) will present outcomes from SSP pilots in trials in Lima
and Hanoi. Regulatory implications of reuse and wastewater management
will also be considered. Robert Bos (IWA) will moderate a discussion on the
opportunities and challenges for institutionalising SSPs.

16:15
16:35
16:55

in the UK Youla Jenidi, University of Nottingham (UK)


Impact of Urban Sludge Stabilisation Steps on the Phase Distribution of 11
Pharmaceutical Compounds Delphine Lachassagne, Universit de Limoges (FR)
Study on Human & Veterinary Antibiotics in Raw & Treated Water from a
Major French River Basin Amlie Guillon, Suez-Environnement (FR)
Do Wastewater Treatment Plants Act as a Potential Point Source
of Microplastics? - Preliminary Study Julia Talvitie, Helsinki Region
Environmental Services Authority (FI)
Closing Summary

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

Auditorium 1

Water Safety Plans

Chair: Cristina Martinho Acquawise, Portugal

17:00 - 17:15

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

Auditorium 1

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Sex, Drugs & Engineering - Identification & Evaluation of Bioactive Chemicals

Break

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Electrical Energy Performance Assessment in guas de Portugal Wastewater

Coffee Break

Water Sensitive Urban


Infrastructure

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Discolouration Loose Deposits: Balancing Views & Practices Jan Vreeburg,

Chair: Nuno Brco Aguas de Portugal, Portugal

How do we evolve water systems to meet the new imperatives of an


urbanising planet?

60

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Integrating Water System Design


with Long-term Urban Planning &
Development

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Paul Reiter IWA

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Wednesday

Wednesday
Keynote Plenary

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Can a preventative, risk-based management framework support improved


health outcomes for wastewater reuse for agriculture?

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

61

Programme

Business Forums

Keynote Plenary

Business Forum Room 01

Business Forum Room 02

10:30 - 11:15 XYLEM

10:30 - 11:15 JDL Environmental Protection Co.


Ltd & Tsinghua University

Wednesday

Wednesday

09:00 - 10:00

Investing in Clean Tech - Opportunities & Impacts Panel Discussion: Water, Cleantech and Innovation

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Activated Sludge Systems


Chair: Say Leong Ong National University of Singapore

Auditorium 1

Reliable and Energy Efficient Waste Water Pumping

Presented by: Stefan Abelin

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

Alternative Technologies to Improve


Microbial Control of Drinking Water

Auditorium 7
Track 5
WS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Effect of the Carbon to Nitrogen (C/N) Ratio on Composition & Fractionation

Chairs: Karine Delabre GWRC - Veolia


& France Sophie Courtois GWRC - Suez Environnement, France

10:55

Much has been done to develop detection tools to improve the microbiological
control of tap water, but more work is needed to implement innovative tools
in routine lab analysis. We examine progress and current challenges in the
quantitative assessment of microbial agents in water by alternative tools. Karine
Delabre (GWRC - Veolia, France) and Sophie Courtois (GWRC - Suez
Environnement, France) introduce the current situation and work of the
GWRC Waterborne Pathogens workgroup, and techniques such as flow
cytometric assessment of drinking water quality. Stphanie Sammartano (AFNOR
Certification, France) takes nanofiltration validation as an example of how analytical
performance of commercial application can be certificated. An open discussion
addresses implementing cultivation-independent methods for routine monitoring.

11:15
11:35
11:55

of Extracellular Polymeric Substances (EPS) in Activated Sludge Ferhan


een, Bogazici University (TR)
Effects of Filamentous Bulking on Activated Sludge Rheology & Compression
Settling Velocity Dorottya Wgner, Technical University of Denmark (DK)
Optimisation of the Full-scale Dual MBR-CAS Concept Hnxe
with Respect to Energy Consumption & Eff Burkhard Teichgrber,
Emschergenossenschaft/Lippeverband (DE)
Modelling Aerobic Methane Oxidation in a Municipal WWTP Mark
Loosdrecht, Delft University of Technology (NL)
Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Anaerobic Digestion
Chair: Henri Spanjers TU Delft, Netherlands

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 The Influence of Electrolysis on the Solubilisation & Semi-continuous
13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Anaerobic Digestion of WAS Sofie Houtmeyers, KU Leuven (BE)


Effects of Ionic Strength & Ion Pairing on (plant-wide) Modelling of Anaerobic
Digestion Processes Kimberly Solon, Lund University (SE)
Managing Anaerobic Digestion Processes Using Artificial Neural Networks
Milton Fontes, Simria - Saneamento Integrado dos Municpios da Ria, S.A. (PT)
Correlation of Time Necessary to Reach Different Levels of Biogas
Production & Prediction of BMP Mihaela Nistor, Bioprocess Control (SE)
Closing Summary

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Session 3

15:30 - 17:00

Anaerobic Ammonium Oxidation


Chair: Jurg Keller AWMC, Australia

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

How to implement cultivation-independent methods to monitor


drinking water quality?

Nanotechnology in Urban Water


Systems: Application, Implications,
& Analytical Needs

Auditorium 7
Track 5
WS

Chair: Ralf Kaegi EAWAG, Switzerland


What challenges do nanomaterials pose in wastewater and environmental
management - and what applications are they now making possible?

This interactive workshop considers nanotechnology-enabled applications


in the water sector, such as target-oriented adsorbents and nanocomposite
membranes, as well as the fate of nanomaterials that pass in managed waste
streams through urban water systems into the aquatic environment. Attention will
be given to new extraction, isolation and concentration procedures dedicated
for nanomaterials in complex matrices. Darren Sun (University of Singapore) will
report a 3D printed nanofibre membrane for clean water and energy production,
Pedro Alvarez (Rice University, USA) gives a broader survey of nanotechnologys
implications for the water sector and Ralf Kaegi (EAWAG, Switzerland) reviews
the analytical systems needed for safe implementation of nanotechnology.

Auditorium 7
Track 5
Chair: Joachim Fettig University of Ostwestfalen-Lippe, Germany
TS
Introduction

15:30
15:35 Vanadium Removal from Aqueous Solution & Real Wastewater Using

15:55 Efficient Control of Deammonification Cleargreen Plants Under Challenging

15:55 Synthesis of Core-shell Magnetic Nano-adsorbent for Fluoride Removing

Centrate Conditions Luc Lacoste, Suez Environnement (FR)


16:15 Mainstream NOB Out-selection for Nitrite-shunt & Deammonification at
Colder Temperatures Pusker Regmi, Old Dominion University (US)
16:35 ANITAMox Deammonification Process: Possibility to Handle High COD Level
Using the IFAS Configuration Frederic Veuillet, Veolia Environnement (FR)
16:55 Closing Summary

Facultative MBR technology and equipment for wastewater treatment


without excess sludge

JDL has developed the innovative Facultative MBR for the first time in the world.
More than 30 patents issued worldwide. It is characterised as the following.
1. Establishment of precisely controlled facultative conditions in biological
wastewater treatment;
2. Super-high MLSS up to 20000mg/L of MLSS;
3. Zero-discharge of excess organic-sludge;
4. Removal of phosphorus in terms of gaseous phosphine from domestic
wastewater;
5. Synchronous de-nitrification for N removal

11:15 - 12:00 Likuid Nanotek

11:15 - 12:00 A2O - gua, Ambiente e Organizao Lda

Ceramic membranes for industrial water/waste treatment. MBR, oily waters,


heavy metals removal

NAVIA Agile Operations for Water Utilities

Presented by: Elana Meabe


Ceramic membranes are the most robust type of membranes available. The
presentation carried out by Likuid will deal with the following issues:
1. Ceramic membranes: Characteristics, advantages and operation
2. Ceramic membranes: Applications
3. The ceramic MBR for industrial wastewater treatment
4. Case study: Ceramic MBR for chemical industry wastewater treatment

Presented by: Thiago Oliveira


NAVIA is a fully operational IT tool, which aggregates all the information brought
by field operators and from many other data sources. Everything done in real time,
reducing time and costs.
NAVIA improves water and wastewater operational management, in a way that
enables utilities to improve the full water cycle.

13:30 - 14:15 Naldeo

13:30 - 14:15 KIWA

Defining modern and efficient PPP contracts

Recognizing Quality

Presented by: Didier Carron


After two decades of PPP contracts in the water sector, several studies have
shown their effectiveness but also their weaknesses, especially to reach
effectiveness at fair financial conditions for both parties.
Second generation of PPP contracts have been designed to include lessons
from the past. They include a series of new features ensuring an effective,
stable, transparent and fair contract. These new features will be presented.

Presented by: Dragan Jovanov, supported by others.


KIWA is an international quality authority, permanently occupied with improving
processes, products, employees and organisations. We do so not only by
helping companies handle certification requirements, but also by offering
services in the fields of training, inspection, research and technological knowhow. The goal of the session is to share our experience with the audience,
reflect on important developments in recent years and elaborate on expected
future trends for the water sector.

14:15 15:00 Epal

13:30 - 14:15 KIWA

Controlling Non-Revenue Water within a major water utility:


The successful case of Lisbon & WONE

Introduction to the AquaRating audit

Presented by: Francisco Serranito


EPAL has implemented a successful project to reduce Non-Revenue Water
in the 1,450km distribution network within Lisbon. The Water Optimisation
for Network Efficiency (WONE) project has seen more than 150 District
Metered Areas (DMAs) created, through which increased monitoring, improved
understanding of systems dynamics and performance have been obtained, which
combined with Active Leakage Control interventions has reduced NRW from
23.5% in 2005 to 7,9% in 2013.

Presented by: Ramon Dolz, supported by others.


KIWA was the company who did the first audits of AquaRating during the field
test of the system. In this session the basics of the AquaRating audit will be
introduced. Attendees will receive a brief introduction to the audit process
and the benefits of AquaRating from the different stakeholders point of view:
utilities, governments, regulators and consultants.

Innovative Adsorbents

15:30 Introduction
15:35 Enhancement of Anammox Activity with External Electric Field Application
Sen Qiao, Dalian University of Technology (CN)

Opportunities to increase pumping reliability and energy efficiency in wastewater


collection and treatment systems exist with modern technologies. Here we will
present new technology and case studies that exemplify what is possible with
state-of-the-art technology today.

Quaternised Pine Sawdust Tiina Leivisk, University Of Oulu (FI)


from Drinking Water Ting-Jie Wang, Department of Chemical Engineering,
Tsinghua University (CN)
16:15 Affinity Adsorption for The Removal of Organic Micropollutants in Wastewater
& Drinking Water Patrick Buerlein, KWR (NL)
16:35 Where in an Activated Carbon Particle MIB & Geosmin Adsorb: Isotope
Micro-mapping Asuka Sakamoto, Hokkaido University (JP)
16:55 Closing Summary

15:30 - 16:15 Watershare


Watershare Sustainability

Watershare is the collaborative platform for top applied research institutes in


the public water sector. Members share their best expert tools to assist enduser clients. Watershare experts can take the lead in their own countries in
offering advanced and very practical solutions to water utilities, municipalities
and water agencies, helping them meet their daily and long-term strategic
goals. Watershare: Sharing the knowledge, building the network and serving
the community. In three Business Fora we discuss Watershare Distribution
22nd / Watershare Water resources and treatment 23rd / Watershare
Sustainability 24th

15:30 16:15/ 16:15 17:00 Danish Water


Technology Group (Danish Export
Association)
Non-Revenue Water, Ground-Water Mapping and other Danish Strongholds

Presented by: diverse Danish companies


Water is a scarce resource under increased and unsustainable pressure. This
emphasises the need for proper water management. Denmark has been a green
growth frontier for decades, offering solutions within water supply, distribution,
treatment. The forum includes presentations of solutions within:
Water supply Wastewater - Water resources - Industrial water

16:15 - 17:00 Scinor Water Technologies and


Scinor TIPS Membrane Technologies

Break

17:00 - 17:15

Keynote Plenary

17:15 - 18:00

1. Land use planning and regional development policy and regulatory reforms for innovative water management in emerging economies
Francisco Nunes Correia Instituto Superior Tcnico, Lisbon
2. Panel Discussion

62

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Introduction to Scinor Water Technologies

Auditorium 1

Presented by: Francisco Serranito


Scinor, comprised of Scinor Water Technologies and Scinor Membranes
Technologies, has seen great success in the execution of EPC projects and
development of Best in Class TIPS membranes. While previous markets were
Asia-based, Scinor now is pleased to introduce its full range of products to
North America and Australia.
Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

63

Notes

Congress Programme

Addressing the global water challenge demands imaginative


approaches and the adoption of new paradigms and technologies.
Participating in technical sessions including oral and poster
presentations, brings you the latest findings and allows you to
connect to new developments. Attending workshops will provide
insight and inspiration for cooperation and collaboration on
research and practical applications. The workshops and technical
sessions provide a unique opportunity for connecting with peers
from across the water sector.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

64

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Thursday

Thursday:

Thursday Spotlight
Plenary Session

09:00 - 10:00, Auditorium 1

The DNA revolution in water engineering: the secret


lives of the microbes that drive these systems

Resource recovery: new realities


& leading practices

Plenary Keynote:
Per Nielsen,

Plenary Keynote:
Willy Verstraete

Professor of Biotechology,
Department of Biotechnolgy,
Chemistry and Environmental
Engineering, Faculty
Engineering and Science,
Aalborg University

Emeritus Professor
of Environmental
Biotechnology,
Faculty of Bioscience
Engineering, Ghent
University

Plenary Session

17:15 - 18:00, Auditorium 1

Closing Ceremony
Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy
(Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with
IWA Distinguished Fellows

Gala evening: relax, network and enjoy, 19:00


The gala evening provides an informal and relaxed opportunity to
network and connect with other water experts in a truly unique
setting. The magnificent 15th century Convento do Beato,
constructed by order of Afonso V of Portugal as a gift to his
first wife, is a celebrated piece of Lisbons extraordinary history.
Explore the convents cloisters, refectory, library, terrace and
foyers for an experience youll never forget.
Convento do Beato
Dress: Smart casual
Transport: Buses will take you from and back to selected hotels.
Price: 30 + 23%VAT per fully paid delegate,
100 + 23%VAT for all others who would like to attend

IWA World Water Exhibition, 09:00 - 15:00, Hall 1 & 2


Join the worlds leading companies working in sustainable water
management. The IWA World Water Exhibition is a one-stopshop where you can connect and do business with the leading
industry and technology providers.

Young Water Professionals Networking & Discussion

12:30 - 13:30 Room 1.06 Biomimicry: Drawing inspiration


from nature for shaping our water future. Sign up at YWP
Room 1.14 (max 30 participants).

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

67

Programme

Programme

Thursday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

10:00 - 10:30

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 2

Room 1.07
Track 3
WS

Two sides of the same coin? What can


we learn from the energy sector on
stakeholder engagement?

The first session will address challenges and opportunities across the
Mediterranean and MENA region, looking at transformational changes for
utilities, overcoming challenges to private sector engagement and enhancing
cooperation in the region; with contributions from ACWUA, OECD and the
Mediterranean Water Institute.

Chair: Kari Elisabeth Fagerns Oslo Water, Norway


Can the water sector improve its track record when it comes to
stakeholder engagement and communications?

Monitoring & Control Systems


Chair: Wolfgang Rauch University of Innsbruck, Austria

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Cost-efficient Control of Wastewater Treatment Plants to Reduce
10:55

Why do industries, energy and water have widely divergent track records in
stakeholder engagement and communication? The energy sector - mostly works efficiently and competently to communicate well with the general public
and key sub-groups; the water sector mostly does not, with consequences
for its public image and customer relations. How can water learn from energy?
Zulandi van der Westhuizen (World Energy Council, UK) looks at gaining the
publics trust; Alexandre Brailowsky (GDF Suez, France) compares human
rights to energy and water; and Inge Wallage (IWA) considers transparent
versus polluted stakeholder engagement. A panel discussion will draw
lessons that can be applied to improve the water sectors performance.

11:15
11:35
11:55

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Auditorium 2

Customer Communication
Creating Better Services
Chair: Kari Elisabeth Fagerns Oslo Water & Sewerage, Norway

Room 1.07
Track 3
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Water Conservation Education as a Tool to Empower Water Users to Reduce
13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Water Use Leslie Hoy, Rand Water (ZA)


The Right to Information - Improving Transparency to End-users of Water
Services Alvaro Carvalho, ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services
Regulation Authority (PT)
Choose Tap - Making a Stand for Tap Water to Improve Health &
Environmental Outcomes Glenn Wilson, Yarra Valley Water (AU)
Stakeholder Driven Improvement of Water & Sewerage Services Florin
Iliescu, Romanian Water Association (RO)
Closing Summary

Modelling & Systems Analysis


Chair: Ingmar Nopens Ghent University, Belgium

Sludge Process of WWTP Javier Climent, Universitat JaumeI (ES)

13:55 A Cumulative Logit Model to Control Filamentous Bulking in Wastewater

Treatment Plants Nashia Deepanarain, Durban University of Technology (ZA)

14:15 Comprehensive Sewer Facilities Information Management System Toshikazu


Satou, Tokyo Metropolitan Sewerage Service Corporation (JP)

14:35 Cross-sectoral Optimisation & Visualisation of Transformation Processes in

Urban Water Infrastructures in Rural Areas Inka Kaufmann Alves, University


of Kaiserslautern (DE)
14:55 Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 1

Room 1.08
Track 3
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 CFD Simulation of Hydrodynamics & Biological Reactions in an Activated

Coffee Break

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Room 1.08
Track 3
TS

Greenhouse Gas Emissions Christine Sweetapple, University of Exeter (UK)


Influence of Solubility & Diffusion of Gas Components in Volumetric
Measurements of Biogas Sten Strmberg, Lund University (SE)
A New Aeration Control Scheme for Energy Saving & Nitrogen Removal by
Using DO & NH4-N Sensors Osamu Yamanaka, Toshiba Corporation (JP)
Innovative Water Quality Monitoring: Automation of Data Assessment in
Practical Scenarios Janelcy Alferes, modelEAU, Universit Laval (CA)
Closing Summary

Lunch

This session will look at research, and innovation for large scale applications
in the region, with contributions from the MENA Water Centers of
Excellence, focusing on issues such as: water use efficiency and productivity;
groundwater; non-conventional water; water/energy/food nexus; water supply
and sanitation; non-revenue water.

68

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

MEDITERRANEAN & MIDDLE-EAST FORUM

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Thursday

09:00 - 10:00

MEDITERRANEAN & MIDDLE-EAST FORUM

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Room 5A
Track 1
Chairs: Hans-Curt Flemming University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
WS
Biotechnology & its
applications (Biocluster)

& Per Nielsen Aalborg University, Denmark

Will working for microorganisms make microorganisms work for us?

The IWA/ISME Bio Cluster has been designed to provide an interdisciplinary


platform for activities shared between engineers and environmental
microbiologists. Both in the IWA and the International Society of Microbial
Ecology (ISME) possibilities for exciting synergism have been recognised
the motto is: work for the microorganisms so that they work for us. The
winners of the first BioCluster awards will present and discuss: Bruce
Rittmann (Arizona State University, USA) on Prying Open the Black Box,
Mari Winkler (Ghent University, Belgium) on Everything is everywhere but
the granule selects, and Hans-Curt Flemming on the The Hidden Life
of Bacteria. Finally, an inspiring general interdisciplinary discussion will
conclude the session.

Industrial Application of
Microbial-ecology-focused
Monitoring Tools for Wastewater
& Drinking Water Treatment

Room 5A
Track 1
WS

Chairs: Tom Curtis University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK


& Adrian Oehmen Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
How can the revolution in microbiological methods move out of the
laboratory and into the real world of wastewater and water treatment?

The unprecedented power and precision offered by microbiological methods


will be discussed. As the cost of sequencing declines, the water industry faces
increasing demand for greater efficiency and reliability. Tom Curtis (University
of Newcastle, UK) will introduce the industrial applications of microbial ecology
techniques and their links to water and wastewater; Per H. Nielsen (Aalborg
University, Denmark) will focus on applications of advanced sequencing
techniques to optimise full-scale treatment plants. Expect a frank discussion on
the technical and cultural barriers they are facing.

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

69

Programme

Programme

Thursday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

11:15
11:35
11:55

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Room 5B
Track 2
TS

Demand Management Dalia Loureiro, Laboratrio Nacional de Engenharia


Civil (PT)
Stakeholders Perception Evaluation Regarding Water Use Issues in Dhaka,
Bangladesh Kazi Akter, University of Asia Pacific, Dhaka, Bangladesh (BD)
Boosting Innovation in the Water Sector - the Role & Lessons Learned from
Collaborative Projects Helena Alegre, LNEC (PT)
Establishment of Water Price Regulation Model & Influences on Urban Water
Resource Supply in Harbin, China Yujie Feng, Harbin Institute of Technology
(CN)
Closing Summary

RESOURCE RECOVERY:
From Push to Pull in Practice
Chair: Peter Cornel Technische Universitt Darmstadt, Germany
Moderator: Willy Verstraete Ghent University, Belgium

Room 5C
Track 2
WS

What current technological options and inspiring examples of resource


recovery from water and wastewater exist?

Used water is a highly valuable resource, and many technologies to reuse


the goodies from industrial and domestic water are now available or being
enthusiastically developed. Ludwig Hermann (Outotec, Germany) illustrates
Integrated Energy Generation and Nutrient Recovery from Sewage Sludge
and Farmyard Manure - Opportunities and Challenges. Olaf van der Kolk
(Reststoffenunie, Netherlands) discusses the drinking water sector as he
investigates the development of markets and regulatory issues for residuals
from the water cycle. The session continues with a panel discussion on the
transition from the push to the pull side. The panel consists of the presenters
and Nuno Brco (guas de Portugal, Portugal), Katrin Eitrem Holmgren
(IWA) and Mads Munk-Poulsen (Billund Vand, Denmark).

Biofilm Processes
Chair: Eveline Volcke Ghent University, Belgium

10:55
11:15
11:35
11:55

MBBRs: Effect of the Carrier Type Marcia Dezotti, Federal University of Rio
de Janeiro (BR)
Comparison of Bio-physiochemical Properties of Granule & Floc from
Denitrifying P Removal System Yayi Wang, Tongji University (CN)
Understanding the Contribution of Biofilm in an IFAS System Designed for
Nitrogen Removal Moretti Paul, IRSTEA (FR)
Bioaugmentation in Hybrid Biofilm Reactors to Enhance Nitrogen Removal for
Wastewater Treatment Francis Hassard, Cranfield University (UK)
Closing Summary

12:00 - 13:30

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Room 5B
Track 2
WS

Chair: Bambos Charalambous J2C Water, Cyprus


When the supply of water is intermittent, problems of water losses
become more complicated and more intolerable.

In many parts of the world the water supply is only intermittent, a situation
that aggravates and is aggravated by the problem of water loss. How
can these interlinked problems be tackled? Bambos Charalambous (J2C
Water, Cyprus) introduces the issues of intermittent water supply (IWS) and
the work of the IWA Task Group on IWS; Roland Liemberger (Miya Asia,
Singapore) shows how the well known concept of non-revenue water can be
applied for IWS; Jan Janssens (J2C Water, Switzerland) will suggest ways of
moving from intermittent to 24/7 supply; and Ryan Baculinao (Miya, Tanzania)
presents a case study of how that transition was addressed.

Rethinking the Future: Making


Resource Recovery Happen
Chair: Willy Verstraete Ghent University, Belgium

Room 5C
Track 2
WS

What are upcoming trends in resource recovery and


how can these be further developed?

This second workshop will deal with the key challenges related to supply
chain management of recovered resources and the economics of scale.
Attention will be given to overall public and legal acceptability. Peter Cornel
(Technische Universitt Darmstadt, Germany) provides an overview on the
IWA Resource Recovery Cluster and the potential of resource recovery;
followed by Alexander Duyndam (Schuttelaar & Partners, Netherlands)
speaking on Before marketing: bridging barriers in resource recovery. An
interactive discussion will debate what is needed to further develop resource
recovery, both innovation and adoption. Along with the presenters, Glen
Daigger (IWA) and Aijie Wang (Harbin Institute of Technology, China) also
join the discussion.

Biofilm Processes
Chair: Eveline Volcke Ghent University, Belgium

13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Treatment Plant Mari Heinonen, Helsinki Region Environmental Services


HSY (FI)
Influence of Dissolved Oxygen Concentration on the Start-up of the
Anammox Based Process: ELAN Nicolas Morales, Aqualia (ES)
Contribution to the Study of Biofilms with Controlled Thickness. New
Concept - Biofilm Age Rita Maurcio, Faculdade de Cincias e Tecnologia,
Universidade Nova de Lisboa (PT)
Effluent Recirculation Aiming Denitrification in Combined Treatment Systems
Mario Foco, University Of Campinas - Unicamp (BR)
Closing Summary

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 1

Room 1.09
Track 5
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 N2O Production in Denitrifying Post-filtration at the Viikinmki Wastewater

Coffee Break

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Room 1.09
Track 5
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 COD & Ammonium Removal from a High Organic Strength Wastewater in

Lunch

dealing with the Complex


Interrelation of Intermittent
Supply & Water Losses

70

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Linking Water Consumption Smart Metering with Census Data to Improve
10:55

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Chair: Stuart White Institute for Sustainable Futures, Australia

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Thursday

09:00 - 10:00

Implementing Demand Management

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Auditorium 8
Track 5
Chair: Darren Sun Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
TS
Introduction
Advanced Water Treatment

10:30
10:35 A Study on the Effect of Ozone Dosage on Dissolved-ozone Flotation (DOF)

Process Performance Xin Jin, XiAn University of Architecture & Technology (CN)

10:55 Micro-bubble Flotation of Freshwater Algae: a Comparative Study of Differing


Shape & Size Mooyoung Han, Seoul National University (KR)

11:15 Transformation of Diclofenac by Filter Sands Containing Manganese-hydrooxides Andreas Albers, TU-Dresden (DE)

11:35 Processes of Microbial Pesticide Degradation in Rapid Sand Filters for

Treatment of Drinking Water Mathilde Hedegaard, Technical University of


Denmark (DK)
11:55 Closing Summary

The latest developments in


low pressure membranes.
Chair: Laurent Guey Degrmont - Suez Environnement

Auditorium 8
Track 5
WS

Membrane use in the water industry is growing fast, new products are on
the market, but what are their applications and future trends?

This workshop presents and evaluates the latest evolutions regarding lowpressure membranes (Micro, UF, in/out, out/in). The applications of those
membranes will cover all kind of applications as drinking water, waste water,
reuse and sea water pre-treatment either for municipal and industrial markets.
We will treat the position of the market from suppliers, integrators and endusers vision. Richard Woodling (Scinor Membrane Technology, China) is part
of the panel that will be constituted of different membranes suppliers as well
as experts in membranes evaluation regarding performances and reliability
such and their adequation with existing or potential applications.

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

71

Programme

Programme

Thursday

Keynote Plenary

Keynote Plenary

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Auditorium 3
Track 1
WS

What are the structural and non-structural solutions for establishing flood
resilience in Cities of the Future?

This workshop is directed at developing a framework for building flood resilience


in Cities of the Future. It will focus on building resilience to pluvial flooding
caused by urban stormwater, examining design & management principles
associated with (i) adapting cityscapes and building form to accommodate
increasing flood vulnerability; (ii) redefinition of land-use in retreating urban
development away from severely flood-prone areas to support restoration of
floodplains and natural waterways; and (iii) adoption of new technologies for
real-time control of flood defence infrastructure. Presentations from Tony Wong
(Monash University, Australia), Berry Gersonius (UNESCO-IHE, Netherlands)
and Chris Chesterfield (CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, Australia).

14:35
14:55

Cooperation for WASH sector


capacity development
Chair: Uta Wehn UNESCO IHE & Kirsten de Vette IWA

Will we have enough and appropriately skilled water professionals to


meet demand in the sector in 2030?

The shortfall of human resource capacity in the WASH (water, sanitation and
hygiene) sector has been reported in several country-level assessments by
IWA and a UN Water report. Action is needed at national level to establish
capacity development strategies, with detailed implementation plans
incorporating the assessments findings. This workshop brings together a
range of actors from the WASH sector, including Petrit Tare (SHUKALB,
Albania), Rui Godinho (APDA, Portugal), Kelvin Chitumbo (NWASCO,
Zambia), Amadou Diallo (PEPAM, Senegal), Paul Smith (National Water
Commission, Australia), Inga Jacobs (Water Research Commission, South
Africa) and Joseph Epitu (Ministry of Water and Environment, Uganda) to
discuss the process of national-level strategising to move from strategy to
implementation.

Cyanobacteria
Chair: Ricardo Santos Instituto Superior Tecnico Lisboa, Portugal

10:55 Water Cycle Safety Planning: Demonstration in the City of Lisbon Maria

11:15 Establishment of a Rapid Monitoring System for Microcystis & Toxins in

11:15 Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment of the Impacts of Urban Flooding

11:35 Release & Oxidation of Cell-bound Microcystins by Ozone Flavio Lapolli,

11:35 HIDRALERTA Project - a Flood Forecast & Alert System in Coastal & Port

11:55 Closing Summary

11:55 Closing Summary

Compounds Lei Li, Tongji University (CN)

Drinking Water Reservoirs Tsair-Fuh Lin, National Cheng Kung University (TW)
UFSC - Federal University of Santa Catarina (BR)

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

the Resilience Index Antonino Fortunato, University of Palermo (IT)


From Managing Risk to Improving Resilience in European Urban Water
Services Heather Smith, Cranfield University (UK)
Competitive Energy Advantage of Using Reclaimed Water for Crops in Arid &
Semi-arid Regions Diego Rosso, University of California, Irvine (US)
Building Resilience in Urban Water Systems for Sustainable Cities of the
Future Seith Mugume, University of Exeter (UK)
Closing Summary

Knowledge & Capacity:


Strengthen it. Retain it. Gain from it.
Chairs: Uta Wehn de Montalvo Unesco-IHE, Netherlands
& Kirsten de Vette IWA

Auditorium 4
Track 1
WS

Nanoparticles
Chair: Ralf Kaegi EAWAG, Switzerland

13:55
14:15
14:35
14:55

Effect of NOM Concentration Sherub Phuntsho, University of Technology


Sydney (AU)
The Impact of TiO2 Nanoparticles on Pseudomonas Stutzeri Under Aerobic
Denitrifying Conditions Dapeng Li, Harbin Isistitutue of Technology (CN)
Impact of Nanoscale Zero Valent Iron on Bacteria is Growth Phase
Dependent Eakalak Khan, North Dakota State University (US)
Effects of Nanoparticles on Enzyme Activity & Functional Bacteria in
Wastewater Treatment Plants Xiong Zheng, School of Environmental Science
& Engineering (CN)
Closing Summary

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Auditorium 1

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Stability of Fe-oxide Nanoparticles Coated with Natural Organic Matter -

How can water and wastewater utilities become learning organisations?

Mechanisms have been developed to support individual and organisational


capacity development within water service providers, such as networks,
peer-to-peer exchanges, training. How can water service providers ensure
that knowledge and capacity is retained? We will discuss a range of internal
processes necessary to ensure that knowledge and capacity are not lost;
touching upon procedures for implementing knowledge management to
embed knowledge and capacity within organisations, as well as procedures
for workforce planning and professional development. Cheryl Davis (SFWater,
US), Ben Tam (Anglian Water, UK), Josses Mugabi (World Bank, US), Rose
Kaggwa (NWSC, Uganda), and Kelvin Chitumbo (NWASCO, Zambia) will be
leading the discussion on sharing and retaining the knowledge that matters.

Chair: Hamanth Kasan Rand Water, South Africa

10:55 Formation of AOM-associated Disinfection Byproducts & Odor & Taste

National Institute of Health (IT)

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Risk Assessment

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Quantitative Microbiological Risk Assessment for Defining Desinfection of

Lunch
Auditorium 3
Track 1
TS

Room 3B
Track 4
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Cyanotoxins in Drinking Water: Risk Analysis in Italy Luca Lucentini, Italian

12:00 - 13:30

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

72

Auditorium 4
Track 1
WS

Lunch

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Robust Design of Water Distribution Networks Based on the Maximisation of

14:15

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

Coffee Break

Chair: Rob Skinner Monash University, Australia

13:55

Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

09:00 - 10:00

10:00 - 10:30

Chair: Vijay Padmanabhan ADB

Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health

Coffee Break

Resilient & Decentralised


Urban Systems

Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources

Thursday

09:00 - 10:00

Urban Stormwater & a Generalised


Framework for Building Flood
Resilience in Global Cities to 2050

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change

Drinking Water Near Paris Caroline Lecarpentier, Veolia Eau dIle de France (FR)
Almeida, LNEC (PT)

Signe Andersen, Technical University of Denmark (Dtu) (DK)


Areas Pedro Poseiro, LNEC (PT)

Room 3C
Track 4
TS

Health Related
Water Microbiology
Chair: Daisuke Sano Hokkaido University, Japan

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Biological Treatment Changed Heterotrophic Bacteria Resistance to
Erythromycin in Wastewater Mei-Ting Guo, Tongji University (CN)

13:55 Bayesian Modeling of Virus Removal Efficiency in Wastewater Treatment


Processes Daisuke Sano, Hokkaido University (JP)

14:15 Heterotrophic Plate Counts as an Index of the Probability of Contamination of


Drinking Water in Distribution Systems J. Hein Van Lieverloo, Viaeterna (NL)

14:35 Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria in Urban Sewage: Role of Treatment Plants &
Environmental Dispersion Valeria Mezzanotte, Politecnico di Milano (IT)

14:55 Closing Summary

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

Auditorium 1

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

73

Programme

Business Forums

Keynote Plenary

Business Forum Room 01

Business Forum Room 02

10:30 11:15 XYLEM

10:30 11:15 LG Sound B.V. (The Netherlands)

Smart Gravity Filters Retrofits with Leopold

Monitoring and controlling of blue-green algae in large lakes and reservoirs


with new MPC-Buo

Thursday

Thursday

09:00 - 10:00

1. Breakthroughs from the New Molecular Biology: How Can We Apply Novel Molecular Methods in Water Engineering? Per H. Nielsen, Aalborg University
2. Resource Recovery: Putting New Ideas Into Practice Willy Verstraete, University of Ghent
Auditorium

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30

Session 1

10:30 - 12:00

Advanced Oxidation Processes


Chair: Michael Sievers CUTEC, Germany

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

Particle Separation
Chair: Dayanand Panse IWWA India

Auditorium 7
Track 5
TS

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Water Treatment Combining Photocatalysis & Nanofiltration in Sequence & as

10:30 Introduction
10:35 Integrated Approach to Water Treatment Plant Optimisation Using Computer

10:55 Mineralisation of Industry Wastewater Containing Acrylonitrile &

10:55 Lower Aluminum Concentration in Sand Bed Filtrate than in Polymeric

a New Hybrid Process Sandra Sanches, IBET (PT)

Dimethylformamide Using UV-Persulfate Yao-Hui Huang, National Cheng


Kung University (TW)
11:15 A New Sulfite/UV Process for Efficient Dehalogenation & Detoxification of
Toxic Contaminants Xuchun Li, Nanjing University (CN)
11:35 New Reaction Pathway Discovery for Fate of Transformation Products in
Aqueous Phase Advanced Oxidation Processes Daisuke Minakata, Michigan
Technological University (US)
11:55 Closing Summary

Lunch

12:00 - 13:30

Session 2

13:30 - 15:00

Adsorption Processes
Chair: Yoshihiko Matsui Hokkaido University, Japan

Auditorium 6
Track 5
TS

13:30 Introduction
13:35 Coating Granulation of Nano Adsorbents Using PVA as a Binder for Drinking
Water Defluoridation Ting-Jie Wang, Tsinghua University (CN)

13:55 Modelling GAC Adsorption of Biologically Pre-treated Process Water from

Hydrothermal Carbonisation Joachim Fettig, University of Applied Sciences


Ostwestfalen-Lippe (DE)
14:15 Effect of the Humic & Fulvic Acids on The Adsorption of Arsenic (V) onto
GEH Ricardo Jaime Guerra Sanchez, CIATEC A.C. (MX)
14:35 Organic Substance Removal by Combination of Powdered Activated Carbon
Adsorption & Microfiltration Grit Hoffmann, University Duisburg-Essen,
Institute for Energy & Environmental Process Engineering (DE)
14:55 Closing Summary

Coffee Break

15:00 - 15:30

Closing Plenary

15:30 - 17:00

Models Alex Yavich, Optimization Solutions Environmental, LLC (US)


Membrane Filtrate Nobutaka Shirasaki, Hokkaido University (JP)

11:15 The Interaction Between Ozonation & Wastewater Particles Hadas Mamane,
Tel-Aviv University (IL)

11:35 Coagulation Process Control by Applying a Semi-empirical Model to Predict


DOC-removal on the Basis of LC-OCD-analytics Javier Farias, Technische
Universitt Dresden (DE)
11:55 Closing Summary

Advanced Processes for the


Removal of Micro-pollutants:
Lessons Learned From Full-scale
Plants & Remaining Issues

Auditorium 7
Track 5
WS

Presented by: Lucia Bartolome and Bruno Silveirinha


There are many reasons a filter floor fails and has to be retrofitted. The need
for a reliable operation and low maintenance is one of them and so is the end
of the life of the previous system. Since each plant is different, the system also
has to be flexible.

11:15 - 12:00 AQUASIS, an IT guas de Portugal


Group Company
Smart Water Systems need Smart Information Technology

Water and wastewater utility companies are facing big challenges: how to
maintain a high level of service to customers, assuring financial, economic and
technical sustainability with reduced budgets.
A holistic business process approach must rely on We cant manage what we
dont know principle. For utilities with a wide range of infrastructures operating
24/7/365 it is humanly impossible to follow and monitor each infrastructure
locally, the reason why they need to collect data from physical infrastructures,
centralise and process it into information.
Independently of being private or public held utilities, they are pushing hard
to improve performance and deliver cost-effective services to its customers
and generate added value to shareholders. To accomplish these goals, utilities
need to collect and combine economic, financial and specialised operating
and maintenance data in order to have context information to support precise
decision-making.
Only with Smart Information Technology and well-defined enterprise information
architecture (business processes, applications and information) can utilities
develop an enterprise asset management methodology.

UrbanWater: Intelligent and efficient management system for water resources


in urban areas

The FP7 EU UrbanWater project is developing and demonstrating an innovative


ICT-based platform for efficient and integrated management of urban water
resources.
The project integrates high quality and already proven solutions for data
management and billing systems, with innovative models for forecasting water
supply availability, predicting customers demand and detecting leakages, it
also gathers real measured data from sensors connected to the water network
infrastructure.

What are the techniques for specific removal of micropollutants are now
moving from development into full-scale application?

Specific processes for micropollutant removal in full-scale wastewater treatment


plants has become a reality in the last 2 years. Hansruedi Siegrist, (EAWAG,
Switzerland) and Samuel Martin Ruel, (SUEZ Environnement, France)
introduce early feedback on advanced treatments for micropollutant removal in
full-scale plants; Gnter Langergraber, (BOKU, Austria) describes alternative
treatments in constructed wetlands; Maria Frhacker, (BOKU, Austria) outlines
the indicator compounds and bioanalytical tools used; and Dilek Sanin, (METU,
Turkey) looks at micropolluntants fate in sludge treatment lines.

13:30 - 14:15 Portuguese Water Partnership


Water Innovation Support for SMEs through the Network of National Water
Partnerships

Presented by: Francisco Nunes Correira, Portuguese Water Partnership,


President Danish Water Forum, German Water Partnership, Netherlands Water
Partnership
There will be a series of presentations from each organization, followed by a
discussion panel. Regarding the candidature Water-Inno-SME submitted
under the Horizon 2020, the PWP with the EWP European partnerships for
water, this business forum aims to discuss water-related innovation and business
development in European environmental and water sectors between SMEs.

13:30 - 14:15 IWA Project Innovation Awards


Winners
The IWA Project Innovation Awards recognise excellence and innovation in
water engineering around the world.
This is an opportunity to learn about some of the leading regional and
global innovations taking place in water engineering from the participants
at the PIA Winners Pavilion.

Auditorium 1
14:15 - 15:00 Portuguese Water Partnership
Water Innovation Support for SMEs through the Network of National Water
Partnerships

Presented by: Francisco Nunes Correira, Portuguese Water Partnership,


President Danish Water Forum, German Water Partnership, Netherlands Water
Partnership
There will be a series of presentations from each organization, followed by a
discussion panel. Regarding the candidature Water-Inno-SME submitted
under the Horizon 2020, the PWP with the EWP European partnerships for
water, this business forum aims to discuss water-related innovation and business
development in European environmental and water sectors between SMEs.

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

11:15 - 12:00 Aqualogus/Urbanwater Consortium

Chairs: Samuel Martin Ruel SUEZ Environnement, France


& France Hansruedi Siegrist EAWAG, Switzerland

Closing Plenary. Including keynote presentation by Pat Mulroy (Brookings Institute, US) and a panel discussion with IWA Distinguished Fellows

74

Presented by: Falco Aguilar Rubio


Algal blooms in large water bodies are problems difficult to tackle with current
methods. The patented MPC.Buoy provides an innovative, chemical free
solution for algae and cyanobacteria control by combining continuous water
quality monitoring, telemetering and ultrasound technology. MPC-Buoy is
successfully installed in lakes in Poland, the UK, the USA, Canada and Ireland.

14:15 - 15:00 IWA Project Innovation Awards


Winners
The IWA Project Innovation Awards recognise excellence and innovation in
water engineering around the world.
This is an opportunity to learn about some of the leading regional and
global innovations taking place in water engineering from the participants
at the PIA Winners Pavilion.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

75

Notes

Posters Presentations

Posters:
Poster presentations will take place daily. They will provide an
opportunity to hear presenters discuss their work and to have your
questions answered.
Social media

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

Posters

76

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Posters presentations
Pavillion 4

Posters presentations
Pavillion 5

Monday

Monday

Poster Presentations

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 1 - 30

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 301 - 330

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 31 - 60

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 331 - 360

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 61 - 90

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 361 - 390

Tuesday

Tuesday

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 91 - 120

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 391 - 420

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 121 - 150

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 421 - 450

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 151 - 180

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 451 - 480

Wednesday

Wednesday

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 181 - 210

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 481 - 510

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 211 - 240

13:30 - 15:00

Poster 511 - 540

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 241 - 270

15:30 - 17:00

Poster 541 - 570

Thursday
10:30 - 12:00

Thursday
Poster 271 - 300

10:30 - 12:00

Poster 571 - 600

Each author introduces the poster in


three minute long pitch. Poster sessions
are grouped by thematic track, with two
simultaneous sessions taking place in
the two poster Halls, Pavilion 4 and
Pavilion 5.

Poster Awards
Explore the poster Halls on Pavilion
4 and 5, download the digital version
of each poster and rate their favourite
ones through the mobile App. The rates
between Monday and Wednesday will
define which the best posters according
to attendees are. The winners will
be notified on Thursday morning and
presented with their awards at the
plenary session on Thursday afternoon.

Track 1: Cities, Utilities & Industries Leading Change


Track 2: Re-charting the Course of Water Resources
Track 3: Enabling Progress with Good Governance, Sustainable Finance & ICT
Track 4: Water Quality, Safety & Human Health
Track 5: Water & Wastewater Processes & Treatment

2447565

NG

Simulation Modeling In MDT In Conjunctively Managed Competitive Multi-Purpose ARBD Scheme,Nigeria Luke Eme Anambra State University

2449486

PT

Climate Change Impacts On Querena-Silves Aquifer And Odelouca Watershed Maria Novo LNEC

2449494

PT

Climate Change Impacts On Groundwater Dependent Coastal Ecosystems. Melides Case Study Maria Novo LNEC

2450490

PT

Predicting Pollution Status Of Water Masses Evolution Using Change Scenarios, Melides Case Study LNEC Maria Novo LNEC

2465268

PT

Environmental Performance Of The Urban Water System Of Aveiro (Portugal) Luis Arroja University of Aveiro

2466894

NL

Improving Implementation Capacities Of Cities By sharing Best Practices On UWCS Kees Van Leeuwen KWR Watercycle Research Organization

2467458

PT

Generation Of Urban Flood Risk Maps Using A Dual Drainage Model In SWMM Telmo Paula Universidade de Coimbra

2473438

ES

Photocatalytic Degradation Of The Fungicide Imazalil Using TiO2 Immobilized On Different Supports Rocio Espino-Estvez FEAM Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

10

2473470

ES

Scale-up And Economic Assessment Of A Fenton Process To Treat Agro-industrial Wastewater Dunia E. Santiago FEAM Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

11

2473892

ES

Photocatalytic Degradation Of Isoproturon In Waters Using Immobilized Nanoparticles Of Titania Rocio Espino-Estvez FEAM Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

12

2473934

BE

Integrated Stormwater Plans To Adapt Municipalities To Climate Change In Flanders (Belgium) Greet De Gueldre Aquafin NV

14

2474167

AU

Understanding H2S Uptake Dynamics By Corroding Sewer Concrete With Fluctuating H2S Concentrations Xiaoyan Sun The University of Queensland

15

2474492

TR

Climate Change Effects On Urban Watershed Burcu imek Uygun Anadolu University

16

2474957

JP

Expansion Of Direct Water Supply System To High-rise Buildings - Introduction Of Pressurized Direct Water Supply System (In-line/Multi-stage Type) Atsushi Tomaru Tokyo Metropolitan

17

2475046

TR

Sustainability Assessment Of A Hydroelectric Power Plant: A Case From Turkey Elcin Kentel Middle East Technical University

18

2475975

ES

Cost Benefit Analysis Of Adaptation Strategies To Cope With Global Change Impacts In Barcelona Laurent Pouget CETaqua

20

2476078

BR

Monotonic Trend And Change Points In So Loureno Do Sul/RS/Brazil Pamela Disconzi Universidade Federal de Pelotas

21

2476079

BE

Leaching Behaviour Of Different Scrap Materials At Recovery And Recycling Companies Stijn Van Hulle University Ghent - Campus Kortrijk

22

2476789

BR

Large-scale Dams And Their Social, Environmental, And Economic Impacts: The Case Of Xing, Brazil Antenor Aguiar Netto Sergipe Federal University

23

2476852

KR

Development Of Automatic Monitoring System For Integrated Water Resource Management Of Urban Streams Dongil Seo Chungnam National University

25

2477051

KR

Water Reuse Of Dairy Wastewater Using An Integrated AF/BAF System Seung Lim Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute

26

2477128

JP

Evaluation Modelling Of Resilience Curve In Business Continuity Planning For Water Service Nagahisa Hirayama National Institute for Environmental Studies

27

2477217

FR

Efficiency Assessment Of A Surface-flow Constructed Wetland For WWTP Effluent Polishing Marie-Noelle Pons Universit de Lorraine

28

2477256

ES

LCA Of PVC And HDPE Pipes For Drinking Water Distribution Networks In Cities David Sanjuan-Delms Universitat Autnoma de Barcelona

29

2477288

FR

Fate Of Biofilm In Sewer And Wastewater Flowrate Entropy Marie-Noelle Pons Universit de Lorraine

30

2477303

SE

The Water Footprint Of Oil Exploration - An Urgent Challenge For Water Professionals Gustaf Olsson Lund University

31

2477319

PT

Integrated Urban Water Resources Management: The Key-role Of Groundwater Inventories Jose Manuel Marques CERENA, Instituto Superior Tcnico, Technical Univ. of Lisbon,

32

2477365

BR

Sesmaria River - Challenges For A Greater Participation Of Stakeholders Ricardo Oliveira Federal University of Rio de janeiro - UFRJ

33

2477371

AU

Delivering 60% Recycled Water To A Greenfield Development: The Googong Township Story Therese Flapper GHD

34

2477389

BS

Delivering Recycled Water Across Southern New South Wales, Australia Therese Flapper GHD

35

2477393

JP

Aquatic Insect Research For River Environmental Assessment In Boso Peninsula, Japan Kazuhito Murakami Chiba Institute of Technology

36

2477410

BR

Evaluation Of Capacity Of Sewage Treatment In The Belo Horizonte Metropolitan Area Clarisse Gomes Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais - UFMG

38

2477486

CN

Application Of Research On The Emergency Drill For Water Emergency Pollution Accidents Li Yuxian Kyoto University

Waterworks Bureau

ENGINEERING & CONSULTING

A strong trAck record of services over the


world, including :
Advisory services for public private partnerships (PPP) for water
operation up to EUR 3 billion, but also in waste and energy
management. Introduction of performance based contracts
Technical assistance for large waste water treatment plants up to
6 million population equivalent
Non revenue water studies
Environmental and social impact assessment studies for a large
mining project in Congo (USD 7 billion) and hydropower plants
up to 950 MW in Cameroon
Engineering of solid waste treatment plants up to
250 000 t/y

headquarters: 55 rue de la Villette - 69425 LYON cedex 03 - Tel +33 (0)4 72 91 83 70 - siege@naldeo.com - www.naldeo.com

39

2477629

ES

Flood Risk Assessment For Pedestrian And Vehicular Circulation Using A Detailed 1D/2D Coupled Model Pere Malgrat Technical College La Almunia (University of Zaragoza)

40

2477670

JP

Degradation Of An Ionic Liquid, 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium Chloride, By Ozonation Hideaki Nagare Okayama University

41

2477788

PT

Impact Of Wastewater Treatment Plants In The Introduction Of Pharmaceuticals Into Surface Waters: The Case Study Of Lis River Sandra Jorge SIMLIS - Saneamento Integrado dos

Municpios do Lis, SA

42

2477802

JP

The Example Of Disaster Situation Of Sewer System Caused By Liquefaction Of Ground From Earthquake Toshihiro Ochiai Tokyo Metropolitan Sewerage Service Corporation

43

2477814

IT

Perspectives In The Treatment Of Hospital Wastewater Paola Verlicchi University of Ferrara

45

2477869

PT

Wastewater Quality Monitoring In Sewers Through UV-Vis Spectral Acquisition And Calibration Transfer Filipa Ferreira Barreiro College of Technology

46

2477881

PT

Assessment Of Salinization And Residence Time Of Coastal Aquifers (Sousse, Eastern-Tunisia) Jose Manuel Marques Instituto Superior Tcnico - University of Lisbon

47

2477934

ES

Immobilization Of TiO2 On Fire Brick For The Photocatalytic Degradation Of Phenol Dunia E. Santiago FEAM - Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

48

2478021

ES

Modelling Sediment Transport In Sewer Systems - A Review Of Existing Tools And Methodologies Laurent Pouget CETaqua, Water Technology Centre

49

2478124

KR

Adaptation Of Ceramic Membrane For Treatment Groundwater In Building Management Water Supply June-Seok Choi Korea Institute of Construction Technology

50

2478157

DK

Urban Development By Climate Adaptation - The Most Beautiful Climate Adaptation Project In Denmark Helle Norden Middelfart Wastewater Utility

51

2478532

NL

Testing The Robustness Of The Drinking Water Distribution Network Jan Van Der Hoek KWR - Watercycle Research Institute

52

2478550

PT

Evolution Of Intervened Streams In Irrigated Areas: A Case-study In Alqueva Multi-Purpose Project Maria Barbosa EDIA

54

2478575

DE

Combined Sewer Overflow Treatment Using A Conventional Settling Tank And A Lamella Separator Anna Abels RWTH Aachen University, Institute of Environmental Engineering

55

2478603

PT

Real Time Observatory For Water Quality Management: From Lisbons Urban Drainage To The Estuary Lus David LNEC - Laboratrio Nacional de Engenharia Civil

56

2478618

PT

Abstraction Of Water By Induced Infiltration In The Complexo De Lever Ana Cardoso guas do Douro e Paiva, SA

57

2478938

PT

The Importance Of The Restitutions Results From/for Stakeholders To Improve The Public Participation Anabela Duro Polytechnic Institute of Beja

58

2481002

BR

Mapping The Risk Of Groundwater Contamination By Nitrate Gerson Nascimento Universidade Federal de Rondnia

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

79

Posters presentations
59

2481065

DE

Innovative Concepts And Technologies For The Treatment Of Wastewater From Health Care Facilities Martina Winker RWTH Aachen University

116

2478452

PT

Adequacy Of The Treatment Capacity In Water And Wastewater Services Ana Rita Ramos ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

60

2481273

PT

Study Of Integrated Chemical -- Physical Processes For Biodiesel Wastewater Treatment Junia Ferreira Polytechnic Institute of Beja

117

2478479

PT

RAV (Remote Automated Valve) - Cutting Off Water Supply In Situations Of Inaccessibility Margarida Pinhao Tecnilab Portugal, S.A.

61

2481330

UK

Social Science To Support Water Sensitive Cities Liz Sharp University of Sheffield

118

2478490

ES

Up-Concentration Of Primary Sludge With Membrane And Biosorption To Increase Biogas Production Alexandre Gali Cetaqua

Water Quality Modelling Of Three Projected Reservoir In Series In Lower Zambezi River In Mozambique Paulo Alexandre Diogo IMAR & Faculty of Sciences and Technology New University

119

2478505

PT

The Decrease of Demand for Water Services: Causes & Consequences for Operators Srgio Hora Lopes guas do Douro e Paiva, S.A.

120

2478633

PT

Lagging And Leading Indicators In Occupational Health And Safety Management Adriano Vieira guas do Douro e Paiva, S.A.

121

2478636

PT

Water Demand Profiling As A Decision Support System For Network Operation And Planning Dlia Loureiro Harbin Institute of Technology

122

2478686

PT

Evolution Of An Energy Management System And Its Improvement Through ISO 500001 Ins Freitas guas do Douro e Paiva, SA

123

2478734

DE

What Is The Reliability Of Sewer Deterioration Models? Ingo Kropp Kompetenzzentrum Wasser Berlin GmbH

124

2478750

PT

Energy Efficiency In Water Supply System And Wastewater Treatment Plants Pedro Fontes guas do Oeste S.A.

125

2478770

BR

62

2481387

PT

63

2481395

BR

64

80

Posters presentations

2481487

BR

of Lisbon
Aquifer Recharge On The Porto Velho City -- Rondnia, Brazil Marcos Nbrega Ii Companhia de Pesquisa de Recursos Minerais
Implementation Of A PMO For The Water Loss Management Program In Public Supply Systems Eduardo Augusto Bulhes Filho B&B Engenharia LTDA

65

2481639

JP

Efficacy Of Oxidizing Disinfectants On Biofilm Removal; Estimation Using Established Biofilms Mariko Tachikawa Nihon University

66

2481931

BR

Analysis Of Water Sustainability Of Rice Growing Through Of Temporary Dams, Rio Grande Do Sul,Brazil Adriana Salbego UNIPAMPA

67

2477848

MZ

Beira City Storm Water Infrastructures Improvement In Response To Climate Changes Paulo Oscar Silva Administrao de Infraestruturas de gua e Saneamento - AIAS

68

2482227

JP

Biodegradability Of Natural Organic Matter In The Northern Lake Biwa By Long-term Test Method Taketoshi Kusakabe Kyoto University

69

2482231

US

Complexities Of Contaminated Groundwater Sites: Need For Transition Assessment Mohsen Mehran Rubicon Engineering Corporation

126

2478797

PT

Do You Know How Much You Pay For Water? Henrique Monteiro ISCTE - Instituto Universitrio de Lisboa

70

2484040

ES

Effect Of Nitrite On The N2O And NO Production On The Nitrification Of Low Strength NH4+ Wastewater Maite Pijuan Ghent University

128

2478802

ES

Life Cycle Costing Of The Urban Water Cycle Applied To Mediterranean And Atlantic Cities Maria Jose Amores Barrero CETaqua Water Technology Centre

71

2484368

US

Challenges In Developing Baseline Water Quality Data In Unconventional Oil And Gas Fields Audrey Levine Flinders University

129

2478841

FR

Desalination, Softening And Water Quality Changes: Impact On Corrosion In Distribution Systems Benjamin Rabaud SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT

72

2484473

KR

Analysis Of Collection Efficiency In The Rainwater Utilization System.. Lee Jung-Hun Korea Institute of Construction Technology

130

2478851

PT

The Impact Of Demographic Trends In Water Supply Services In Portugal Joana Boaventura guas do Douro e Paiva, SA

73

2484583

IT

Cyanotoxins In Drinking Water: Risk Analysis In Italy. Luca Lucentini Italian National Institute of Health

131

2478866

PT

Infrastructure Asset Management Program In A Multi-utility Organisation Joo Feliciano AGS, S.A.

75

2484964

PT

Automatic Generation Of Synthetic Urban Drainage Network Models With SWMM Telmo Paula University of Coimbra

132

2481068

NL

Practical Training On Wastewater Treatment As A Key For Maintaining Assets Agnes Maenhout World Water Academy

76

2485248

BR

Evaluation Of The Potential Of Capture Rainwater For Use In Poultry Farming Of COREDE-Serra, Brazil Vania Schneider Ghent University

133

2481279

DE

TWIST++ - Using A Serious Game To Develop And Understand Innovative Water Infrastructures Ingo Kropp 3S Consult GmbH

77

2464519

PH

Recommendations For Initial Non-Revenue Water Assessment Roland Liemberger Miya Asia

134

2481282

JP

Regional Risk Analysis For Water Distribution Pipeline Using Mesh Data Takaharu Kunizane Tokyo Metropolitan University

78

2464533

PH

Project Design For A Water Loss Reduction Pilot Project In Kolkata Roland Liemberger Miya Asia

136

2481410

PT

Going Beyond Average Response: Modeling Portuguese Residential Water Demand With Quantile Regression Henrique Monteiro ISCTE-IUL

79

2471007

AU

Dili Urban Water Supply -- Post-conflict Lessons And Current Options For Improving Service Delivery Graham Costin Cos Wat Pty Ltd

137

2481445

PT

Testing Integration And Efficiency In The Portuguese Water Sector Adelino Fortunato University of Coimbra

80

2471226

JP

Prospects And Challenges With The Introduction Of The AMR System In The Tokyo Waterworks Bureau Kazuya Naito Tokyo Waterworks Bureau

138

2481448

PT

A New Methodology For Preventive Maintenance Plan Of EPAL Water Distribution Network Assets Ctia Henriques EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A.

81

2471387

DE

Masterplan Wastewater 2025 -- Implementation Of A Strategic Regional Planning Concept Christoph Brepols Erftverband

139

2466957

DE

Combination Of Ozone And Bio Filter For The Removal Of Hard COD In Industrial Wastewater Jenny Wang Xylem Services GmbH

83

2473945

IR

Application Of Fuzzy MCDM Technique In Selecting The Best Disaster Relief Method: Shiraz W & W Co. Ali Taghizadeh Shiraz Water & Wastewater Company

140

2472761

DE

Influence Of Hydrodynamic Induced Cavitation On Water Pollutants Andreas Schmid University of Applied Sciences Hof

84

2474297

NL

Development Of A Low Cost Burst Detection Method Using Existing Flow And Pressure Measurements Andreas Giesen Royal HaskoningDHV / Delft University of Technology

141

2476035

ES

Impact Of Direct UF Pre-treatment Of Challenging Surface Water On Subsequent RO Membranes Desiree Marin CETaqua

85

2474771

DE

European Strategic Workshop On Water Safety Planning (WSP) Bettina Rickert German Federal Environment Agency - Umweltbundesamt (UBA)

142

2477226

RO

Microbial Control With ClO2 In Fresh And Used Water Blends, For Re-injection In Oil & Gas Extraction Marian Constantin DuPont

86

2474952

JP

Ensuring Stable Water Supply Through Large-scale Facility Renewal In Tokyo Tsutomu Shioda Tokyo Metropolitan Waterworks Bureau

144

2477353

US

Fermentation Of Waste Sugar For Improved Biological Phosphorus Removal Peter Schauer Clean Water Services

87

2476151

PT

Rehabilitation Of Filters Infrastructure: A Practical Case Of Portugals Largest WTP Sonia Tormenta EPAL S.A.

145

2477580

DE

Water And Industrial Innovation Advantages Digital Dosing Juergen Kiefer Grundfos Water Treatment GmbH

88

2476195

PT

The Short Term Impact Of The Financial Crisis In Water Utilities In Portugal Srgio Hora Lopes APDA - Associao Portuguesa de Distribuio e Drenagem de guas

146

2477590

DE

Optimisation Of The Full-scale Dual MBR-CAS Concept Hnxe With Respect To Energy Consumption And Eff Burkhard Teichgrber Emschergenossenschaft/Lippeverband

89

2476253

PT

How To Promote Efficiency With Water And Wastewater Price Regulation Alexandra Cunha ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

147

2481110

BR

Degradation Of Abamectin By UV And UV/H2O2: Assessment Of Reduction Of Toxicity Using Daphnia Spp Izabela Barbosa University of So Paulo

90

2476811

KR

Developing Computational Algorithms For Long-term Management Of Water Distribution Pipes Suwan Park Pusan National University

148

2482426

TW

Recycle Si From Solar Silicon Wafer Casting To Generate Hydrogen Gas And Its Application Wen-Hui Kuan Ming Chi University of Technology

91

2476862

FI

Web-based Risk Assessment And Management Tool For Drinking Water And Sanitation Safety Planning Heli Hrkki Ministry of Social Affairs and Health

149

2484185

TR

Environmentally Friendly Copper Electroplating Process Development Ipek Imamoglu Middle East Technical University

92

2477029

PT

Rehabilitation Of The Olivais Pumping Station Water Circuit - Impact On Water Loss Reduction & Energy Efficiency Improvement Lus Azevedo EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa guas Livres SA

150

2484854

ES

Biological Treatment Of The Fermentation Brine Of Table Olives Processing Eva Ferrer Universitat Politcnica de Valncia

93

2477225

PT

Risk Management In The Drinking Water Sector -- National Survey In Portugal Rui Sancho guas do Algarve, SA

151

2428703

CN

Effect Of DO On The Performance Of A2/O Process Treating Petrochemical Wastewater Changyong Wu Chinese Research Academy of Environment Sciences

94

2477547

JP

Asset Management Technique And Accelerated Restructuring Of Sewerage System Hayato Mori Tokyo Metropolitan Government Bureau of Sewerage

152

2462485

CA

Hollow Fibres Contactors: A Useful Tool For Molybdates And Ammonia Extraction In Process Water Serge Alex Institut des procds industriels (IPI)

95

2477579

CN

Multi-Pollutants Removal In A Flocculation-Adsorption Fluidized Bed: Fundamental Investigation Xu Zhengxue Jilin University

153

2467634

BR

Anaerobic Biological Treatment & Environmental Compliance of Vinasse for Methane Production Jos Rodrigues Escola de Engenharia Mau - Instituto Mau de Tecnologia

96

2477662

KR

Eco-friendly Technology For Removal Of Residual Ozone Woohyeun Joe Seoul Waterworks Research Institute

154

2471318

BE

Oxygen Transfer Model Development For Activated Sludge And Clean Water Stijn Van Hulle Ghent University

98

2477665

JP

History And Financial Issues Of Sewerage In Tokyo Kentaro Uehara Tokyo Metropolitan Government Bureau of Sewerage

155

2471557

CN

Biologically Treated Domestic Wastewater Via Ozone And Activated Carbon Dehua Ma Tsinghua University

99

2477976

KR

Level Of Service On Sewage Collection And Treatment In Customers View Kyoohong Park Chung-Ang University

156

2473824

PT

Moringa Oleifera Seeds: Removal Of Phosphorus From Wastewater And Interaction With Tetracycline Andra Santos University of Minho

100

2477979

JO

We Care About Water, Even If You Dont: Water As A Low Involvement Service Patricia Bakir La Trobe University / Coliban Water

157

2476007

IT

Chemical Concern On Reusing A Cooling Tower Blow-down With Equipment Solution Concetta Sapio GE Power and Water Technologies

101

2478016

PT

Repair Methodologies For Large Diameter Trunk Mains - From Alviela To Circunvalao Jos Salgueiro Universiti Sains Malaysia

158

2476150

BE

H2SO4 And NaOH Recovery Of A Concentrated Na2SO4 Solution Using Bipolar Membrane Electrodialysis Boudewijn Meesschaert KU Leuven - KULAB

102

2478045

PT

Water Safety Plans - The Experience In Implementation Within Aquapor Utilities Group Claudia Guerreiro Aquapor - Servios, S.A.

159

2476189

DK

Feedback Control Of Prefiltration To Improve Plant Energy Balance Dines Thornberg Lynettefllesskabet

103

2478071

BR

Performance Indicator For Sampling Plans Of Quality Control In A Drinking Water Supply Network Victor Faria Companhia Estadual de gua e Esgotos - Rio de Janeiro

161

2476226

BE

Evaluation Of A Selectrodialysis Process For Phosphate Fractionation In Wastewater Boudewijn Meesschaert KU Leuven - KULAB

104

2478132

ES

Lessons Learned On Dynamic Pricing Montserrat Termes-Rif CETaqua

162

2476794

JP

Sewage Treatment Plant As A Base For Circulation Of Water, Materials, And Energy In A Watershed Toshiki Fukushima METAWATER Co., Ltd.

106

2478168

PT

Improving Energy Efficiency In Unitary Systems - Quinta Das Drogas Pumping Station Case Study Mrio Santos SimTejo

163

2477040

US

Performance And Characterization Of Low Cost Treatment System For Onsite Residential Graywater Reuse Michael Stenstrom University of California, Los Angeles

107

2478174

PT

A Reference In Quality Control Of The Rehabilitation Process Of A Section Of The Barbadinhos Pipe Ana Santos EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa guas Livres

164

2477091

UK

The Impact Of Coagulant Reuse On Water Quality And Process Economics James Keeley Cranfield University

108

2478178

FI

Water Cooperatives -- A Vital Supplement To Public Water Utilities In Finland Pekka Pietil Tampere University of Technology

165

2477525

SG

Effect Of Salinity On Anaerobic Treatment Of Pharmaceutical Wastewater How Yong Ng National University of Singapore

109

2478204

IR

Application Of DEA Technique On Performance Of Iran Urban Water And Wastewater Companies Ali Taghizadeh Shiraz Water & Wastewater Company

166

2477608

JP

Electricity-saving Measures In Drinking Water Sector Kiyotaka Noguchi Japan Water Research Center

110

2478263

JP

Regional Sewerage System In Tokyo Hoshino Tatsuhiko Tokyo Metropolitan Government Bureau of Sewerage

167

2477661

FR

Comparative Study Of Alternative Membrane Bioreactor Treatment Trains: Energy Friendly Designs Bruno Barillon Suez Environnement - CIRSEE

111

2478273

PT

Infrastructure Rehabilitation, Maximizing Process Efficiency And Minimising Environmental Impacts Paulo Grave EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A.

168

2477692

FR

Implementation Of Sustainable Activated Carbons For Emerging Pollutants Adsorption In Natural Water Claire Gerente Ecole des Mines de Nantes, GEPEA UMR CNRS 6144

112

2466539

CA

Why Learn The Hard Way? Effective Learning About Failure For Front-line Drinking Water Personnel Steve Hrudey University of Alberta

169

2477755

KR

Water Cascade Analysis For Water Recycling In Paper Mill: A Plant Scale Study Jangho Lee Yonsei University

114

2478436

JP

Burst Detection In Water Distribution Systems Using High Frequency Pressure Measurements Katsuya Yokokawa Toshiba Corp.

170

2477833

JP

Improvement Of Dewatering Characteristics By Co-digestion Of Rice Straw With Sewage Sludge Ryoko Yamamoto-Ikemoto Kanazawa University

115

2478445

PT

Water Tariffs Applied To Non-domestic Users Rita Silva ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Water Quality For Human Consumption: A Preventive Management Approach Hubert Brant Moraes Agncia Reguladora de Servios de Abastecimento de gua e de Esgotamento Sanitrio

do Estado de Minas Gerais - ARSAE-MG

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

81

Posters presentations

82

Posters presentations

172

2477871

ES

Production Of Biopolymers Using Tuna-processing Wastewater Nicolas Morales University of Santiago de Compostela

228

2477913

JP

Analysis Of Historical Trends Of Water Research And Technologies In Japan Since 1960s Keishiro Hara Osaka University

173

2478087

JP

Resources Recovery From Invasive Aquatic Plants Might Be Of Some Help To Improve Water Environment Satoshi Akao Tottori University

229

2478029

PT

Water And Sanitation Services Governance -- Lessons Learned From The Portuguese Experience Isabel Andrade ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

174

2478115

ES

Heterogeneous Photocatalysis Using Nanostructured Titanium Dioxide For Micropollutant Elimination Teresa De La Torre Acciona Agua

230

2478117

PT

Good Practices In The Management Of Septic Tanks Francisco Mira ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

175

2478161

NL

Production, Use And Reuse Of Dutch Calcite In Drinking Water Pellet Softening Bas Hofs KWR Watercycle Research Institute

231

2478191

KR

Water Management Policy Considering Sustainable Water Cycle In Korea Lee Jung-Hun Korea Institute of Construction Technology

176

2478162

KR

Hydrothermal Pre-treatment Of Sewage Sludge To Improve Biogas Production By Anaerobic Digestion Daegi Kim Konkuk University

232

2478328

FR

Let The Unpaid Water Bills Do The Talking: Analysing And Mapping Urban Water Poverty Julien Batisse Lyonnaise des Eaux (LyRE) - UMR 5185 ADESS

177

2478190

ES

Development Of Indian Wastewater Treatment With The SWINGS Project Juan A. Alvarez AIMEN Technology Centre

234

2478427

PT

Emergency Control Discharges In Sewerage Services Rute Rodrigues ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

178

2478267

ES

Development And Implementation Of A Fuzzy Logic System For Advanced Control Of Aeration In Small WWTPs Nicolas De Arespacochaga CETaqua

235

2478442

HU

A Unique Example For The Regulation Of Water Utility Supply Gabor Kisvardai Hungarian Energy and Public Utility Regulatory Authority

179

2478272

RO

Energetic Optimization Of The Wastewater Treatment Plant Through The Use Of Unconventional Sources Nicolae Pitu S.C. RAJA S.A Constanta

236

2478468

PT

Can Portugal Afford Tariff-based Service Cost Recovery? Joo Pires APDA

180

2478374

KR

Using Rainwater And Greywater In Building For Water Self-Sufficiency And Savings: A Case Study Mooyoung Han Seoul National University

237

2478551

DK

ICT For Sustainable Water Service Delivery In Africa Rasoul Mikkelsen Grundfos Lifelink

181

2478485

CN

Effect Of Extractives On Sugars Recovery From Liquid Hot Water Pretreated Corn Stover Yujie Feng Harbin Institute of Technology

238

2478654

PT

From A Fundamental Right To Water To The Public Obligation To Protect, Guarantee And Promote It Jorge Sampaio Faculty of Law, University of Lisbon

182

2478491

KR

Short-chain Fatty Acids And H2 Production From Microalgae By Anaerobic Mixed Culture Fermentatation Yeo-Myeong Yun KAIST

239

2478685

UA

Human Right To Water In Countries With Transition Economy: Water Quality Monitoring Issues Zakhar Maletskyi NGO WaterNet

183

2478496

TW

Crude Glycerol Reutilization For Lipid Recovery By Strain Rhodotorula Mucilaginosa Chu Fang Yang National Yunlin University of Science and Technology

240

2478724

ES

Including Equity-oriented Mechanisms For Rural Water Supply Decision Making At Local Level Oscar Flores Baquero Universitat Politcnica de Catalunya

184

2478565

KR

Comparative Study On N2O Recovery And N-removal During Auto & Heterotrophic Partial Denitrification Jangho Lee Yonsei University

241

2478725

PT

Benchmarking Of Water Services Paula Freixial ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

185

2478574

CN

Electricity Generation From Domestic Wastewater By MFC With Rolling Activated Carbon-PTFE Air-cathod Yujie Feng Harbin Institute of Technology

242

2478788

PT

Potential Economic Savings From Tackling Operational Inefficiencies In Water Supply Services David Alves The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (ERSAR)

186

2478597

IL

Tertiary Treatment Of Municipal Wastewater By Diverse Filtrations Vitaly Gitis Ben Gurion University of teh Negev

243

2478875

PT

Macro And Micro Water Services Affordability Rita Martins University of Coimbra - Faculty of Economics - GEMF

187

2478684

TW

Phosphate Precipitation And Heterogeneous Phosphate Crystallization By Fluidized Bed Reactor Ricky Priambodo National Cheng Kung University

244

2478897

BR

188

2478700

FR

Environmental Friendly Activated Carbons Based On Local Resources For Micropollutants Removal Claire Gerente Ecole des Mines de Nantes, GEPEA UMR CNRS 6144

245

2481028

PT

Regulation Impact Assessment -- How Much Does A Regulator Cost To The Society? David Alves The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (ERSAR)

189

2478737

DK

A Baseline Model For Monitoring Energy Efficiency And Use Of An ESCO Model In The Wastewater Sector Jeanette Madsen Envidan A/S

246

2481030

TR

Development Of A National Set Of Water Indicators For Turkey Goksen Capar Ankara University Water Management Institute

191

2478745

PT

Contribution Of Water Reuse For The Water Efficient Use At The Camping Site Of Ilha Do Pessegueiro Maria Helena Marecos Do Monte ISEL

247

2481399

BR

Rural Water And Sanitation Policies In Brazil In The 21th Century:An Evaluation Of Social Innovation Ana Queiroz Federal University of Minas Gerais

192

2478758

ES

Operation Parameters For Nutrient Recovery From Human Urine By Struvite Crystallisation Frank Rogalla Faculty of Dentistry of Padjadjaran University

248

2481449

PT

Operational Decision Support System For Integrated Flood Forecasting And Early-warning Systems Adelio Silva Hidromod

193

2478809

ES

Application Of NF For Water Reclamation And Phosphorous Recovery From Anaerobic Sludge Filtrate Luisa Vera Universidad de La Laguna

249

2481483

PT

Indicators Of Environmental Assessment Applied To The Water Resources Planning And Management Pedro Coelho ESAS/IPS; CENSE

194

2478837

PT

Sequential Batch Reactor (SBR) Small-scale Testing For WWTP Receiving Petrochemical Effluents Carlos Raposo Sisaqua - Sistemas de Saneamento Bsico S.A.

250

2481555

JP

Factors Sustaining Small-scale Water Supply Cooperatives In Communities In Japan Kyoko Matsumoto Kyoto University

195

2478843

MX

Ozone Effect On The Proteins Release And The Recovery Of Fatty Acids From Wastewater Microalgae Maria Orta Ledesma Engineering Institute/UNAM

252

2484229

BR

Brazilian Mineral Water, Mineral Or Water Resource? Lucio Caetano Rural Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

196

2478870

FR

Toward Water Circularity: Reusing Wastewater For Urban Uses. Singapore And Windhoek Experiences Michel Lafforgue Safege

253

2484599

UK

Sustainability: Demonstrating Global And Local Links Between Water And Wildlife Tim Wilson Uppsala Universitet

197

2478876

SG

Membrane Fouling Behaviour Of Submerged Ceramic Membrane Photobioreactors Operated At Different Hydraulic Retention Times Say-Leong Ong National University of Singapore

254

2474078

ES

Electronic Tongues For The Control And Monitoring Of The Water Integrated Cycle e-TONGUE4WAT Jose Guillermo Berlanga SOCIEDAD FOMENTO AGRCOLA CASTELLONENSE, S.A

198

2478888

PT

Mechanisms Of Cr(III) Biosorption Onto Residual Brewers Yeast Filomena Costa Universidade do Minho; and Instituto Politcnico de Viana do Castelo

255

2474250

JP

Adapting To The Diversification Of Consumer And Societal Needs Through Utilizing ICT Yuji Hoshino Public Utility Service Center Co., Ltd. (PUC)

199

2478946

DK

Novel Activated Sludge System For Resource Recovery Via Downstream Cultivation Of Green Micro-Algae Borja Valverde Prez Technical University of Denmark

256

2474352

PT

Network Management Optimization Based On Modelling And Monitoring: Two Case Studies From Lisbon Nuno Dias EPAL S.A.

200

2478967

BR

Streamflow Forecast Using Linear Regression Methods For The So Francisco River Manoel Marinho Escola Politcnica da Universidade de Pernambuco (POLI-UPE)

257

2476016

IT

Using Instrument Diagnostics To Reduce Regulatory Compliance Cost In Water And Waste Water Industry Maurizio De Francesco Emerson Process Management

202

2481048

BR

Water Reuse In Textile Industry: Knitted Textiles Mnica Leo Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

258

2476043

BR

Stochastic Modeling Using Markov Chain: Filling Missing Daily Rainfall Data And Forecasting Rita De Cssia Dam University of Pelotas

203

2481299

DK

The Effect Of Light On Mixed Green Micro-Algae Growth-- Experimental Assessment And Modelling Dorottya Wgner Technical University of Denmark

259

2477050

CN

Grey DGM( 1, 1) Dynamic Prediction Model Of Regional Minimum Night Flow Shan Wu Beijing University of Technology

204

2481300

BR

Nitrogen And Organic Matter Removal In MBR: Influence Of Sludge Age And Foulants Characterization Izabela Barbosa University of So Paulo

260

2477200

PT

Modelling Water Residence Time In Arade Estuary, Portugal Ramiro Neves Instituto Superior Tcnico, Technical University of Lisbon

205

2481428

IR

Harvesting Water From Fog And Air Humidity Zahra Elmi sistan and balouchestan water and waste water co

262

2477889

PT

Portal ERSAR: Improving Regulators Effectiveness And Efficiency David Alves The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority (ERSAR)

206

2481513

TW

The Application Of Capacitive Deionization For Ammonium Ion Removal Shun-Hsing Chuang Chaoyang University of Technology

263

2478726

PT

Collaborative Software As A Driver For Vertical Integration Of Objectives, Processes And People Sergio Coelho LNEC

207

2482399

PT

Lettuce Crop Fertilized By Sludge From Cheese Whey Wastewater And Vinasse: Effects On Leaching Water Junia Ferreira Instituto Politcnico de Beja

264

2478736

DE

A Video Game As Virtual Prototype Of Water Infrastructure Systems: Vivid Support For Decision Makers Susanne Scharf Bauhaus-Universitt Weimar

208

2484095

KP

Effects Of Plant Density Of Water Celery (Oenanthe Javanica) On Nitrous Oxide Reduction And Nutrient Jae Lee Korea University

265

2478792

PT

How Much Water Do You Put On The Table? - Awareness Raising Multimedia Resource Miguel Laranjo FORMATO VERDE

209

2484875

BE

Standardised Real Time Control For Increased Process Stability And Aeration Energy Optimisation Andreas Schroers Hach Lange

266

2478804

PT

Water Safety Plan Support Tool Development In NAVIATM Rui Sancho Independent Consultant

210

2487377

SE

Simulation And Verification Of Hydraulic Properties And Organic Matter Degradation In Sand Filters Susanna Ciuk Karlsson Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

267

2478945

PT

Work Orders Management - A Way To Improve Systems Assessment Joo Feliciano AGS, S.A.

211

2438619

IR

An Evaluation On The Effects Of Training On Insight Of Junior Students About Water Resources Mohammad Behnam Rassouli Abangah Consulting Engineering Co.

268

2482250

KR

MIDAS System For Integrated Wastewater Management From Influent To Natural Water Body Changwon Kim Pusan National University

212

2471221

BR

Performance Assessment Of Sanitation Services From Monitoring The Quality Of Water Supplied Carlos Gravina ARES-PCJ

269

2483031

PT

On The Comparison Of Numerical Methodologies For Control Optimisation Of Variable-speed Pumps Bernardete Coelho University of Aveiro

213

2473464

BR

Trends In Brazilian Water Resources Management Research Antenor Aguiar Netto Sergipe Federal University

270

2484591

SE

Optimizing Zone Volumes In Bioreactors Described By Monod And Contois Growth Kinetics Jesus Zambrano Uppsala Universitet

214

2474379

SE

Drinking Water Minerals And Mineral Balance -Importance, Health Significance, Precautionary Principle Ingegerd Rosborg Royal Institute of Engineering

271

2465640

NG

Antibiotic Resistance E.coli 0157:H7 Isolated From Packaged Drinking Water Jacob Oluyege Ekiti State University

215

2474509

PT

Governance (national And European) Of The Portuguese Water And Waste Sector Joo Nuno Calvo Da Silva Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de Coimbra

272

2465741

UK

Exposing The Association Between Lead Assets And Housing Chcracteristics Paul Jeffrey Cranfield University

216

2475924

AT

A Tool To Find The Most Cost-effective Solution For Water Supply And Sanitation Systems Guenter Langergraber BOKU University

273

2467900

TW

Modelling The Microcystis Nutrient Uptake Which Affected By Irradiance And Nutrient Yu-Ching Chien National Taiwan University

217

2476101

RO

CASETA: Past, Present And Future Madalin Mihailovici Apa Nova Bucuresti

274

2473235

JP

Experimental Study On Residual Chlorine Consumption With Total Organic Carbon And Suspended Matters Kimiko Yamazaki Tokyo Metropolitan University

219

2476104

BR

Standardized Precipitation Index For Drought Intensity In Southern Brazil Rita Dame Universidade Federal de Pelotas

276

2473693

JP

Detection Of Antiviral Drug Laninamivir In Treated Sewage Effluent And River Water In Osaka, Japan Ryohei Takanami Osaka Sangyo University

220

2476121

BR

Precipitation Index Percent Of Normal Related To Soybean Productivity In Southern Brazil Rita Dame Universidade Federal de Pelotas

277

2473763

FR

Leaching Of Bisphenols And Other Organics From New And Old Epoxy Coatings: Consequences On Drinking Auguste Bruchet Suez environnement

221

2476218

BR

Stochastic Modeling Using Markov Chain For Standardized Precipitation Index Forecast Rita Dame Universidade Federal de Pelotas

278

2473995

PT

Exposure And Risk Characterization Of Pharmaceuticals In The EPAL Water Supply System Vitor Cardoso iMed.UL, Faculdade de Farmcia da Universidade de Lisboa

222

2477142

PT

The Role Of Regulator Is To Promote The Sustainability Of Water Management System Octavio Almeida Open University/guas de Portugal S.A.

279

2474042

ES

Catalytic Membrane Reactors for Nitrate Removal Javier Garca Castillo SOCIEDAD FOMENTO AGRCOLA CASTELLONENSE, S.A

223

2477318

JP

Household Water Use Survey And Analysis Of Its Influential Factors In Danang, Vietnam Shigeo Fujii Kyoto University

281

2474080

PT

Impact Of Extreme Drought And Phosphorus On Cyanobacteria Occurrence And Toxicity In River Tejo Dora Figueiredo EPAL

224

2477441

BR

Managing The Universal Access To Water And Sanitation Services In Brazil Ester Guimares University of So Paulo - Brazil

282

2474085

PT

Evaluation Of Biological Stability In Lisbons Drinking Water - A Tool For Microbial Risk Assessment Ana Jorge EPAL

225

2477732

DE

Environmental Impacts Of Advanced Nitrogen Removal At Large Wastewater Treatment Plants Daniel Mutz Berlin Centre of Competence for Water

283

2474261

SG

Photonic Efficiency And Degradation Rate Of Acetaminophen (Ace) Using TiO2/UVA/LED System Jiangyong Hu National University of Singapore

227

2477769

UK

How Government In The Republic Of Cyprus Is Responding To The Issues Of Water Scarcity And Quality Alexis Pericli University of Hertfordshire

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Regulatory Cost Of Water Supply And Sewerage Utilities Call Center: An Erlang Theory Approach Hubert Brant Moraes ARSAE-MG - Water Supply and Sewerage Services Regulatory

Agency of Minas Gerais

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

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83

Posters presentations

84

Posters presentations

284

2474325

PT

Monitoring Of C10-C13 PCAs In The EPAL Water Supply System: Validation Of LLE-GC/ECD Method Vitor Cardoso Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A. EPAL

345

2478364

CN

Stability Of Different Surfactant-facilitated Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes In Natural Water Samples Lin Lin Harbin Institute of Technology

286

2474355

PT

Optimization And Validation Of SPE-GC/ECD Method For Monitoring Of PBDEs In Water Samples Vitor Vale Cardoso Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A. EPAL

347

2478424

PT

Risk Management Of Operation And Maintenance Planning, Procedures And Practices - guas Do Algarve Sandra Dias guas do Algarve

287

2474378

PT

Mimicking The Fate Of Sulfonamides In A WTP: Reaction With Chlorine And By-products Identification Vitor Cardoso Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres, S.A. EPAL

348

2478425

NL

Continuous Microbial Monitoring Of Non-chlorinated Drinking Water Distribution Systems Gertjan Medema KWR

288

2474516

ES

The Economics Of Improving Drinking Water Quality: Evidences From Arsenic Contamination In Argentina Maria Molinos-Senante University of Valencia

349

2478437

SI

Waterborne Pathogens Removal Combining Electroporation And Chromatography Nejc Racki National Institute of Biology

289

2474947

JP

Research Study Of Residual Chlorine Consumption In Water Supply Facilities With Receiving Tank Masanori Ishii Tokyo Metropolitan Waterworks Bureau

350

2478500

KR

Microcontaminants Enhance Antibiotic Resistance Gene Transfer Rate In The Biofilm Sungpyo Kim Korea University Sejong Campus

291

2474995

PL

Identifying Sources Of Organic Matter In Thereservoirs Sediment Using Stable Isotope Model Piotr Koszelnik Rzeszw University of Technology

352

2478503

CN

Characteristics And Mechanism Of Seven Trace Chlorophenols Adsorption By Powdered Activated Carbon Chao Chen Tsinghua University

292

2475003

TW

Synergetic Effects Of Manganese And Iron Oxide On The Transformation Of Inorganic Iodine Compounds Wen-Hui Kuan Ming Chi University of Technology

353

2478543

TW

Visble Light Photocatalytic Degradation Of Orange G By Immobilized ZnO Nanoparticles Hung-Yee Shu Hungkuang University

293

2475011

JP

Research On The Energy Recovery Of The Small Binary Cycle Generation In The Sewage Treatment Plant Takayuki Ono Japan Institute of Wastewater Engineering and Technology

354

2478563

UK

Removal Of Metaldehyde From Water Mohammed Nabeerasool The University of Manchester

294

2476040

PT

Approval Scheme For Products In Contact With Drinking Water In Portugal Pedro Gonalves ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

355

2478668

FR

Multi-criteria Assessment Of Advanced Tertiary Treatments For Micropollutants Removal Sophie Besnault Suez Environnement CIRSEE

295

2476075

FI

The Sanitation Safety Plan - Health And Environmental Risk Management Tool For Wastewater Utilities Heidi Ekholm Helsinki Region Environmental Services HSY

357

2478669

TW

Impact Of Chlorine On Colonial Microcystis Aeruginosa: Cell Integrity And Microcystin Degradation Tsair-Fuh Lin National Cheng Kung University

297

2476214

PT

Shaping A Drinking-water Quality Regulatory Model Lus Simas ERSAR The Water and Waste Services Regulation Authority

358

2478719

ES

Evaluating Sulfamethoxazole Degradation And Greenhouse Gases Emissions By Ammonia Oxidizing Bacteria Gianluigi Buttiglieri Catalan Institute for Water Research

298

2476892

JP

Chronic Toxicity Test WithCeriodaphnia DubiaFor The Safety Assessment Of River Water Toshiya Komatsu Nagaoka University of Technology

359

2478735

DK

Closed Loop Oxidation Of Methane In Drinking Water Treatment Henrik Aktor AKTOR innovation

299

2477075

CN

Impact Of Feeding Desalinated Seawater On Iron Release In Distribution Systems And Control Measures Chao Chen Tsinghua University

360

2478759

NL

300

2477081

BR

Degradation Of Norfloxacin By UV And UV/H2O2 Lucilaine De Souza Santos Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

361

2478776

PT

301

2477113

NL

Drinking Water Temperature Determined By Soil Temperature Jan Vreeburg KWR Watercycle Research Institute

302

2477162

BR

Development Of Microcystin Detection System As Auxiliary Tool For Water Quality Monitoring Programs Servio Cassini Univ Federal Esp. Santo UFES

362

2478786

PT

303

2477190

TR

Investigation Of Non-point Source Pollution Potential In The Watershed Of Porsuk Dam Reservoir Elif Kk Middle East Technical University

363

2478793

TR

Water Quality For Human Consumption And Agricultural Use In Golbasi District Of Ankara-Turkey Goksen Capar Ankara University Water Management Institute

304

2477204

PT

Inactivation Of Fungi In Surface Water By Chloramination Vanessa Pereira IBET - Instituto de Biologia Experimental e Tecnolgica

364

2478825

IT

Removal Of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons From Treated Effluents: Lab-scale Ozonation Trials Valeria Mezzanotte Universit degli Studi di Milano Bicocca

306

2477214

TW

Visible-light-driven Cu-deposited TiO2 For Sulfamethoxazole Photodegradation Ruey-An Doong National Tsing Hua University

366

2478844

PT

Analytical Methods For Monitoring Of Emerging Hazards In Water Ana Calvinho Aguas do Algarve

2478874

PT

HS-SPME-GC/MS Method For The Determination Of VOCs In Surface Water Samples Catarina Mansilha National Institute of Health Doutor Ricardo Jorge

Subsurface Iron Removal And Hand-pump Arsenic Removal: Influence Of Pre-iron Removal And Contact Time On Lengthening Lifetime Of Household Filters Sandra Borges Freitas Delft

University of Technology
Assessment Of Groundwater Quality Of Domestic Supply Systems Catarina Mansilha National Institute of Health Doutor Ricardo Jorge
Water Quality Simulation In Zzere River In Face Of Potential Panasqueira Mine Tailing Dam Failure Pedro Santos Coelho Faculdade de Cincias e Tecnologia. Universidade Nova de

Lisboa.

307

2477250

JP

Assessing Bioavailable Metals In Effluent-affected Rivers: Effect Of Iron And Chelating Agents Shigeki Masunaga Yokohama National University

367

308

2477285

ES

The Role Of The Redox Potential, Primary And Secondary Metabolism In The Removal Of PPCPs Juan Lema University of Santiago de Compostela

368

2478908

PT

Cryptosporidium And Giardia In Natural Waters: Characterization Of Six Portuguese Rivers Manuel Carneiro guas do Douro e Paiva, SA

309

2477317

NL

Monitoring Toxic Cyanobacteria In Bathing Water With Newly Developed Quantitative PCR Methods Gertjan Medema KWR Water cycle research institute

369

2481005

NL

Particle Associated Bacteria In An Unchlorinated Dirking Water Distribution System Gang Liu Delft University of Technology

310

2477800

USA

A Strategy to Eliminate Waterborne Disease in Lower Nyakach, Kenya Robert Metcalf California State University

371

2481034

FR

Testing Of Endocrine Disruptors In Wastewater Using Automated Read-out Of Fluorescent Model Organism Gregory Lemkine VERI

311

2477344

CA

Adsorption Of Bisphenol-A On Biosolids Of An Aerobic Process Treating An MSW Landfill Leachate Roland Leduc University of Sherbrooke

372

2481037

JP

Use Of Simple Bioassay To Detect The Formation Of Toxic By-products During Activated Sludge Process Makoto Sekine Yokohama National University

2481060

TR

Effect Of Environmental Conditions On Greenhouse Gas Emissions From A Shallow Eutrophic Lake Selim Sanin Hacettepe niversity

312

2477383

KR

Performance Evaluation Of A Newly Developed Mobile Hybrid BMP System Lee Hyung Kim Kongju National University

373

313

2477385

JP

Environmental Impact Risk Assessment Of Herbicide Using IEIRAS Based On Experimental Microcosm Kazuhito Murakami Chiba Institute of Technology

374

2481064

DK

Staged MBBR Optimized For Pharmaceutical Biodegradation And Ozonation Of Hospital Wastewater Caroline Kragelund Rickers Technical University of Denmark

314

2477397

JP

Water Environmental Remediation Using Shell Fragment As Regional Unused Resources Kazuhito Murakami Chiba Institute of Technology

375

2481098

BR

Removal Of Pharmaceuticals And Endocrine Disruptors By Means Of Clarification And Adsorption Marcelo Libanio Fedal University of Minas Gerais

315

2477462

CN

The Influence Of Potassium Permanganate Pre-oxidation On The Interaction Of Humic Acid With Cd/As Jimin Shen Harbin Institute of Technology

377

2481119

PT

Eutrophication Indicators For Temporal And Spatial Water Quality Assessment In Reservoirs Jos Vieira University of Minho

317

2477478

JP

The Fate Of Selected Pharmaceuticals In A Section Of The River Thames And In Sewage Treatment Plants Seiya Hanamoto Kyoto University

378

2481332

TR

Sediment-Water Interface Dynamics And Phosphorous Release Potential In A Lake Selim Sanin Hacettepe University

Use Of An Activated Carbon Dosing Index And Automatic TOC Analysis Considered Ayumi Takayanagi Yokohama Waterworks Bureau

379

2481368

ES

The Role Of Nitrifiers In The Biodegradation Of Pharmaceuticals Juan Lema University of Santiago de Compostela

318

2477540

JP

319

2477560

IR

Direct Screening Of Ground Water Samples For Fuel Oxygenates By HS-LPME /gas Chromatography Mohammad Reza Mirbalouchzehi sistan and balouchistan water&waste water co

380

2481370

BR

Simultaneous Biodegradation Of Hormones By An Enrichment Culture From Activated Sludge Jossy Brasil Bernardelli Federal University of Santa Catarina

320

2477614

DE

Elimination Of Organic Micropollutants By dynamic Recirculationat Schwerte Wwtp Christopher Keysers RWTH Aachen University

382

2481382

DK

Removal Of Pharmaceuticals In Sewage Treatment Plants: A Model Generalisation To International Data Fabio Polesel Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

322

2477652

FI

Waterborne Pathogens And Their Sources At Kokemki River Water Course Tarja Pitknen National Institute for Health and Welfare

383

2481490

RU

Evaluation Of Iron-containing Adsorbents For Arsenic (V) Removal From Drinking Water Sofya Rodionova METTEM-Technologies, ZAO

323

2477686

KR

Runoff Characteristics Of Nitrogen Compound In Railway Bridge Area During Rainfall Event Kyungik Gil Seoul National University of Science and Technology

384

2481566

MX

Constructed Wetlands Inoculated With Tolerant Strains For Treatment Of Effluents With Hg, Pb And Cr Leonel Amabilis Universidad Nacional Atnoma de Mxico

2482186

IR

Determination Of BTEX In Drinking Water Using HS-LPME/GCFID Mohammadreza Mirbalouchzehi sistan and balouchestan water and waste water co

324

2477736

ES

Quantifying The Environmental Benefits Of SemPAC For The Removal Of Nutrients And PPCPs Yago Lorenzo Toja University of Santiago de Compostela (USC)

385

325

2477756

FR

Drinking Water Treatment Steps In Paris Suburbs Vs Emerging Contaminants Caroline Lecarpentier Veolia Eau dIle de France

387

2482579

IL

Carboplatin Degradation Products Obtained In The Aquatic Environment Dror Avisar Tel Aviv University

327

2477768

KR

Analysis Of First Flush Criteria Using Various Methods In Railway Bridges Kyungik Gil Seoul National University of Science and Technology

388

2485256

BR

Evaluation Of A Reservoir Eutrophication Potential Due To Drainage Diffuse Contribution In Brazil Vania Schneider Universidade de Caxias do Sul

328

2477781

TR

Development Of Practical Extraction & Analysis Methods For Nonylphenol Compounds In Water/Wastewater Dilek Sanin Middle East Technical University

389

2486164

SG

Development of piped drinking water quality standards - Singapores experience Pranav Joshi National Environment Agency

329

2477794

FI

Studying The Chemical Purification Response To Variations In Water Quality Using 2k Factorial Design Elisangela Heiderscheidt University of Oulu

390

2487310

TW

Pharmaceuticals In River Basin In The Middle Of Taiwan Chiung-Fen Chang Universidade de Coimbra

2438277

CN

Effect Of Free Ammonia And Temperature On The Partial Nitrification Of The Municipal Landfill Leachate Lina Wu Chinese Research Academy of Environment Sciences

330

2477820

PT

Urban Soil And Water Leaching Processes: Implications For Human And Environmental Health Teresa Leito LNEC

391

331

2477857

PT

Monitoring Of Panasqueira Mine Tailing Dam Impact On Levels Of Metals In River Zzere Andre Miranda EPAL S.A.

392

2449930

US

Technology Developments In Forward Osmosis To Address Water Purification Aneliese Ramsay Trevi Systems Inc.

332

2477885

TR

Determination Of Relative Abundance Of Sphingomonads In Aerobic Batch And Semi-Continuous Digesters Dilek Sanin Middle East Technical University

393

2453125

KR

Mechanisms That Mitigate Membrane Fouling In MBR System By Ozone Injection Byoung Ho Lee University of Ulsan

333

2477940

BE

Diversifying Ones Core Business Christiane Franck Instituto de Biologia Experimental e Tecnolgica, Instituto de Tecnologia Qumica e Biolgica

395

2464893

BR

Steel Magnetic Residue Used As Substrate To Treat And Adsorb Amoxicillin -Kinetic Studies Nilce Ortiz Institute for Nuclear and Energy Research-IPEN

334

2477966

MZ

Drinking Water Quality In Mozambique Mauricete Ruco National Laboratory of Hygiene of Food and Water

396

2465435

BR

Amoxicillin Removal Using WTPS Pellets As Substrate For Fixed Bed Adsorption Nilce Ortiz Institute for Nuclear and Energy Research-IPEN

2465860

UK

Sensor-Based Control - THE Way For Energy-Efficient Open Channel UV System Operation Mike Newberry xylem

336

2478001

JP

Removal Of UV Filter Compounds From Greywater By Intermittent Sand Filtration Sebastian Charchalac Ochoa Hokkaido University

397

337

2478007

HK

Gene Expression And Classification Of Mode In Escherichia Coli Exposed To Aqueous Fullerene Ji Dai HKUST

399

2466779

FR

Victorian Desalination Plant: Successful Fast-track Commissioning And Operational Start-up Miguel Angel Sanz Degrmont

338

2478059

FI

Changes In The NOM Of Raw Water And Implications For Drinking Water Treatment In Helsinki, Finland Johanna Castrn Helsinki Region Environmental Services Authority HSy

400

2466804

JP

Removal Mechanism Of Arsenic Ion In Drinking Water By Calcined Aluminum Oxide Naohito Kawasaki Kinki University

339

2478076

FR

Xenobiotics Removal By Photodegradation In The Context Of Tertiary Treatment Baptiste Mathon IRSTEA

401

2466890

DE

341

2478100

PT

Effects Of Forest Fires On Groundwater Contamination Catarina Mansilha National Institute of Health Doutor Ricardo Jorge

403

2466944

DE

ECORAY, WEDECOs Green UV Disinfection At Mangere WWTP In New Zealand Jenny Wang Xylem Services GmbH

342

2478159

CN

The Influence Of Organic Ligands On Chromium(VI) Reduction By Sulphite Jimin Shen Harbin Institute of Technology

404

2467014

JP

Adsorption Of Pt(IV) And Pd(II) By Calcined Dried Aluminum Hydroxide Gel From Aqueous Solution Fumihiko Ogata Kinki University

343

2478304

FI

Occurrence Of Environmentally Relevant Hazardous Substances In Finnish Wastewater Treatment Plants Niina Vieno Envieno

405

2467671

BR

Backwashing Of Down-flow Rapid Filter Using Polystyrene Granules As Granular Media Filter Juliana Schontag UFSC

344

2478327

CN

Adsorptive Removal Of Bisphenol-A In Water By Powdered Carbon Aerogel (PCA) Weiying Li State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, Tongji University

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Comparing Effectiveness Of Ozone And Ozone/H2O2, UV And UV/H2O2 On Removal Of T&O Compounds In A Real Water Plant Under Tropical Climate Conditions Jenny Wang Xylem

Services GmbH

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

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85

Posters presentations

86

Posters presentations

407

2467897

MY

Sediment Deposition And Water Quality Improvement Using Submerged Pool In Straight Channel Supiah Shamsudin Universiti Teknologi Malaysia

474

2477891

SE

Nitrogen Load Increase To Swedish Wastewater Treatment Plants Due To Increased Meat Consumption Ann Mattsson Gryaab AB

408

2471447

PL

Effect Of Sludge Loading Rate On Morphology Of Activated Sludge Flocs Ewa Liwarska-Bizukojc Lodz University of Technology

475

2477900

PT

Green Roofs As A Technology For Rainwater Retention Paula Lima Castro CBQFLaboratrio Associado, ESB- UCP

409

2472765

BE

Improved Drinking Water Treatment For Arsenic Removal By A Biological-adsorptive Iron Removal Step. Koen Huysman Pidpa

476

2478014

MY

Bioregeneration Of Activated Carbon Loaded With Binary Components Of Phenol And 4-Chlorophenol Leong Kwok Yii Universiti Sains Malaysia

411

2473257

AU

Pressure Assisted Osmosis: Overcoming Limitations Of Osmotic Equilibrium In Forward Osmosis Process Sherub Phuntsho University of Technology Sydney

478

2478081

FI

Wastewater Loading In Single-house Purification Plants Piia Leskinen Turku University of Applied Sciences

412

2473683

JP

Degradation Of Monochlorophenols Under UV Irradiation Keiko Katayama-Hirayama Univ. of Yamanashi

479

2478097

JP

Degradation Of Starch Containing Wastewater In A Sulphidogenic Condition Eri Tsuchiya-Nakakihara Kanazawa University

413

2473709

TW

Photoelectrochemical Oxidation Removal Of Polyvinyl Alcohol Using An Activated Carbon Fiber Cathode Wei-Lung Chou Hungkuang University

480

2478102

BE

Optimising A Flow Division Chamber On WWTP Antwerp South Using CFD Marjoleine Weemaes Aquafin NV

415

2474139

ES

Domestic Wastewater Treatment In An UASB Pilot Plant Under Mediterranean Climate Conditions Maikel Ferndez University Of Cdiz- Aqualia

481

2478151

ES

Anaerobic Ceramic MBR For High COD Content Food Wastewater Treatment: Bench And Pilot Scale Study Elena Meabe CETaqua

416

2474183

CN

Role Of Silicon Of Pumice On Catalytic Ozonation Of P-chloronitrobenzene Zhonglin Chen Harbin Institute of Technology

482

2478185

HR

Simultaneous Nitrogen And Phosphorus Removal At Anoxic Conditions Tibela Landeka Dragievi University of Zagreb, Faculty of Food Technology and Biotechnology

417

2474574

KR

Effect Of PES Beads In Hybrid Water Treatment Of Tubular Ceramic MF And Photocatalyst Beads Jin Yong Park Hallym University

483

2478188

PT

Nitrate Removal In A VFCW Planted WithVetiveria ZizanioidesAndOryza Sativa Maria Almeida Departamento de Tecnologias e Cincias Aplicadas, IPBeja

419

2474974

TW

Desalination Of NaCl Solution By Electrosorption Technology Using Activated Carbon Fiber Electrodes Chih-Ta Wang Chung Hwa University of Medical Technology

485

2478217

DE

Experiences With A Reinforced UF Hollow-fiber Water Filtration System Christoph Thiemig Koch Membrane Systems

420

2474994

CN

Polymeric Pyrrole-Carbon Nanotubes Modified Palladium Electrode For Hydrodechlorination Of PCP Zhirong Sun Beijing University of Technology

486

2478227

CN

Photocatalytic Degradation Of Phenol By Fe3O4/ZnO Magnetic Composites Under UV-vis Irradiation Haijuan Guo Taizhou University

421

2475014

DE

A Conceptual Approach To Characterize Amalgam Lamps With A Comparable Procedure Achim Ried Xylem

487

2478230

UK

Biodegradation Of Pesticides In Contact Systems Catherine Rolph Cranfield University

422

2475036

IT

Wastewater Treatment Plant Based On Membrane Bioreactors (MBR) In A Touristic Locality Luigi Falletti University of Padova

489

2478247

ES

High-rate Anaerobic And Constructed Wetland Systems For Municipal And Industrial Wastewater Luz Herrero AIMEN Technology Centre

423

2475073

ES

Characterization Of Long-Term Operation Of The FO-MBR Process For Wastewater Reclamation Marina Arnaldos Acciona Agua

490

2478256

ES

Low Cost Microalgae Harvesting Strategies For Wastewater Treatment Plants Zouhayr Arbib Aqualia Gestin integral del agua

425

2475085

FR

Dehydris Twist, A Boosted Dewatering Workshop With A Piston Press On DW And Desalination Sludges Eric Judenne DEGREMONT SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT

491

2478290

PT

VFCW Applied To Pretreated Cheese Whey Wastewater By Basic Precipitation: Effects Of Bed Depth Maria Almeida Departamento de Tecnologias e Cincias Aplicadas-IPBeja

426

2475229

JP

Influence Of Radioactive Materials To Treated Water And Dehydrated Sludge In Sendai City Waterworks Yoshiaki Konno Sendai City Waterworks Bureau

493

2478297

SE

Mainstream Application Of Deammonification Process Combined With Organics Removal In UASB Reactor Jingjing Yang Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

427

2475245

NL

Membrane Distillation Of Cooling Tower Blow Down Water Raymond Creusen TNO

494

2478300

ES

High Rate Algae Ponds For Treatment Of Anaerobically Digested Urban Wastewater: Assessment In South Arbib Zouhayr Aqualia Gestin Integral del Agua, S.A.

429

2475957

ES

Submerged Ultrafiltration As Direct Pre-treatment For Challenging Water: Microbiological Monitoring Montserrat Termes CETaqua

495

2478334

JP

Correlation Between Abundance Of Chloroflexi Type 1851 Filaments And Sludge Sedimentation Properties Tadashi Nittami Yokohama National University

430

2475967

ES

Minimization Of Sludge Production By Means Chlorine Dioxide Addition In Sequencing Batch Reactors Jose Guillermo Berlanga SOCIEDAD FOMENTO AGRCOLA CASTELLONENSE, S.A

496

2478343

DK

Microbial Water Quality In Clean Water Tanks Following Inspection And Cleaning Albrechtsen Hans-Jrgen DTU Environment, Technical University of Denmark

431

2476020

CA

Enderby WWTP Uses Continuous-loop Filter Technology For Filtration, Sludge Thickening And Dewatering Terry Keep Trojan Technologies

498

2478350

JP

Characterization Of Membrane Fouling In Anammox Membrane Bioreactors (anammox-MBR) Tomonori Kindaichi Hiroshima University

433

2476809

CN

Integrated Membrane Processes For Drinking Water Treatment Based On Nano-reactor Theory Xihui Zhang Tsinghua University

499

2478379

PT

Online Monitoring Potential For Decentralized WWTP Operation Enhancement Rita Ribeiro Laboratrio Nacional de Engenharia Civil

434

2476816

CN

Innovative Development Of Facultative MBR For Domestic Wastewater Treatment And Reclamation Zhiming Liao JDL Environmental Protection Co., Ltd

500

2478386

FI

NOM Removal Using Integrated Coagulation And Membrane Filtration Riku Vahala Aalto University

435

2476833

AU

Dual-layer Electrospun Nanofibrous Membrane For Direct Contact Membrane Distillation Leonard Tijing University of Technology, Sydney

502

2478398

CN

A Multimedia Fate Model To Evaluate The Fate Of Polycyclic Musks In Songhua River, China Yujie Feng Harbin Institute of Technology

437

2476850

CN

Coating Granulation Of Nano Adsorbents Using PVA As A Binder For Drinking Water Defluoridation Ting-Jie Wang Tsinghua University

503

2478455

PT

Aerobic Granulation In A Non Tubular SBR Treating An Azo Dye Containing Simulated Textile Wastewater Ndia D Loureno Instituto Superior Tcnico, ULisboa

438

2476854

UA

Functionalized Filter Media For Stabilization Treatment Of Cooling Water In Recirculating Systems Yevhen Orestov National Technical University of Ukraine

504

2478487

TW

Effect Of Permanganate Pre-oxidation On Organic Matter Coagulation Removal And MF Membrane Fouling Hsuan-Hsien Yeh National Cheng Kung University

439

2476861

IR

Using Activated Sludge Microorganisms For Treatment Of High Salinity Textile Industry Wastewater Reza Amirnezhad Tehran water and wastewater company

505

2478489

ES

Sludge Preheating System As A Strategy To Improve Sludge Dewatering In WWTP. Full-scale Trials. Nicolas De Arespacochaga CETaqua, Water Technological Center

441

2477011

BR

Influence Of Sludge Retention Time In An Anaerobic Side-stream Reactor To Reduce Excess Sludge Produ Rejane Costa Federal University of Santa Catarina/University of Trento

507

2478492

ES

Tertiary Membrane Filtration Of Municipal Wastewater Treated In A Moving Bed Bioreactor Jose Vazquez Padin University of Santiago de Compostela

442

2477043

TW

Efficient Removal Of Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA) From Water By Flotation Separation. Shang-Lien Lo Water Purification Division/Taipei water department

508

2478497

BR

Nitrogen Removal By Aerobic Granules Grown On Domestic Wastewater Jamile Wagner Federal University of Santa Catarina - UFSC

443

2477044

AU

Towards Improved Maturation Ponds Steven Melvin Smart Water Research Centre

509

2478525

CA

Full-scale Coagulation With Chitosan And Alum For Tertiary Phosphorus Removal From A Biofilm System Roland Leduc University of Sherbrooke

445

2477048

TW

Electrochemical Decolorization Of AY 36 Dye Solution Using BDD Film P-type Electrode Grown On SiC Ervin Nurhayati National Chiao Tung University

510

2478526

TW

Methylamine Removal Using Mixed Bacterial Strains In The Batch Reactor Chun-Chin Wang Hungkuang University

446

2477067

CN

Biosorption Of Cu(II) Onto De-oiled Soybean Treated With NaOH: Characteristics And Mechanisms Jingfeng Gao Beijing University of Technology

511

2478558

HK

A Review On Self-forming Dynamic Membrane (SFDM) Supported By Macro-filtration Materials Ji Dai HKUST

447

2477077

JP

Removal Of Dissolved Organic Matter From Secondary Effluent Using Amorphous Iron Oxide Coated Sand Taketoshi Kusakabe Kyoto University

512

2478561

PT

Microcystin-LR And Natural Organic Matter Removal By Biologically Active Carbon Filters Maria Rosa LNEC National Civil Engineering Laboratory

449

2477106

TW

Upgrading Aeration Basin With Anaerobic/Oxic Environments Via Entrapped Biomass For Total Nitrogen Removal: A Pilot Project At Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant

513

2478582

PT

The Impact Of Aeration On The Competition Between Polyphosphate And Glycogen Accumulating Organisms Maria Reis FCT/UNL

515

2478632

BE

Parameter Study On The Efficiency Of Ozonation For Biologically Treated Landfill Leachate Wim Audenaert Ghent University

516

2478659

ES

Application Of ELAN, An Anammox Based Process For Nitrogen Removal In The Water Line Of Urban WWTP Nicolas Morales University of Santiago de Compostela

517

2478695

IL

Studies Of Pore Width In Ultrafiltration Membranes With Inert Nanoparticles Vitaly Gitis Ben Gurion University of the Negev

518

2478720

BE

Modelling Microbial Competition In Biofilm Reactors Eveline Volcke Ghent University

520

2478730

ES

Design Of An AnMBR For Urban Wastewater Treatment With And Without Primary Settling Frank Rogalla Aqualia, gestin integral del agua, S.A

521

2478743

BR

H2O2/UV Advanced Oxidative Processes to Degrade Amoxicillin Ivanilda Mendes University of Ribeiro Preto

522

2478778

CN

Preparation Of Al And Er Codoped TiO2 With Response Surface Methodology Shuanghi Dong Jilin University

524

2478801

PT

Constructed Wetland Implemented In A Tourism Unit For Wastewater Treatment Paula Lima Castro Escola Superior de Biotecnologia, UCP

525

2478840

ES

New Mathematical Model For Evaluating The Water Treatment Capacity Of Microbial Desalination Cells Juan Ortiz Aqualia, gestin integral del agua, S.A.

526

2478858

ES

Filterability Study Of Anaerobic Suspensions In AnSMBR Under Different Operational Conditions Luisa Vera Universidad de La Laguna

528

2478880

ES

Performance Of A Tertiary SMBR Operated With Backwashing Initiation Controlled By TMP Set-point Luisa Vera Universidad de La Laguna

529

2478902

LV

Applicability Of Geopolymers As Filter Media For Water Softening Kristina Tihomirova Riga Technical University

530

2478909

US

Computational Simulations In Water Applications Mikhail Strongin Xylem Inc.

532

2478917

CN
UK

Impact Of Media Composition On Rotating Media Biofilm Reactor Performance. Francis Hassard Cranfield Water Science Institute, Cranfield University

Cheng-Fang Lin National Taiwan University

450

2477181

CN

Degradation Of Atrazine And Nitrobenzene In Water By Iron Silicate/ozone Jimin Shen Harbin Institute of Technology

451

2477201

DE

Advanced Process Control For Nitrogen Removal In Sequential Batch Reactors Frank Honold Xylem - WTW GmbH

452

2477206

PT

Use Of Phenotypic And Molecular Biology Techniques To Identify Fungi In Drinking Water Sources Vanessa Pereira IBET - Instituto de Biologia Experimental e Tecnolgica

453

2477224

BR

Removal Of Nitrogen From Sewage In An Arrangement Composed By Anaerobic-anoxic And Aerobic Reactor Eugenio Foresti EESC/USP

455

2477278

BR

Influence Of COD/N Ratio On The SND Process In Vertical Structured-bed Reactor Eugenio Foresti University of So Paulo

456

2477401

TW

Coupled Precipitation-ultrafiltration For Treatment Of Fluoride-containing Wastewater Jhy-Chern Liu Chiba Institute of Technology

457

2477435

JP

Reconstructing The Kawai Water Purification Plant By Introducing The Membrane Filtration Method Yasuko Kume Yokohama Waterworks Bureau

459

2477437

SG

Emergency Potable-water Disinfection Using Sponge-like Superabsorbent Cryogels Decorated With Silver Nanoparticles Siew-Leng Loo Nanyang Technological University

460

2477446

JP

Evaluation Of Microbial Characteristics In A Sewage Treatment System Based On Stable Isotope Ratios Takashi Onodera National Institute for Environmental Studies

461

2477502

KR

A Study On The Physical Properties Of GAC During Operating Period In Han River Youngae Baek Seoul waterworks research institution

463

2477523

SG

Comparison Of Membrane Fouling Between A Moving Bed Membrane Bioreactor And A Conventional MBR How Yong Ng National University of Singapore

464

2477633

ES

Improving Bioreactors Efficiency Using CFD And Tracer Techniques To Simulate Hydrodynamics And RTD Javier Climent Jaume I, University of Castellon

466

2477659

KR

Osmotic Cleaning Of The RO Membrane Fouled By The Ulsan Seawater Mijin Kim Hyundai Heavy Industries

467

2477669

KR

The Numerical Simulation Compared With Experimental Study In The Bench-scale DAF Separation Zone Sang Cheol Park Hyundai Heavy Industies

468

2477723

AU

Implications For The Design Of Maturation Ponds For Wastewater Treatment Helen Stratton Griffith University

533

2478933

470

2477738

JP

Performance Of Direct Sand Filtration System With Super Fine Silica Sand Shinsuke Kasahara Osaka Institute of Technology

534

2478970

ES

High Salinity Effect On Pesticide Removal By Photo-Fenton And Slow Sand Filtration Coupling Carmen Sans Acciona Agua S.A.U.

471

2477751

TR

Inhibitory Effect Of Silver Ion On Activated Sludges Operated At Various C/N Ratios Ferhan een Bogazici University, Institute of Environmental Sciences

535

2478974

MX

Effect Of The Humic And Fulvic Acids On The Adsorption Of Arsenic (V) Onto GEH Ricardo Jaime Guerra Sanchez CIATEC A. C.

472

2477887

CH

The Effect Of DOC Removal In Pretreatment To Desalination Jonas Lwenberg University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW)

537

2481004

ZA

Comparison Of FISH And QPCR To Study The Distribution Of Nitrobacter Spp In Two Full-scale WWTP Nishani Ramdhani Durban University of Technology

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Artificial Root Channel Technology As Enhanced Treatment Of Drinking Water Source Pollution Weidong Wang Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of

Sciences

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

87

Posters presentations
2481026

US

Magnetite-Ballasted Activated Sludge: A Cost-Effective Approach For Augmenting Existing Facilities Thor Young GHD, Inc.

539

2481079

DK

Phosphorus Limitations In Biological Rapid Sand Filters Studied With Different Packed Column Assays Florian Wagner Danish Technical University

540

2481100

SE

IFAS ANITA Mox - A New MBBR Solution For Side- And Mainstream Treatment Magnus Christensson AnoxKaldnes

541

2481116

PT

Tayloring Hybrid Membrane Processes For Sustainable Water Production: First Adsorption Studies Maria Rosa LNEC National Civil Engineering Laboratory

542

2481313

US

Striving For Perfection At The Rock Creek AWTF: Optimization Ballasted Sedimentation For TP Removal Peter Schauer Carollo Engineers

543

2481317

EG

Influence Of Kinetic Parameters Variation On The Performance Of Modified UASB Reactor Model Mostafa El-Seddik Cairo University

545

2481414

DK

Nitrification At Biological Rapid Sand Filters Treating Drinking Water - Monitoring Governing Factor Hans-Jrgen Lbrechtsen Cairo University

546

2481429

BR

Effect Of Pure Oxygen Aeration In MBR Treating Synthetic Effluent Of Petroleum Refinery Industry Eduardo Subtil International Reference Center on Water Reuse

547

2481450

BR

Compartmented UASB Reactor On Sewage Treatment: Restart Monitoring Tsunao Matsumoto Univ. Estadual Paulista

549

2481474

ES

Respirometry As A Tool For Constructed Wetland Monitoring And Design Isabel Ruiz University of A Corua

550

2481506

CN

Model Development For Operation And Management Of Gaobeidian Wastewater Treatment Plant In Beijing Jiawei Wang EnviroSim Associates Ltd

551

2481514

JP

553

2481523

KR

The Membrane Cleaning Index(MCI) As Novel Method For Assessment Of Membrane Cleaning Youngbeom Yu K-water Institute

554

2481557

CN

Microbial Community Analysis Of A/O Process In Municipal Wastewater Plant By Metagemonic Sequencing Ang Li Harbin Institute of Technology

555

2481591

JP

Influence Of Coagulant Dose And Mixing Strength On Zeta Potential Of Micro- And Nano- Sized Flocs Hiroshi Yamamura Chuo University, Japan

556

2481604

CN

Removal Of Carbamazepine By Bioaugmentation Combined With BAF At Low Temperatures Ang Li Harbin Institute of Technology

558

2481622

US

Utilizing Bioaugmentation And AnMBR To Improve Ambient Temperature Digestion Of Wastewater Ana Martin-Ryals University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

559

2481898

UK

Anaerobic Digestion Of Brewery Effluent- 2 Year Operating Experiences Tanja Radu Loughborough University

560

2483236

BE

Calibration And Analysis Of A Direct Contact Membrane Distillation Model Using The GLUE Method Ingmar Nopens BIOMATH, VITO

562

2484344

ES

Use Of Cork Waste In Constructed Wetlands For Chemical And Microbiological Pollution Control Jordi Morat UNESCO CHAIR ON SUSTAINABILITY

563

2484462

IL

Nano-structured TiON Photo-Catalytic Membranes For Water Treatment Hadas Mamane Tel-Aviv University

564

2485008

BE

Towards Intelligent Ultrafiltration For Reverse Osmosis Seawater Desalination Pretreatment Wouter Naessens Ghent University

565

2485043

AU

Optimization Of Dual Media Filter For Seawater Desalination Using Organic And Biological Parameters Robert Vollprecht University of Technology Sydney

567

2485488

KR

Influence Of Anode Material On Ammonia Removal Using Electrochemical Oxidation Process Chong Min Chung Samsung electronics

568

2486775

SI

Reducing Interactions Between Water And Sludge Treatment In WWTP By Plant-wide Modelling Darko Vrecko Jozef Stefan Institute

569

2523501

CN

Functionalized Membranes For Water Or Wastewater Treatment Xie Quan Dalian University of Technology

570

2468634

IT

Chemical Analyses? No Thanks, Bioassays Do It Better! Giorgio Bertanza University of Brescia

571

2473506

PT

New Monitoring Solution Supporting Sustainable Management Of Groundwater And Its Ecosystems Services Miguel Carrinho Instituto Superior Tcnico

572

2474056

DK

Mg-aminoclay As Stabilizer For Synthesizing Highly Stable And Reactive NZVI For Decontamination Henrik Andersen Technical University of Denmark

573

2474069

TW

Rapid And Effective Adsorption Of Metal Ions By Titanate Nanotubes Prepared By Hydrothermal Method Ruey-An Doong National Tsing Hua University

575

2474327

PT

Controlling Non-Revenue Water Within A Major Water Utility: The Successful Case Of Lisbon & WONE Andrew Donnelly EPAL S.A.

576

2474354

ES

Targeted Delivery Biocide Enhancing Biofilm Control In Cooling Concetta Sapio GE Water & Process Technologies

577

2474973

JP

Recovery Of Selenium In Wastewater Through Biovolatilization By UsingPseudomonas StutzeriNT-I Satoshi Soda Osaka University

578

2475087

PL

A Global Approach For Leak Detection In Closed-loop Water Distribution Networks Damian Sala Adaptronica sp. z o.o.

580

2475676

FI

On-line Water Quality Monitoring In A Distribution System Kirsi Hiillos Luode Consulting

581

2476067

ES

N2O Microelectrode For Online Monitoring Of N2O Gas Emissions During Wastewater Treatment Maite Pijuan FCT-UNL

582

2476125

SE

Assessment Of Storage Methods For Biological Anodes Using Cyclic Voltammetry Soroush Saheb Alam Chalmers University of Technology

583

2477027

MY

585

2477145

DE

Improvements In Sludge Level Measurement In Wastewater Treatment Plants Frank Honold Xylem - WTW GmbH

586

2477526

JP

The Dewatering Test Method, & Examination of the Determination Index of the Optimum Polymer Dose Tomoya Saeki Tokyo Metropolitan Sewerage Service Corporation

587

2477653

ES

Development And Validation Of Advanced Monitoring Systems For Control Of Organic Priority Pollutants Alexandre Gali CETaqua

589

2477849

TW

Enhanced Degradation Of Chlorinated Methanes By Copper And Vitamin B12 Under ZVI Reduction Condition Shang-Lien Lo Administrao de Infraestruturas de gua e Saneamento - AIAS

590

2478106

JP

Development Of Bioreactor For Treatment Of 1,4-dioxane-polluted Groundwater Masashi Kuroda Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University

591

2478228

FI

Buoy-based Vertical Profiler Reveals Subtle Details On Dynamics Of Processes Piia Leskinen Turku University of Applied Sciences

593

2478313

PT

From River To River. NAVIA - A Tool For A Global And Integrated Management Of The Water Cycle Jorge Tavares Mdemaquina

594

2478857

PT

Ultraviolet Water Disinfection Studies At Lever WTP Joo Vilaa guas do Douro e Paiva, S.A.

595

2478975

PT

Integrated Approach To Flow Measurement To Support Efficient Management Of Water Resources Francisco Braga EPAL

596

2481020

PT

An Innovative Perspective For Evaluating The Performance Of Flow Measuring Equipment Francisco Braga EPAL

598

2481091

IT

Long-term BOD To Assess The Effects Of Ozone And UV On The Biodegradability Of Organic Matter Valeria Mezzanotte Universit degli Studi di Milano Bicocca

599

2481352

ES

Removal Of Pharmaceuticals In MBR Permeate Using A Photocatalytic Reactor With TiO2/Al2O3 Filter Cristina Fernndez University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

600

2481442

PT

Bacterial Diversity Along Treatment Phases In Lever WTP Joo Vilaa guas do Douro e Paiva, S.A.

Sponsors, Media
Partners & Organisers

Direct Analysis Of Foulants Inside Pore Matrix Of MF Membrane Treating River Water By XRF And FT-IR & Influence Of Treated Wastewater On Foulants Characteristics Hiroshi Nagaoka

Tokyo City University

Suppression Of Filamentous Cyanobacterial Bloom In Warm Waters By An Improved Electrolysis Gurminder Kaur Sardool Malaysia-Japan International Institute of Technology, Universiti

Teknologi Malaysia

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Sponsors

88

538

Principal Sponsor

Institutional Sponsors

Meeting water sector


challenges with Watershare

EPAL ( Empresa Portuguesa das guas


Livres, SA) is Portugals oldest and
largest water supply company. EPAL
supplies water to about three million
people and provides household water to
Lisbons half a million inhabitants.

Our citizens demand that the water


sector, its stakeholders and the scientific
community respond to todays complex
water-related problems efficiently and
effectively. Within the Watershare
collaborative framework, top international
applied research institutes combine their
scientific and institutional strengths to
create and share sophisticated, practical
and proven water management tools.
Membership in Watershare puts the
institutes in a leading position to offer
affordable water management solutions
to their end-user clients water
companies, utilities, municipalities and
waterboards so that they can best
meet the needs of their populations.
Watershare
serving citizens

c/- KWR, Groningenhaven 7, PO


Box 1072, 3430 BB Nieuwegein,
Netherlands
Contact: Bianca van der Wolf
Email: bianca.van.der.wolf@kwrwater.nl
www.watershare.eu

With 140 years of experience, EPAL


is seen as the reference company in
Portugal. We have developed modern
management strategies with the
objective to improve overall efficiency
of the company and attain sustainable
management from social, environmental
and economic perspectives.
EPAL

Av. da Liberdade 24, 1250-144


Lisboa, Portugal
Tel.+351 213 251 106
Fax +351 213 251 397
Contact: Jos Sardinha
Email: epal@epal.pt
www.epal.pt

Platinum Sponsors

CNAIA, the IWA Governing Member


from Portugal, joins the three main
technical and scientific associations from
the Portuguese water resources and
water services sector (APRH, APESB
and APDA). CNAIA seeks to influence
public policies by promoting the
principles of integrated water resources
management and sustainability
through a continuous multi-sector
and interdisciplinary discussion on
water-related issues and by supporting
cooperation and dialogue initiatives
between different actors and sectors.
Comisso Nacional da
Associao Internacional da
gua

c/- Associao Portuguesa dos


Recursos Hdricos
Laboratrio Nacional de Engenharia
Civil, Av. do Brasil 101, 1700-066
Lisboa, Portugal
Tel. +351 218 443 428
Fax +351 218 443 017
Contact: Rodrigo Protena de Oliveira
Email: aprh@aprh.pt
www.aprh.pt

With 79,220 employees, SUEZ


ENVIRONNEMENT supplies 92
million people with drinking water, and
65 million with sanitation services.
It provides nearly 52 million people
with waste collection services and
recovers over 14 million tons of waste
as secondary raw materials and energy.
To protect the future, we promote a
more efficient use of resources: optimize
processes, create alternatives water
resources, and give waste second life.
In the growth model of the circular
economy, SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT is
a leading player. We position ourselves
as a partner for cities and industry to
support them in making the most of their
resources.

Located in Angola, EPAL-EP is a public


water company whose social objectives
are to carry out studies and projects
about; capture, produce and distribute;
and sell systems for drinking water.
EPAL-EPs policies aim for efficient and
effective public water management, and
safeguarding public water interests.
In recent years, Angola has reduced its
large deficit of drinking water supplies
by implementing new systems of
water treatment and distribution in the
provincial capitals through the Agua
para Todos programme. EPAL-EP is
also currently running the two largest
water projects in sub-Saharan Africa, in
Luanda: Bita and Quilonga.

SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT

Tour CB21-16, Place de lIris, 92040


Paris la Defense Cedex, France
Contact: Florie Lozivit
Email: florie.lozivit@suez-env.com
www.suez-environnement.fr/

FCC Aqualia is the water management


subsidiary of FCC, one of Europes
leading citizen services companies.
It is the third-largest water company
in Europe and the sixth-largest in the
world, according to the most recent
ranking by Global Water Intelligence
magazine, and serves 23.5 million
people.
The company currently operates in
1,100 cities in 19 countries: Spain,
Italy, Portugal, Czech Republic, Poland,
Romania, Montenegro, Bosnia, Mexico,
Peru, Chile, Uruguay, Algeria, Egypt,
UAE, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Tunisia
and China. In 2013, the company
obtained revenues of 900 million euro
and had a backlog of over 14 billion
euro.

EPAL, EP

Rua Frederich Engels N.3,


Luanda, Angola
Contact: Lionidio Gustavo Ferreira
de Ceita
Email: geral@epal.gv.ao
www.epal.gv.ao

FCC Aqualia

FCC Citizen Services


Avenida Camino de Santiago, 40,
Madrid 28050, Spain
Contact: Isabel Plaza
Email: iplazag@fcc.es
www.aqualia.es

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

91

Naldeo is a leading, French engineering


and consulting firm in the fields of water,
environment, waste and energy. Naldeo
has experience in very large projects
all over the world, such as being an
advisor for 3 billion Public Private
Partnerships (PPPs) in water operations,
and technical assistance for wastewater
treatment plants which serve the
equivalent of up to six million people.

Aguas de Portugal

Naldeo

Rua Visconde de Seabra, n3 1700-421


Lisboa, Portugal
Contact: Elsa Luz
Email: info@adp.pt
www.adp.pt

55 rue de la Villette, F-69425 Lyon


Cedex 03, France
Contact: Myriam Maisse
Email: myriam.maisse@naldeo.com
www.naldeo.com

Pure Technologies is a world leader


in the development and application of
innovative technologies for inspecting,
monitoring and management of physical
infrastructure. Pures expertise and
technologies are being used worldwide
to help mitigate deterioration and reduce
capital loss. Pures in-line leak detection
technologies are capable of identifying
small leaks in water and wastewater
pipelines, reducing non-revenue water
and preventing leaks from becoming
ruptures. Our Assess and Address
engineering services platform is driven by
a suite of world-renowned technologies
that help operators develop cost-effective
management programs. With our riskbased prioritisation software, PureNet, we
can maximise risk reduction at a minimum
cost.
Pure Technologies

300, 705-11 Avenue SW, Calgary


Alberta T2R 0C3 Canada
Contact: Koen Kinsbergen
Email: koen.kinsbergen@puretechltd.com
www.puretechltd.com

92

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Beijing Scinor Water Technology


Co.Ltd., a high-tech water treatment
company formed in December 2002 and
located at the Zhongguancun Science
Park, Beijing, China. Scinor is a truly
comprehensive treatment solutions
supplier which has always been
committed to design, manufacture and
deployment of high-value proprietary
water treatment solutions, including
UF membranes for the municipal,
industrial and desalination water market.
Scinor boasts a group of experts
and technicians with rich practical
experiences in the water treatment field.
They have numerous years of membrane
water treatment application experience
and are able to provide the best
solutions and membrane products. They
assume the project design, equipment
set up, monitoring, commissioning and a
series of after sales services, according
to different clients demands.
Beijing Scinor Water
Technology Co., Ltd.

F8, Xueyuan International Tower,1


Zhichun Road Haidian District, Beijing,
100083, China
Contact Li Fan
Email fan.li@scinorwater.com
www.scinorwater.com

Vewin is an association of drinking


water companies in The Netherlands.
Vewin represents the common interests
of its member utilities in national and
international politics and institutions.
The ten Dutch member drinking water
companies provide water of outstanding
quality. Their unique selling point is the
absence of chlorination, due to a longstanding focus on water quality from
source to tap. Besides water quality, the
sector pays much attention to provide
sustainable and efficient services to the
customer.
Vewin

PO Box 90611, NL 2509 LP, The


Hague, Netherlands
Contact: Rene M. Bergkamp
Email: info@vewin.nl
www.vewin.nl

Xylem is a leading water technology


provider, enabling customers to
transport, treat, test and efficiently
use water in public utility, residential
and commercial building services,
industrial and agricultural settings. The
company does business in more than
150 countries through a number of
market-leading product brands, bringing
broad applications expertise with a
strong focus on finding local solutions
to challenging water problems. Xylem
is headquartered in Rye Brook, N.Y.
(U.S), with annual revenues of $3.8
billion. Xylem has been named to the
Dow Jones Sustainability World Index
for advancing sustainable business
practices and solutions worldwide.
Xylem Inc.

1 International Drive, Rye Brook, NY


10573 USA
Contact: Ellen Hermans
Email: ellen.hermans@xylem.com
www.xylem.com

Official Publication

The IWA Congress 2014 is a major


opportunity to put water services
regulation in the global agenda of the
water industry as an important tool
to deliver high quality and affordable
water services. ERSAR, the Portuguese
Water and Waste Services Regulation
Authority, has decided to jointly
organize with IWA the 1st International
Water Regulators Forum with
regulators worldwide, which is a good
opportunity to share what regulation
has accomplished and what challenges
remain. ERSAR will also be present
at the Exhibition (Booth 292) which
will be a lively area for networking and
knowledge sharing. Feel free to visit us!

Water21 is the magazine of the


International Water Association.
Published six times a year, Water21
covers key developments and provides
a global perspective in relation to the
most important business, technology
and environmental issues affecting the
water sector.

Supporting Media

Urbanicity is the worlds leading


digital channel for urban issues.
www.urbanicity.org

For more information, contact: Keith


Hayward, Editor Water21, khayward@
iwap.co.uk

ERSAR

Rua Toms da Fonseca, Torre G, 8.


1600-209 Lisboa Portugal
Contact: David Alves
Email: geral@ersar.pt
www.ersar.pt

Media Partners

www.futurenviro.es

www.intwater.com

www.ambienteonline.pt

Global
Water Intelligence
www.globalwaterintel.com
www.asianwater.com.my
Korrespondenz
Abwasser Abfall
55. Jahrgang Nr. 7 Juli

Set up in 1993, the AdP - guas de


Portugal Group is responsible for
providing water supply and wastewater
treatment services to over 80 per cent of
the Portuguese population. Throughout
its two decades of operation, it has
undertaken investment in excess of 7.5
billion, with positive impacts on core
issues such as national cohesion, public
health and the environment.

Institutional Partner

www.watergas.it/en

http://de.dwa.de/ka-korrespondenzabwasser-abfall.html
Korrespondenz Abwasser, Abfall

Gold Sponsors

www.environmentmagazine.co.uk

Neues DWA-Bro
in Berlin

Demografischer
Wandel in der
Wasserwirtschaft
Niederschlagswasser in
Trennsystemen
DWA-Politikmemorandum

Korrespondenz
Wasserwirtschaft

www.wwdmag.com

Wasser Boden Natur


www.dwa.de/KW

http://de.dwa.de/kw-korrespondenzwasserwirtschaft.html
www.waterwastewaterasia.com
KA-Titel_07_2008.indd 1

19.06.2008 10:02:59

www.formatoverde.pt
www.industriaeambiente.pt

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

93

Organisers
IWA Programme Committee
Chair
Wolfgang Rauch - Austria

Co-chair
Ruya Tasli Toraman - Turkey

Committee members
Shafick Adams - South Africa
Kim Andersen - France
Antnio Guerreiro de Brito - Portugal
Jurg Keller - Australia
Valentina Lazarova - France
Rafaela de Saldanha Matos - Portugal
Yoshihiko Matsui - Japan
Scott Phillips - US
Teodor Popa - Romania
Hong Seungkwan - Korea
Shane Snyder - US
Wang Xiaochang - PR China
Gertjan Zwolsman - Netherlands

Scientific and technical paper reviewers


Reviewers contribute significantly
to the development of the congress
programme. All 1,707 submissions
were reviewed and scored by at least
two experts, who are drawn from over
70 countries. This is critical to ensuring
high standards and IWA and the World
Water Congress is grateful for the
reviewers tireless efforts.
Azzam Abuhabib
Hussein Abulreesh
Valiagha Aghabeygi
Joon Ho Ahn
Roger Ben Aim
Aysha Akter
Serge Alex
Ioannis Alexiou
Janelcy Alferes
Leonor Amaral
Gary Amy
Kyoungjin An
Alexey Andrianov
Manuela Antonelli
Hiroshi Ashida
Johan strm
Wisrutta Atthakor
Vladan Babovic

94

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Organisers
Juan Antonio Baeza
David Baguma
Geoffrey Baldwin
Elisenda Ballest
Poonam Kunwar Banerjee
Jaime Melo Baptista
Nir Barlev
Jean Baron
Catheleen Bartie
John Bavor
Elhassane Benahmed
Lorenzo Benedetti
Maria Joao Benoliel
Tatiana Bibikova
Trevor Bishop
Linda Blankenship
David Bolzonella
Alisson Borges
Werner Brenner
Trevor Bridle
Nuno Brco
Nicola Brown
Auguste Bruchet
Jo Burgess
Stewart Burn
Corinne Cabassud
Enrique Cabrera
Ndia Caetano
Pablo Campo-Moreno
Guillermo Cardoso-Landa
Bengt Carlsson
Maria Nunes De Carvalho
Luis Castillo
Ferhan een
Grzegorz Cema
Faith Chan
Amit Chanan
Tatiana Chaparro
Bambos Charalambous
Silvana Revollar Chvez
Yan-Min Chen
Bing Chen
Jae-Ho Choi
Jean-Marc Choubert
Ana Christ
Haim Cikurel
Karim Claudio
Ricardo Cobacho
Maria Coelho
Jim Cooke
Peter Cornel
Rui Cortes
Burin Coskun
Sophie Courtois

Jonathan Peter Cox


Shaun Cox
Bob Crabtree
Peter Dane
Cheryl Davis
Ibrahim Demir
Jn Derco
Harikishore Kumar Reddy Desireddy
Ricard Devesa
Raf Dewil
Auriane Diamand
Mary Ann Dickinson
Walter Dragoni
David Drury
Renato Drusiani
James Dunning
Peter Edwards
Abdirashid Elmi
Khalid Elwakeel
Alice Jawan Empaling
Iman Janghorban Esfahani
Hatem Fadel
Muhammad Ridwan Fahmi
Pierre Naider Fanfan
Roberto Farina
Francesco Fatone
Maria Fdz-Polanco
Jnos Fehr
Joao Feliciano
Caiping Feng
Giovanni De Feo
Isaac Fernandez
Margherita Ferrante
Ana Ferraz
Filipa Ferreira
Jeff Foley
Brita Forssberg
Ashley Franks
Daniela Fuchs-Hanusch
Taku Fujiwara
Maria Frhacker
Ana Galvo
Winnie Gerbens-Leenes
Wolfgang Gernjak
Mahmood Ghaheri
Mohammad Taghi Ghaneian
Karim Ghasemipanah
Payam Ghorbannezhad
Rabindra Giri
Rosina Girones
Yannick Gourbeyre
Willie Grabow
Walter Graf
Alain Grasmick

Wayne Green
Niels Groot
Albert Guisasola
Jianhua Guo
David Gustavsson
Mooyoung Han
Mei Han
Jrgen Hanaeus
Scott Haskins
Aina Irene Helgesen
Qomarudin Helmy
Goen Ho
Bilqis Hoque
Ahmed Hosni
Hongjuan Hou
Carol Howe
Roumiana Hranova
Jeanne Huang
Stijn Van Hulle
Joseph Husband
Koen Huysman
Valerie Ingrand
Daisuke Inoue
Unai Iriarte
Ion Irizar
Sergey Izyumov
Pedro Roberto Jacobi
Rahul Jadhao
Naser Jamshidi
Hyunyoung Jang
Jes La Cour Jansen
Martin Jekel
Ulf Jeppsson
Hansa Jeswani
Samuel Jeyanayagam
Limei Jin
Xue Jin
David Johnson
Domenec Jolis
Hkan Jnsson
Dinis Juizo
Bongseog Jung
Isik Kabdasli
Wilfred Kadewa
Gobi Kanadasan
Ki-Hoon Kang
Gernot Kayser
Christian Kazner
Patiya Kemacheevakul
Steven Kenway
Mohiuddin Khan
Rajendra Khanal
Faheem Ahmed Khanzada
Leehyung Kim

Katsuki Kimura
Miroslav Klos
Seok-Oh Ko
Ivan Kozyatnyk
Ashish Kumar
Ralf Kunkel
Hsion-Wen, David Kuo
Taketoshi Kusakabe
Tetsuya Kusuda
Giuseppe Laera
Simone Larcher
Daniele Laucelli
Harry Lee
Hansaem Lee
Jieun Lee
Tae Kwon Lee
Woo Hyoung Lee
Paulo Lemos
Jorge Lendro
Dorothee Lensch
Anne-Sophie Lepeuple
Andr Lerch
Frederic Leusch
Junwen Li
Hong Li
Roland Liemberger
Yen-Hui Lin
Tsair-Fuh Lin
Rodrigo Valladares Linares
Andreas Lindhe
Natalie Linklater
Steven Liss
Xavier Litrico
An Chi Liu
Sergey Lobanov
Christian Loderer
Sebastien Logette
Dalila Loudyi
Hui Lu
Doug Lumley
Francisco Luque-Ruiz
Gerard Luyet
Tugba Evrim Maden
Thomas Maere
Marius Majewsky
Jacek Makinia
Konstantinos Makris
Annika Malm
Ioannis Manariotis
Pierre Mandel
Cyril Marconnet
Ruth Marfl-Vega
Ole Mark
Helen Markewich

Jiri Marsalek
Gilberto Martins
Jos Matos
Taku Matsushita
Njenga Mburu
Djalma Medeiros
Nahum Medellin
Maddalen Mendizabal
Christian Eduardo Hernandez Mendoza
Fangang Meng
Arthur Meuleman
Sumayya Mieta
Kiyoshi Miyauchi
Mohammad Reza Mohebbi
Maria Molinos-Senante
Michael Moore
Francisco Fernandez Morales
Carlos Moreno
Paul Moretti
Ivan Mrnco
Takao Murakami
Sudhir Murthy
Chandrakanth Mysore
Yogalakshmi Nandabalan
Fiona Napier
Chad Newton
Ding-Quan Ng
Bruno Nguyen
Anh Nguyen
Arjen Van Nieuwenhuijzen
Ardavan Niknam
Leticia Nishi
Rodolfo Nobrega
Ingmar Nopens
Koichi Ohno
Ying Hui Ong
Ron Van Der Oost
Banu Ormeci
Nilce Ortiz
Jones Orumwense
Avi Ostfeld
mer zam
Anne Pallars
Marja Palmroth
Chanhyuk Park
Suwan Park
Joonhong Park
Dhundi Raj Pathak
Soubhagya Kumar Pattanayak
Bruno Peeters
Pilar Pena
Jose Antonio Perales
Lus Dias Pereira
Vanessa Pereira

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

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95

Organisers
Carlos Lopes Pereira
Kenneth Persson
Alice Petre
Jose Pinho
Antonio Pirra
Marie-Noelle Pons
Bambang Priyambodo
Sebasti Puig
Anton Purnama
Fei Qi
Justina Racyte
Asha Ramjatan
Francisco Raposo
Thunyalux Ratpukdi
Wolfgang Rauch
Donald Reid
Christian Remy
Franz Resl
Thierry Ribeiro
Leiv Rieger
Jesus Andres Cacho Rivero
Lacramioara Diana Robescu
Paolo Roccaro
Jorge Rodriguez
Maria Joao Rosa
Ingegerd Rosborg
Simona Rossetti
Samuel Martin Ruel
Larry Russell
Noboru Saito
Walid Salim
Bhimo Rizky Samudro
Alberto Snchez
Rui Sancho
Selim Sanin
Isabel Esprito Santo
Raman Saravanane
Sarper Sarp
Hisashi Sato
Philippe Sauvignet
Takayuki Sawai
Peter Schauer
Yvonne Schneider
Alexander Schriewer
Martin Schwarz
David Schwesig
Yolanda Segura
Kazunari Sei
Andrew Shaw
Sudhanshu Shekhar
Jeffrey Shi
Gerarda Shields
Toshio Shimada
Chamgmin Shin

Akbar Shirzad
Binaya Raj Shivakoti
Pradeep Shrivastava
Hansruedi Siegrist
Catarina Silva
Claudio Silva
Elodie Singlande
Sumana Siripattanakul-Ratpukdi
Irene Slavik
Ed Smeets
Patrick Smeets
Satoshi Soda
Kim Soerensen
Reza Darvishi Cheshmeh Soltani
Regina Sommer
Sabrina Sorlini
Philip De Souza
Henri Spanjers
Peter Spencer
Marcos Von Sperling
Ludovico Spinosa
Jatin Srivastava
Samantha Van Staden
Lukas Staub
Peter Stoks
Mara Surez-Ojeda
Pawan Kumar Subramaniam
Graham Symmonds
Eoin Syron
Malgorzata Szlachta
Fernando Tadeo
Ruya Tasli Toraman
Ahmed Tawfik
Martin Tedd
Edmilson Teixeira
Ivana Teodorovic
Dines Thornberg
Selcuk Toprak
Gary Toranzos
Eelco Trietsch
Konstantinos Tsagarakis
Kwok-Wai Tsang
Kuo-Lun Tung
Sean Turner
Andrea Turolla
Toshiyuki Ushikubo
Handojo Djati Utomo
Joanne Vanderzalm
Davy Vanham
Peter Vanrolleghem
Marta Varanda
Ifetayo Venner
Marco Verani
Jose Vieira

Adriano Vieira
Cristina Villamar
Eveline Volcke
Darko Vrecko
Jan Vreeburg
Nick Walmsley
Xiaoyan Wang
Ting-Jie Wang
Longmian Wang
Hui Wang
Rongchang Wang
Xinhua Wang
Chi-Kang Wang
Ben Ward
Sarah Ward
Celia Way
Chunhai Wei
Dorothea Weingaertner
David Weissbrodt
Steve Whipp
Melanie Wilkinson
Jay Witherspoon
Patryk Wjtowicz
Jun Wu
Guangxue Wu
Nikolaos Xafenias
Xuan Xu
Xin Yang
Hidenari Yasui
Alex Yavich
Ali Asghar Semsar Yazdi
Toshiya Yoshino
Sansfica Young
Yimin Zhang
Panyue Zhang
Guoliang Zhang
Qingliang Zhao
Yaqian Zhao
Liang Zhu

Exhibition

Exhibition:
Join the worlds leading companies working in sustainable water
management
With a focus on leading practice and innovation, the IWA World
Water Exhibition is a one-stop-shop showcasing world-leading
companies. With a focus on technology and innovation, the
Exhibition brings you the newest technologies and best practice,
and connects you to the people with the right solutions.
Designed to provide new networking and business opportunities,
and to ensure maximum engagement between participants and
exhibitors, the IWA World Water Exhibition is a fully integrated
component of the IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition.
Morning and afternoon breaks and lunches will be hosted in the
exhibition areas
Social media

Joint Organising Committee


Rodrigo Proena de Oliveira Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Maria Joo Araujo Gouveia Benoliel EPAL Portugal
Alexandra Serra - guas de Portugal,
Portugal
Keith Robertson - IWA
Joyce Gielen - IWA
Roy Agterbos - Match+

Dont miss out. Follow us and join the conversation:


#iwa2014lisbon #waterinnovation
www.facebook.com/InternationalWaterAssociation
www.linkedin.com/company/international-water-association

Exhibition

96

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Floor plan

Exhibitor list

to the exhibition

by organisation name
Catering Area
Lunches & Coffee breaks

exhibitor

152

EXHIBITION FLOOR PLAN

151

154

9 sq.m. booth

160

Pillars

131

155

146

126 118

133

145

165 144

Business
Forum
Room 1

115

127 128

162

Sponsor Booth Locations

119

122

147 125

Business
Forum
Room 2

130 114

135

112

142
137

Registration

111

166

109 107

103 101

Main Entrance

141
108 106

139
140

168

104 102 100

Stairs to 1st level


Conference rooms posters

110

HALL 1
110
Cafetaria

HALL 2
Coffee Tea Lunch 222 220 219
Up

218

216

212

214

210

208

206

204 202
Up

Down

223

217

Platinum
Sponsor
FCC Aqualia

213

KWR

221

Principal
Sponsor

243

270

Pure

250

266

Technologies

Institutional
Sponsor
EPAL / CNAIA

260

258

AdP

256

Down
Coffee Tea Lunch

Up

280 282

284 285

286 288

305 307

301 303
Up

254

292

ERSAR

309 311

252
Down
Stands under balcony

294 295

313 315

296

298

317

299 299A

321
Up

Down

Down

Balcony
HALL 2

Balcony
HALL 2
Up

Up

Down

347 345 343 341 339 337

335 333

331 329

327 325

Down

stand

exhibitor

stand

CME, SA Portugal

108

GRUP ROMET Romania

241

Abengoa Spain

206

CNAIA Portugal

262

Grupo About Media Portugal

343

Acciona Aqua Spain

207

106

Gutermann Switzerland

111

Acevision (Beijing) Exhibition Co. Ltd. China

133

COBA - Consultores de Engenharia e


Ambiente, S.A. Portugal

Harsonic bvba Belgium

250

Acquawise Portugal

135

Hexa-Cover Denmark

140

ACWUA Arab Countries Water Utilities


Association Jordan

337

IADB - Inter American Development Bank USA

103

Indaqua Portugal

294

Industria e Ambiente Portugal

331
339

PIA

Advanced Water Management Centre


The University of Queensland Australia

252

Aerofloat Pty Ltd Australia

252

AFWA-African Water Association Ivory Coast

122

Agilent Technologies Spain

152

AGRU Kunstofftechnik GmbH Austria

254

guas do Porto Portugal

296

Ahlstrom Filtration USA

166

Alfatubo Engineering Pipes Portugal

299A

Ambidata Portugal

135

Aqua Purification Systems, Inc. USA


Aquafin NV Belgium

Convergence Industry BV The Netherlands

115
135

Consulgal Portugal
CTGA - Centro Tecnologico de Gesto
Ambiental Portugal

144

Dalian Wedo Environmental Material and


Technology Co, LTD. China

133

Danish Water Forum Denmark

140

Industrial WaterWorld USA

Danish Water Technology Group Denmark

140

International Water & Irrigation Israel

339

De Watergroep Belgium

250

International WaterCentre Australia

252

Denmark Pavilion Denmark

140

Invisible Structures Australia

252

140

Ireland Pavilion Ireland

151

288

Isiflo Iberica S.L. Spain

270

285

Italmatch Chemicals Belgium

102

DVGW - Deutscher Verein


des Gas- und Wasserfaches e.V. Germany

229

Itron France

110

DWF Denmark

140

221

160

IWA - International Water Association


The Netherlands / UK

250

EBC-European Benchmarking Cooperation The


Netherlands

243

JANZ Portugal

225

250

Japan Pavilion Japan

EDS - European Desalination Society Italy

345

139

100

Japan Sewage Works Association Japan

EFACEC Portugal

216

139

Aquarating USA

103

Japan Water Works Association Japan

Emerson Process Management USA

130

139

AR guas do Ribatejo Portugal

295

Environment Industry Magazine United Kingdom

339

JDL- Jiangxi JDL Environmental Protection Co


Ltd China

ARA Romanian Water Association Romania

241
258

262/
PIA

Jornal gua & Ambient Portugal

Arcadis USA

EPAL Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres,


SA Portugal

142/
PIA
343

Kamstrup Denmark

EPAL Luanda Angola

213

140

KERN Measuring Technology & Electronics


Switzerland

127

Kiwa The Netherlands

243

KUBOTA Corporation Japan

139

KWR Watercycle Research Institute


The Netherlands

217

Leighton Contractors Australia

252

LG Sound BV The Netherlands

243

LIKUID NANOTEK S.L Spain

128A

Masdar UAE

266

AquaFlanders Belgium
Aqualogus Portugal

201

Beijing
Scinorwater
Technology

248 Naldeo

262

Platinum
Sponsor
Suez
Environnement

205

247 Xylem
Gold Sponsors

264

268

207

Platinum
sponsor
Epal Luanda

219

IWA

Watershare

241

272
Up

225

Stands under balcony

Catering Area
Lunches & Coffee breaks

Catering Area
Lunches & Coffee breaks

229

Down

exhibitor

119

AdP - guas de Portugal, SGPS, S.A Portugal

164

Sitting tables

stand

A2O gua e Organizao, Lda. Portugal

DHI (EcoWater) Denmark


Douro ECI / Serveng Portugal / Angola
Dchting Pumpen Germany

Argal Chemical Pumps Italy

101

Asian Water SHP Media Malaysia

339

ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services


Regulation Authority Portugal

292

ASTEE France

204

114

Australia Pavilion Australia

252

ESRI - Environmental Systems Research


Institute USA
ESTEC, LDA Portugal

Australian Water Recycling Centre of Excellence


Australia

252

125

European Investment Bank Luxembourg

155

AVK Valvulas Spain

140

FAST SpA Italy

147

BDEW - Bundesverband der


Energie- und Wasserwirtschaft e.V Germany

229

FCC Aqualia Spain

223

Beijing Scinor Water Tech. Co. Ltd China

201

Federations of Japan Water Industries, INC


Japan

139

Belgium / Flanders Pavilion Belgium

250

Festo AG & Co. KG Germany

131

Maynilad Water Services The Philippines

PIA

Berson UV The Netherlands

243

Flanders Knowledge Center Water Belgium

250

MDPI AG Switzerland

109

BiAqua The Netherlands

243

Formato Verde Portugal

347

229

Bioprocess Control Sweden AB Sweden

280

Messe Berlin GmbH/Wasser Berlin International


Germany

Frezite - Energy and Environment Portugal

METAWATER Co. Ltd Japan

Bucher Unipektin AG Switzerland

168

FuturENVIRO Spain

339

139

Miya Water Projects Israel

Bureau of Sewerage Tokyo Metropolitan


Government Japan

139

GEA Westfalia Separator Group GmbH


Germany

284

256

Naldeo France

248

CH2M HILL USA

212

Germany Pavilion Germany

229

Navia A2O Portugal

119

China Pavilion China

133

German Water Partnership e.V Germany

229

Netherlands Water Partnership The Netherlands

243

Cheingdu Rosun Disinfection Pharmaceutical


Co. Ltd. China

133

Global Water Intelligence United Kingdom

202

NICTA Australia

252

Grundfos Denmark

140

Pablo Publishing Singapore

339

Chemkimia SDN BHD Malaysia

154

Balcony is available for lunches/stands

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99

Exhibitor list

Exhibitor list

by organisation name
exhibitor

stand

exhibitor

by booth number
stand exhibitor

stand exhibitor

stand exhibitor

Pantarein Belgium

250

Sewerin GmbH Germany

229

Tokyo Metropolitan Water Works Bureau Japan

139

100

Aqualogus Portugal

139

216

EFACEC Portugal

Pennwell United Kingdom

339

Siemens Portugal

205

Toray Membrane Europe AG Switzerland

210

101

Sewerage Works Bureau of Tokyo Metropolitan


Government Japan

Argal Chemical Pumps Italy

Swing Corporation Japan

217

241

Toro Equipment S.L. Spain

139

TAISEI KIKO Co. Ltd Japan

218

TaKaDu Israel

Phoslock Water Solutions Australia

252

Sisaqua Sistemas de Saneamento Bsico


Portugal

135

KWR Watercycle Research Institute The


Netherlands

PET Comunications Romania

139

219

Watershare The Netherlands

PIA

139

Tokyo Metropolitan Water Works Bureau Japan

PIA Project Innovation Award Pavilion


Global

139

Yokohama Water Business Association Japan

220

Saint-Gobain PAM France

221

IWA - International Water Association The


Netherlands / UK

221

Water 21 United Kingdom

222

Springer Verlag GmbH Germany

223

FCC Aqualia Spain

225

JANZ Portugal

225

Resopre S.A. Portugal

229

BDEW - Bundesverband der Energie- und


Wasserwirtschaft e.V. Germany

229

DVGW - Deutscher Verein des Gas- und


Wasserfaches e.V. Germany

229

Germany Pavilion Germany

229

German Water Partnership e.V. Germany

229

Sewerin GmbH Germany

229

Water Berlin International Germany

241

ARA - Romanian Water Association Romania

241

Romania Pavilion Romania

241

GRUP ROMET Romania

241

PET Comunications Romania

241

SIVECO Romania Romania

243

Berson UV The Netherlands

243

BiAqua The Netherlands

243

Kiwa The Netherlands

243

LG Sound BV The Netherlands

243

Netherlands Water Partnership The Netherlands

243

Royal Haskoning DHV The Netherlands

SIVECO Romania Romania


SkyJuice Foundation Inc Australia

stand

241
107

Piedmont USA

286

Smart Water Metering Canada

Poltank Spain

208

Spain Pavilion Spain

128

Springer The Netherlands

222

Portugal Pavilion Portugal

282

exhibitor

128B

102

Italmatch Chemicals Belgium

Trojan Technologies Canada

214

103

AquaRating USA

Unisense Environment Denmark

140

103

IADB - Inter American Development Bank USA

VCS Denmark

140

104

SebaKMT A member of Megger Group Spain

140

AVK Valvulas Spain

Vewin The Netherlands

243

106

140

Danish Water Forum Denmark

VLAKWA Belgium

250

COBA - Consultores de Engenharia e


Ambiente, S.A. Portugal
SkyJuice Foundation Inc Australia

140

Danish Water Technology Group Denmark

Water 21 United Kingdom

221

107
108

CME, SA Portugal

140

Denmark Pavilion Denmark

109

MDPI AG Switzerland

140

DHI (EcoWater) Denmark

Protok Croatia

164

State of Green Denmark

140

PURC - Public Utilities Regulatory Commission


Ghana

118

Suez Environnement France

264

Water & Waste Digest / Storm Water Solutions


USA

339

Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd. Japan

298

Water & Wastewater Asia Singapore

339

110

Itron France

140

Grundfos Denmark

SWAN Analytical Instruments AG Switzerland

137

Water Alliance The Netherlands

243

111

Gutermann Switzerland

140

Hexa-Cover Denmark

Swing Corporation Japan

139

Water and Wastewater International USA

339

112

Technolog Limited United Kingdom

140

Kamstrup Denmark

Syrinix Ltd United Kingdom

299

Water Berlin International Germany

229

114

140

State of Green Denmark

Taipei Water Department Taiwan

PIA

Water World USA

339

ESRI - Environmental Systems Research


Institute USA
Convergence Industry BV The Netherlands

140

Unisense Environment Denmark

TAISEI KIKO Co. Ltd Japan

139

Waterbiz Israel

339

115

VCS Denmark

TaKaDu Israel

218

Waterleau Belgium

250

118

PURC - Public Utilities Regulatory Commission


Ghana

140
141

National Committee for the 7th World Water


Forum Republic of Korea

142

JDL- Jiangxi JDL Environmental Protection Co


Ltd China

PURE Technologies Canada

268

PWP - Portuguese Water Partnership Portugal

135

Resopre S.A. Portugal

225

Rock Solid Group Australia

252

Romania Pavilion Romania

241

Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu


Saudi Arabia

272

Royal Haskoning DHV The Netherlands

243

Taylor & Francis United Kingdom

126

Watershare The Netherlands

219

119

Navia A2O gua e Organizao, Lda Portugal

Saint-Gobain PAM France

220

Technol Portoroz d.o.o. Slovenia

162

Wetsus The Netherlands

243

122

AFWA - African Water Association Ivory Coast

Salsnes Filter Norway

214

Technolog Limited United Kingdom

112

WEX Global Spain

341

125

ESTEC, LDA Portugal

144

CTGA - Centro Tecnologico de Gestao


Ambiental Portugal

Salzgitter Mannesmann Line Pipe GmbH


Germany

321

Tecnilab Portugal

135

141

126

Taylor & Francis United Kingdom

145

FEDCO - Fluid Equipment Co. USA

333

The Netherlands Pavilion The Netherlands

243

7th WORLD WATER FORUM


Republic of Korea
Xylem USA

KERN Measuring Technology & Electronics


Switzerland

147

FAST SpA Italy

SebaKMT A member of Megger Group Spain

104

The University of Queensland Australia

PIA

247

127

Ireland Pavilion Ireland

Sewerage Works Bureau of Tokyo Metropolitan


Government Japan

139

Scranton Gillette Communications USA

Integrated
Water Network
Management

Yokohama Water Business Association Japan

Learn from our


customers how they:
> Increased water savings
> Achieved higher network efficiency
> Improved customer service

At TaKaDu's
Business Forum
Visit us in Hall 2 Booth 218

100

stand

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

www.takadu.com

Monday, 22 September,
14:15-15:00, Hall 1 Room 1

139

128

Liquid Nanotek S.L. Spain

151

128

Toro Equipment S.L. Spain

152

Agilent Technologies Spain

128

Spain Pavilion Spain

154

Chemkimia SDN BHD Malaysia

130

Emerson Process Management USA

155

European Investment Bank Luxembourg

131

Festo AG & Co. KG Germany

160

Aqua Purification Systems, Inc. USA

133

Chengdu Rosun Disinfection Pharmaceutical


Co. Ltd. China

162

Technol Portoroz d.o.o. Slovenia

164

Protok Croatia

133

Dalian Wedo Environmental Material And


Technology Co, LTD. China

166

Ahlstrom Filtration

135

Acquawise Portugal

168

Bucher Unipektin AG Switzerland

135

Ambidata Portugal

201

Beijing Scinor Water Tech. Co. Ltd China

135

PWP - Portuguese Water Partnership Portugal

202

Global Water Intelligence United Kingdom

135

Consulgal / Sisaqua Sistemas de Saneamento


Bsico Portugal

204

ASTEE France

205

Siemens Portugal

206

Abengoa Spain

207

Acciona Aqua Spain

135

Tecnilab Portugal

137

SWAN Analytical Instruments AG Switzerland

139

Federations of Japan Water Industries, INC


Japan

208

Poltank Spain

139

Japan Pavilion Japan

210

Toray Membrane Europe AG Switzerland

139

Japan Sewage Works Association Japan

213

EPAL Luanda Angola

139

Japan Water Works Association Japan

214

Salsnes Filter Norway

139

KUBOTA Corporation Japan

214

Trojan Technologies Canada

139

METAWATER Co. Ltd. Japan

243

The Netherlands Pavilion The Netherlands

243

Vewin The Netherlands

243

Water Alliance The Netherlands

243

Wetsus The Netherlands

247

Xylem USA

248

Naldeo France

250

Aquafin NV Belgium

250

AquaFlanders Belgium

250

Belgium / Flanders Pavilion Belgium

250

De Watergroep Belgium

250

Harsonic bvba Belgium

250

Pantarein Belgium

250

VLAKWA Belgium

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

101

Exhibitor list

Exhibitor profiles

by booth number
stand exhibitor

stand exhibitor

stand exhibitor

250

Waterleau Belgium

282

Smart Water Metering Canada

339

International Water & Irrigation Israel

252

Aerofloat Pty Ltd Australia

284

339

Pablo Publishing Singapore

252

GEA Westfalia Separator Group GmbH


Germany

Australia Pavilion Australia

339

Pennwell United Kingdom

252

285

Dchting Pumpen Germany

Australian Water Recycling Centre of Excellence


Australia

286

Piedmont USA

339

Water and Wastewater International USA

339

Water & Wastewater Asia Singapore

339

WaterWorld USA

252

International Water Centre Australia

288

Douro ECI/Serveng Portugal / Angola

252

Invisible Structures Australia

292

252

ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services


Regulation Authority Portugal

Leighton Contractors Australia

339

Waterbiz Israel

Indaqua Portugal

252

NICTA Australia

294

341

WEX Global Spain

252

Phoslock Water Solutions Australia

295

guas do Ribatejo Portugal

343

Grupo About Media Portugal

Rock Solid Group Australia

296

guas do Porto Portugal

252

343

Jornal gua&Ambiente Portugal

Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd. Japan

254

AGRU Kunstofftechnik GmbH Austria

298

345

EDS - European Desalination Society Italy

299

Syrinix Ltd United Kingdom

347

Formato Verde Portugal

321

Salzgitter Mannesmann Line Pipe GmbH


Germany

128A

LIKUID Nanotek S.L. Spain

256

Miya Water Projects Israel

258

Arcadis USA

260

AdP - guas de Portugal, SGPS, S.A. Portugal

331

Industria e Ambiente Portugal

128B

Toro Equipment S.L. Spain

262

CNAIA Portugal

333

Scranton Gillette Communications US

299A

Alfatubo Engineering Pipes Portugal

262

EPAL Empresa Portuguesa das guas Livres,


SA Portugal

333

Water & Waste Digest / Storm Water Solutions


USA

Frezite - Energy and Environment Portugal


Portugal Pavilion Portugal

337

ACWUA Arab Countries Water Utilities


Association Jordan

PIA

AdP - guas de Portugal, SGPS, S.A Portugal

PIA

Advanced Water Management Centre The


University of Queensland Australia

PIA

Maynilad Water Services The Philippines

PIA

PIA - Project Innovation Award - Pavilion Global

PIA

Taipei Water Department Taiwan

264

Suez Environnement France

266

Masdar UAE

339

Asian Water SHP Media Malaysia

268

PURE Technologies Canada

339

Environment Industry Magazine United Kingdom

270

Isiflo Iberica S.L. Spain

339

FuturENVIRO Spain

272

Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu Saudi


Arabia

339

Industrial WaterWorld USA

280

Bioprocess Control Sweden AB Sweden

Stand 119

Stand 135

A2Os core business is to develop operational


management tools for water and wastewater utilities.
Our software, NAVIA, is an extremely reliable tool with
15 years of development with clients around the world.
NAVIA was created from the beginning to be used by field
operators in their daily work routines. This has generated
an incredible amount of data - transformed into real and
important information - that was not previously available.
Everything is done in real time, saving time and costs.
Most importantly, NAVIA improves water and wastewater
operational management in a way that facilitates the ability
of a utility to improve across the full water cycle.

Acquawise Consulting is based in bidos, Portugal,


and practices hands-on consultancy and capacity
building in management, operation and safety of drinking
water supply and sanitation systems. Acquawise
comprises expertise in a wide range of specialities:
Water and Sanitation Regulamentation, Water Safety
Plans, Sanitation Safety Plans, Infrastructure Asset
Management, Efficient Water and Energy Management,
Performance Audits of Water and Sanitation Services
Providers, Training.

A2O - gua, Ambiente e Organizao, Lda.


Contact: Jorge Tavares
Av. D. Afonso Henriques, 1196 - Sala 606
Matosinhos, Matosinhos 4450-012. Portugal
Tel. +351 220 111 352
Web address: www.navia.pt
General Email: navia@navia.pt

Stand 206

Abengoa
Contact: Catie Romero-Finger
c/ Energia Solar, 1, Palmas Altas
Sevilla, Sevilla 41014. Spain
Phone: +34 954935553
Web address: www.abengoawater.com
General Email: catherine.romero@water.abengoa.com
Abengoa (MCE: ABG.B/P SM /NASDAQ: ABGB)
applies innovative technology solutions for sustainability
in the energy and environment sectors, generating
electricity from renewable resources, converting
biomass into biofuels and producing drinking water from
seawater. Abengoas business is structured around three
activities: engineering and construction, concessiontype infrastructures, and industrial production. Abengoa
seeks to contribute to the sustainable development of
the water market by promoting, developing and operating
water-treatment plants and using leading technology as a
means of growth.

Stand 207

ACCIONA AGUA
Contact: Elena Reyna
Avenida de Europa 22
Madrid, Madrid 28108. Spain
Phone: +34 91 790 77 00
Web address: www.acciona-agua.es
General Email: acciona-agua@acciona.com
ACCIONA Agua is a leader in the water treatment sector
with the ability to design, construct and operate drinking
water treatment plants, residual purification plants,
tertiary treatment plants for re-use and reverse-osmosis
desalination plants. ACCIONA Agua is committed to
innovation and the application of the latest technologies,
together with ensuring water quality in the different areas
of activity.

Stand 133

Acevision (Beijing) Exhibition Co., Ltd.


Contact: Tracy Wang
#B16C, Yingte Plaza, No. 28 Xibahexili
Beijing, Beijing, 100028. China
Phone: +86-10-64475223
Fax: +86-10-62261531
Web address: www.acevision-expo.com
General Email: acevision@vip.163.com
Acevision (Beijing) Exhibition Co.,Ltd is a professional
organizer of international exhibitions. We have been
committed to plan, organize and hold international
prestigious exhibitions and conferences in recent years,
adhering to the concept that Serving Exhibitors as our
duty, Building the first brand of the professional exhibition
in China. We provide professional service for Chinese
enterprises to develop overseas market, especially the
comprehensive, professional, and one-stop exhibition
service in the field of environment protection and water
treatment.

102

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Acquawise Consulting
Contact: Raquel Mendes
Convento Sao Miguel das Gaeiras
Gaeiras, Obidos 2510-718. Portugal
Phone: +351962014668
Contact - Raquel Mendes
Web address: www.acquawise.pt
General Email: info@acquawise.pt

Stand 337

ACWUA - Arab Countries Water Utilities


Association
Contact: Mustafa Nasereddin
P.O. Box: 962449 Amman-11196 Jordan
Al Rasheed Area, Umm Amarah Street Amman. Jordan
Phone: +96265161700
Fax: +96265161800
Web address: www.acwua.org
General Email: acwua_secretariat@acwua.org
The Arab Countries Water Utilities Association (ACWUA)
is a global centre of excellence that partners with water
supply and wastewater utilities in the Arab Countries to
provide best practice service delivery to their customers.
ACWUA offers a wide range of activities and services,
Including:
Arab Water Week International Conference & Trade Fair
Best Practice Conferences Technical Working Groups
Training Programmes & Capacity building Newsletter
Best Practice manuals & Operational Guides
Workshops and Seminars ACWUA website and
ACWUA Wiki Studies and research Study tours and
field visits to water and wastewater treatment plants.

Stand 260

AdP - guas de Portugal


Contact: Elsa Luz
Rua Visconde de Seabra, 3
1700-421 Lisbon. Portugal
Phone: +351 212469400
Web address: www.adp.pt
General Email: info@adp.pt
guas de Portugal is a leading environmental sector
group and provides services, directly and indirectly,
across mainland Portugal including the supply of water,
wastewater treatment and the processing and recovery of
waste. The group also operates in the field of renewable
energies and shared services with an international market
presence. With the integral protection of the natural
and human environment as its founding mission, the
guas de Portugal Group is widely acknowledged for its
planning and implementation capacities, its operational
and financial management skills as well as for developing
innovative solutions, enabling positive results and
significant improvements in its core activities.

Stand 252

Aerofloat (Australia) Pty Ltd


Contact: Ray Anderson
Unit 5 58 Box Road, Caringbah
Caringbah, New South Wales Sydney. Australia
Phone: + 61419223293
Fax: + 61295271052
Web address: www.aerofloat.com.au
General Email: ray.anderson@aerofloat.com.au
Aerofloat (Australia) Pty Ltd is an Australian Private
Company. The patented Aerofloat product is a unique
and innovative Dissolved Air Flotation product. Unlike
traditional DAF systems that use mechanical scrapers,
Aerofloat uses a hopper bottom and hopper top tank. The
water level is periodically raised to funnel the waste float

off the top of the tank. The product is used for numerous
water and wastewater treatment applications including
graywater and industrial wastewater treatment. Compared
to conventional DAF products it is very competitively
priced. Aerofloat Australia seeks distributors for its
products in the European market.

Stand 122

AfWA (African Water Association)


Contact: Sylvain Usher
05 BP 1910 Abidjan 05, Cte dIvoire(Ivory Coast)
Tel. +22521241443
Web address: www.afwa-hq.org
General Email susher@afwa-hq.org
The African Water Association (AfWA), formerly known
as Union of African Water Suppliers (UAWS), is a
professional association of establishments, enterprises
and utilities operating in the areas of drinking water,
sanitation and environment in Africa. Since its inception
in 1980, its main objective is to develop professional
capacity of members in order to achieve its vision
of drinking water coverage across the continent, to
undertake important programs and projects such as
Reduction of Non-revenue water, Quality Water Testing
and Sanitation. AfWA promotes partnerships between
utility members focused on mentoring for improved utility
performance through its Water Operators Partnerships
program, and strengthens advocacy efforts with African
governments and institutions for water and sanitation
issues in public policy andallocation of resources.
It alsopromotes capacity building and performance
improvement products and services, along with the
scientific knowledge research and production through
project grants implemented by Member utilities.
AfWA seeks to be at the upfront in implementing the
African Head of State Sharm El-Sheikh 2008 Declaration
aiming at enhancing coverage of water and sanitation in
Africa. AfWA has over 100 utilities members from some
40 countries across Africa.

Stand 152

Agilent TECHNOLOGIES
Contact: Patricia Lopez
Crtra NVI km 18.200
Las Rozas, Madrid 28230. Spain
Phone: +34 91 631 3000
Web address: www.home.agilent.com/
General Email: customercare_spain@agilent.com
As the worlds premier measurement company, Agilent
offers the broadest range of innovative measurement
solutions in the industry. The companys four businesses
- Chemical Analysis, Life Sciences, Diagnostics and
Genomics, and Electronic Measurement provide
customers with products and services that make a real
difference in the lives of people everywhere. At Agilent
Research Laboratories, we conduct research that
anticipates customer needs and produces breakthroughs
that power growth.

Stand 254

AGRU Kunststofftechnik GmbH


Contact: Albert Lueghamer
Ing.-Pesendorfer-Strasse 31
Bad Hall, Austria 4540. Austria
Phone: 0043 7258 790 0
Fax: 0043 7258 3863
Web address: www.agru.at
General Email: office@agru.at
AGRU Kunststofftechnik GmbH ranks among the most
important international manufacturers of innovative
plastic products as piping systems, fittings, semi-finished
products, concrete protective liners and geomembranes.
Around the world AGRU is known because of its trade
partners in more than 80 countries and its export share
of over 80%. No matter if talking about transportation
tunnels or sewage and irrigation channels, channels
and retention ponds, the first priority is tightness for
generations. AGRU products specifically designed for
construction are environmentally friendly, resistant against
corrosion and adhesion, and as a system flexible for every
application.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

103

Exhibitor profiles
Stand 296

guas do Porto
Contact: Joana Arajo
Rua Baro de Nova Sintra, 285
Porto, Porto 4306-901. Portugal
Phone: +351225190800
Fax: +351225190828
Web address: www.aguasdoporto.pt
General Email: geral@aguasdoporto.pt
Water Supply, Wastewater drainage and treatment, Storm
water drainage, Beaches and Streams, Environmental
Education.

Stand 166

Ahlstrom
Contact: Rod Komlenic
Ahlstrom LLC, 122 West Butler Street
Mt. Holly Springs, PA 17065. United States
Phone: +17174866413
Web address: www.ahlstrom.com
General Email: filtration@ahlstrom.com
Ahlstrom Filtration LLC is a global leader in the
development and manufacture of filter media used in
specialty liquid and air applications. For IWA event, we
will be showcasing our Disruptor water filtration media.
This is a unique patented technology within the water
filtration industry because it is based on electroadsorption
not mechanical filtration.

Stand 299A

Alfatubo Group
Contact: Francisco Leite
Rua Poente, 70
Serzedo, Porto 4410-034. Portugal
Phone: +351961348869
Web address: www.alfatubo.pt
General Email: export@alfatubo.pt

Exhibitor profiles

ALFATUBO Group is an industrial Producer of Plastic


pipes and Fittings, located in the North of Portugal. We
are leaders in the production of High Density Polyethylene
(HDPE) for Natural Gas, Sewage and
Drinking Water supply in Portugal.

Stand 135

Ambidata - Digital Innovation Solutions


and Consulting, Lda
Contact: Paulo Rego
Rua Leira da Relva, 145, S. Flix da Marinha VNGaia
Porto 4410-155, Portugal
Phone: +351 220120813
Web address: www.ambidata.pt
General Email: ambidata@ambidata.pt

Wholesale Exporter for Clack Valves, Tanks, Water


Softeners and filters, Cartridge filters, Filtration media:
Birm, MTM, Greensand Plus, Anthracite, Calcite, Filter
AG, Filter Ag Plus, Ozone generators and accessories.
We export to more than 40 countries with very
competitive wholesale prices.

Stand 250

Aquafin NV
Dijkstraat 8
Aartselaar 2630. Belgium
Phone: + 3234504511
Web address: www.aquafin.be
General Email: info@aquafin.be

Ambidata Digital Innovation Solutions Consulting,


Lda is a Portuguese technological company, with
offices in V. N. Gaia, Madrid and Rio de Janeiro. It has
international operations in many countries (Spain, Angola,
Mozambique, Cape Verde, Brazil and Andorra). The
Ambidata develops and provides Innovative Global
Digital Solutions and consulting for analysis laboratories.
These solutions have the ability to produce a fully digital
work environment, without the need for registration on
paper. This includes LIMS Solutions, Solutions Quality
Management and ERP Solutions. All the products
developed by Ambidata are certified by Microsoft.

Aquafin was established in 1990 by the Flemish Region


of Belgium, for the purpose of expanding, operating and
pre-financing the wastewater treatment infrastructure in
the region. As Flanders is very densely populated, the
implementation of this infrastructure is complicated. This
has resulted in a large theoretical, as well as hands on,
experience in most wastewater treatment technologies.
To date Aquafin is responsible for the operation of about
5,000km of pipeline and more than 250 wastewater
treatment plants. Being Aquafins radar, our research team
is continuously searching for new developments for the
collection and treatment of wastewater and sludge, both
from households and industries.

Stand 160

Stand 250

Aqua Purification Systems, Inc.


Contact: Alex Salman
5442 Thornwood Dr.
California, San Jose. United States
Phone: +1 408 225 7972
Fax: +1 408 225 7974
Web address: www.aquapurification.com
General Email: sales@aquapurification.com

AquaFlanders
Desguinlei 250
2018 Antwerpen. Belgium
Phone: +323/292 91 90
Fax: +323/292 91 99
Web address: www.aquaflanders.be
General Email: secretariaat@aquaflanders.be

s at
Visit u orld Water
IWA W , Portugal
Lisbon 168
Booth

Press for Less in Industry

Less disposal and drying expenses!


Less supervision!
Less labour and maintenance costs!
Less residual water!

= best performance for ambitious duties

with the Bucher sludge press!

Bucher Unipektin AG
Murzlenstrasse 80 CH-8166 Niederweningen
Phone +41 44 857 23 00 Fax +41 44 857 23 41
info@bucherunipektin.com www.bucherunipektin.com
104

Stand 100

AQUALOGUS
Contact: Franisco Carvalho
Alameda dos Oceanos, Edifcio Mar do Oriente
Lote 1.07.1 AN 2.4, Parque das Naes
Lisbon, 1990-208 Lisboa. Portugal
Phone: +3517520190
Fax: +3517520199
Web address: www.aqualogus.pt
General Email: geral@aqualogus.pt
AQUALOGUS is a Portuguese firm established in 1996
by engineering consultants with vast experience in the
development of studies and designs in water resources,
hydraulic works and the environment. The companys
main goal is to provide high quality services based on
Accuracy, Ingenuity and Innovation. The main fields
of activity of AQUALOGUS are the following: Dams,
Water resources planning, Geotechnical works, Water
supply systems, Wastewater treatment, Hydroagricultural
schemes, Hydropower, Drainage works and Flood control,
and Environmental monitoring and assessment. The
company has been developing projects in Europe, Africa
and South America, and has local offices in Morocco and
Mozambique.

Stand 103

AQUARATING/IADB - Inter American


Development bank
Contact: Raimon Puigjaner
1300 New York Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C: 20577. United States
Phone: +1 (202) 623 - 1655
Fax: +1 (202) 312 4197
Web address: www.aquarating.org
General Email: info@aquarating.org
AquaRating is a voluntary and universal system that offers
a comprehensive rating of the Water and/or Sanitation
services delivered based on reliable (audited) information,
and granted by an independent entity (AquaRating
Entity). AquaRating is developed by the Inter-American
Development Bank in cooperation with the International
Water Association.

Stand 295

AR - guas do Ribatejo, EM, S.A.


Contact: Miguel Carrinho
Rua Gaspar Costa Ramalho, n. 38
Salvaterra de Magos, Santarm 2120-098. Portugal
Phone: +351 263 509 400
Fax: +351 263 509 499
Web address: www.aguasdoribatejo.com
General Email: geral@aguasdoribatejo.com
AR guas do Ribatejo, EM, S.A. (AR) is a public utility,
established in 2007 as a water supply and management
company in urban and national protected natural areas.
The shareholders of the company are 7 Municipalities
of the Ribatejo region (Almeirim, Alpiara, Benavente,
Chamusca, Coruche, Salvaterra de Magos and Torres
Novas), which control 100% of the companys capital.
The company is also responsible for the recovery and
treatment of wastewater. Its area of influence covers a
territory with 3.300 Km2, serving a population of 150.000
inhabitants.

Stand 241

drinking water, sanitation and aquatic environments in


France. It brings together experts, researchers, scientists
and practitioners as well as representatives of public
and private organizations working on different sectors
related to environment. ASTEE is qualified to put forward
recommendations and bring them to the attention of public
authorities; it provides advices and decision-making support
to all stakeholders involved in sustainable development,
elected officials as well as their technical staff.

The Romanian Water Association (ARA) is the national


network of water professionals, spanning the continuum
between research and practice and covering all facets
of the water cycle. The 44 water utilities which are ARA
members cover over 90% of the total water supply and
sewerage services in Romania. In the last 5 years, the
water utilities implement large investment project in the
water infrastructure, with a value of over 5,4 billion euro.
A new cycle of investment project is under development.
Through ARA, members collaborate to lead the
development of effective and sustainable approaches to
water supply services management.

Stand 252

ARA - Romanian Water Association


Contact: Felix Stroe
Splaiul Independentei 202H
Bloc 2, Tronson 1, scara A, ap 2 parter
Bucuresti, Romania 060023. Romania
Phone: +40213162787
Fax: + 40213162788
Web address: www.ara.ro
General Email: secretariat@ara.ro

Stand 258

ARCADIS
Contact: Lauren Cavender
Gustav Mahlerplein 97-103, 1082 MS Amsterdam,
P.O. Box 7895. 1008 AB Amsterdam. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 (0) 20 2011 011
Web address: www.arcadis.com
General Email: info@arcadis.com
As the number one International Design Firm in Water
(ENR 2013), ARCADIS serves the entire water cycle from source to tap and back again. Our Water team has
over 2200 water professionals located across the six
regions of the world (Europe, UK, North America, Latin
America, Middle East and Asia). We perform consulting,
engineering, construction and operations services
in water supply and treatment, conveyance, water
management, water for industry, and conveyance markets.
Our service offering includes business advisory, program
management and guaranteed outcome (design-build).

Australian Water Recycling Centre of


Excellence
Contact Greg Oliver
P.O. Box 16146, City East
Brisbane, Queensland 4002. Australia
Phone: +61 409 119 754
Web address: www.australianwaterrecycling.com.au
General Email: administration@australianwaterrecycling.
com.au
The Australian Water Recycling Centre of Excellence is
enhancing the management and use of water recycling
nationally and internationally through industry, research
and government partnerships. By investing in a portfolio
of industry-relevant research projects across the full water
recycling spectrum, the Centre develops practical solutions
to secure Australias future water supply and, at the same
time, builds awareness and understanding in the community
about this precious resource.
We invite water industry members and research institutions
to join us as we work to realise the opportunities that water
recycling will contribute to sustainable water supplies and
improved quality of our environment.

Stand 140

AVK VALVULAS
Contact: Javier G. Noblejas
Polgono Industrial Francol parcela 27
Tarragona, Tarragona 43006. Spain
Phone: +34977543008
Web address: /www.avkvalvulas.com
General Email: avk@avkvalvulas.com
AVK VALVULAS is the company of AVK Group responsible
of the market in Iberian Peninsula. AVK is making valves and
accessories for networks in gas, industry, drinking water,
sewage and fire fighting sectors. AVK VALVULAS has an
expert team of technicians in order to advise and help solve
customer problems.

Stand 101

Argal Chemical Pumps


Contact: Marco Marini
Via Labirinto 159
Brescia, Brescia I25125. Italy
Phone: +390303507033
Fax: +390303507077
Web address: twww.argal.it
General Email: sales@argal.it

Stand 201

Estabilished as supplier of the galvanic industry from


which it borrows its name, the company Argal has been
designing and manufacturing pumps for chemicals made
of thermoplastic polymers for over 30 years. In 2010
began the production of air driven double diaphragm
pumps of the Astra range. Since 2011 we have added
SATURN range of centrifugal pumps in thermosetting
resins (fiberglass).
PRODUCTION PROGRAMME:
CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS IN FYFERGLASS MATERIAL
- THERMOPLASTIC MATERIALS - VERTICAL PUMPS
- MAGNETICAL DRIVEN PUMPS - AIR DRIVEN
DOUBLE DIAPHRAGM PUMPS - PULSATION
DAMPNERS - SELF-PRIMING PUMPS - ATEX
APPROVED PUMPS

Stand 204

ASTEE
Contact: Claire Cayla
51 rue Salvador Allende
Nanterre, Cedex 92027. France
Phone: +33 1 41 20 17 92
Web address: www.astee.org
General Email: astee@astee.org
Created in 1905, The French Scientific and Technical
Association for Water and Environment caries out
reflections on the various methodological, technical
and regulatory aspects linked to management of

Beijing Scinorwater Technology Co., Ltd.


Beijing Scinor Water Technology Co., Ltd.
F8, Xueyuan International Tower, 1 Zhichun Road Haidian
District, Beijing, 100083, China.
Tel: 86-10-82330680-262/18510291058
Fax: 86-10-82330628
Email: fan.li@scinorwater.com
web: www.scinorwater.com
A high-tech water treatment company formed in
December,2002 with located at the Zhongguancun Science
Park, Beijing, China. Scinor is a truly comprehensive
treatment solutions supplier whose has always been
committed to designs, manufactures, and deploys high-value
proprietary water treatment solutions even UF membrane
for the municipal, industrial and desalination water market.
Scinor boasts a group of experts and technicians with rich
practical experiences in the water treatment field. They have
numerous years of membrane water treatment application
experience and are able to provide the best solution,
membrane products and assume the project design,
equipment set up, monitoring commissioning and a series of
after sales services, according to different clients demands.

Stand 243

Berson UV
Contact: Paul Buijs
De Huufkes 23
Nuenen, NB 5674 TL. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 40 2907777
Fax: +31 40 2835755
Web address: www.bersonuv.com
General Email: info@bersonuv.com

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IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014


14-00264_Bucher_Ins_UT_IWA_190x136_E.indd 1

Aquaflanders gathers together all Flemish drinking


water and water sanitation companies. The organization
encourages cooperation between members and gives
advice to them in legislative and operational matters
(quantity, quality, climate change, sustainability,
improvement of asset management, etc.). Aqua Flanders
delivers services of common interest to their members,
such as benchmarking, the organization of the inspection
of sanitary installations and sewerage systems, the
distribution of potable water in emergency situations
and tariff structure. AquaFlanders informs stakeholders
concerning the positions of their members in the water
business. AquaFlanders supports and cooperates with
other organisations on a regional and European level such
as Belgaqua, CEEP and Eureau.

15.07.14 16:51

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

105

Exhibitor profiles
Berson develops and manufactures Ultraviolet Disinfection
reactors for Municipal drinking, waste and re-use water
since 1972 in Holland. Benefits of Ultraviolet systems
are; reduction or avoidance of Chlorine, an effective
barrier against Chlorine resistance pathogens such as
Cryptosporidium and Giardia, no chemical by products
and a cost effective multi barrier system. By working very
closely with their clients, Berson makes equipment to
suit their varying needs. Result is that their customers are
guaranteed to have reliable safe water at most optimal cost.
Berson offers also a large range 3rd party validated reactors
(DVGW, USEPA and NSF).

Stand 243

BiAqua BV
Contact: Lute Broens
Julianalaan 67
Delft, ZH 2628BC. The Netherlands
Phone: +31152788310
Web address: www.biaqua.nl
General Email: l.broens@biaqua.nl
BiAqua, a Netherlands-based start-up, has developed a
new technology to prevent biofouling in water treatment
plants, and particularly in reverse osmosis (RO) membranes.
The core of the solution is simple: biofouling is prevented
if microorganisms are starved of a critical nutrient present
in water like phosphate. BiAquas Phosphate Removal
Technology (PRTTM) achieves this goal using regenerable
adsorbents that remove phosphate from water, reaching
as low a concentration as < 1 ppb. The process can be
implemented as membrane pre-treatment, and can be retrofit
in existing media filter units, or as a stand-alone solution.

Stand 280

Bioprocess Control Sweden AB


Contact: Dr. Mihaela Nistor
Scheelevgen 22
Lund, Skne 223 63. Sweden
Phone: +46 (0) 46 163950
Web address: www.bioprocesscontrol.com
General Email: info@bioprocesscontrol.com
Bioprocess Control is a technology and market leader in the
area of advanced instrumentation and control technologies
for research and commercial applications in the biogas
industry. The company was founded in 2006, and brings
to market more than 15 years of industry leading research
in the area of instrumentation, control and automation of
anaerobic digestion processes. Today Bioprocess Control
has product exports to more than 35 countries.

Stand 168

Bucher Unipektin AG
Contact: Manuela Gremlich
Murzlenstrasse
Niederweningen, 80 8166. Switzerland
Phone: +41448572420
Fax: +41448572341
Web address: www.bucherunipektin.com
General Email: info@bucherunipektin.com
Bucher Unipektin develops, designs, manufactures and
distributes fruit juice plants (reception areas, grinders and
crushers, presses, filtration plants and evaporators) as
well as vacuum drying plants and sewage slurry presses.
Installations of Bucher Unipektin AG are used worldwide and
allow the economical production of high quality products
such as fruit juices, dried products, fruit pures and sludge
dewatering.

Stand 139

106

addition to cleaning water that is dirtied by use in the


daily lives and activities of Tokyo residents and returning
that water to the rivers and sea, the system also speedily
removes rainwater from land surface of cities.

Stand 212

CH2MHILL
Contact: Lori Irvine
9189 South Jamaica Street
Englewood, CO 80112-5946. United States
Phone: +1 720-286-3137
Fax: +1 720-286-9409
Web address: www.ch2m.com
General Email: lori.irvine@ch2m.com
As a global leader in full-service engineering,
procurement, construction, and operations, CH2M
HILL provides water, wastewater, and water resource
services to clients worldwide. With 6.6 billion in revenue
and 26,000 employees worldwide, CH2M HILL delivers
innovative, practical, sustainable solutions - helping
clients develop and manage infrastructure and facilities
that improve efficiency, safety, and quality of life. Working
with our clients, we deliver customized solutions in a
flexible and responsive manner. For more information,
visit: www.ch2mhill.com, www.ch2mhillblogs.com/water,
twitter.com/ch2mhill and facebook.com/ch2mhill

Stand 133

Chengdu Rosun Disinfection


Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Contact Carol Liu
139 East Fifth Road of Auto Center, Economic and
Technological Development Zone
Chengdu city, Sichuan province 610100. China
Phone: +86 28 63166679
Fax: +86 28 65988030
Web address: www.rosun.com.cn
General Email: carol_liu@rosun.com.cn
Chengdu Rosun, founded in 2002, is a large group
high-tech enterprise that focuses on R&D, production
and marketing of high-end environmental water treatment
products and disinfection products, also specialized
in water treatment engineering design, operation and
management.

Stand 154

CHEMKIMIA SDN. BHD.


Contact: KK Diong
No. 19, Jalan Kenanga 6, Seksyen BB 11, Bandar Bukit
Beruntung, Rawang, Selangor 48300. Malaysia
Phone: +6 03 60283888
Fax: +6 03 60281188
Web address: www.chemkimia.com
General Email: chemkimia@chemkimia.com
CHEMKIMIA SDN.BHD. (CK) is a wholly Malaysian
owned company established in April 1989. We have been
accredited with the ISO 9001:2008 by SGS (Malaysia)
Sdn. Bhd. in 2003. Our group of chemist have conducted
our own research and development and had successfully
manufactured our own range of specialty water treatment
chemicals such as CHEMCHLORACH, CHEMIPOL
and CHEMFLOC. Our engineering expertise and
system innovation by our group of experience engineer
and chemist encompass us to provide the market a wide
spectrum of our systems and water related services to the
potable water and waste water treatment industries.

Stand 108

Bureau of Sewerage Tokyo MetroPolitan


Government
Contact: Kentaro Uehara
2-8-1 Nishishinjuku, Shinjuku
163-8001 Tokyo. Japan
Phone: +81-3-5320-6521
Web address: www.gesui.metro.tokyo.jp/english/english.htm
General Email: S4000008@section.metro.tokyo.jp

CME - Construo e Manuteno


Electromecnica, SA
Contact: Paulo Alves
Rua Rui Teles Palhinha, 4
Porto Salvo, Oeiras 2740-278. Portugal
Phone: +351214233110
Fax: +351214233111
Web address: www.procme.pt
General Email: gci@cme.pt

Bureau of Sewerage Tokyo Metropolitan Government is


responsible for operating and constructing the sewerage
system in urban area of Tokyo. Tokyo sewerage system plays
a vital role in ensuring a safe and pleasant living environment
and in the makeup of a healthy water circulation system. In

CME is the main company of the Portuguese ProCME


Group. Providing services of high quality engineering
develops its activity in the areas of energy (electricity
and gas), telecommunications, water, air and fluids,
environment, information systems and industry.

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Exhibitor profiles
Stand 262

CNAIA
Contact - Rodrigo Protena de Oliveira
Comisso Nacional da Associao Internacional da gua
c/- Associao Portuguesa dos Recursos Hdricos
Laboratrio Nacional de Engenharia Civil, Av. do Brasil
101-1700-066 Lisbon. Portugal
Phone: +351 218 443 428
Fax: +351 218 443 017
Web address: www.aprh.pt
General Email: aprh@aprh.pt
CNAIA, the IWA Governing Member from Portugal,
joins the three main technical and scientific associations
from the Portuguese water resources and water
services sector (APRH, APESB and APDA). CNAIA
seeks to influence public policies by promoting the
principles of integrated water resources management
and sustainability through a continuous multi-sector
and interdisciplinary discussion on water-related issues
and by supporting cooperation and dialogue initiatives
between different actors and sectors.

Stand 106

COBA (Engineering & Environmental


Consultants)
Contact: Lus Gusmo
Av. 5 de Outubro, 323
Lisbon 1649-011. Portugal
Phone: +351-217925000
Fax: +351-217970348
Web address: www.coba.pt
General Email: coba@coba.pt
COBA, S.A. is one of the largest Portuguese engineering
consultancy companies, established in 1962. With an
international experience of 52 years, it has been operating
extensively in Europe, Africa, namely in the Maghreb and
in the Sub-Saharan regions, in Latin America and in the
Middle East, totalling 37 countries.
COBA offers a comprehensive range of consultancy
services covering the various disciplines associated with
hydraulic undertakings, hydroelectric power generation
and transmission, water supply and wastewater schemes,
agriculture and rural development, transportation
infrastructures, environment, cartography and cadastre.

Stand 115

Convergence Industry B.V.


Contact: Felix Broens
Euregioweg 283
Enschede, Overijssel 7532 SM. The Netherlands
Phone: 0031 (0) 53 461 5557
Web address: www.con-vergence.com
General Email: info@con-vergence.com
Convergence is a Dutch company specialized in the
manufacture of a wide range of customized liquid
and gas handling systems. Most of our systems are
used for research and quality assurance in the field
of membrane technology. Thanks to our extensive
knowledge and resources in this area we are able to
create almost unlimited types of customized systems that
fit perfectly in any research application. Furnished with all
required integrated sensors and equipment, membrane
characterization is done automatically. Every unit is
compact and portable.

Stand 144

CTGA - Centro Tecnolgico de Gesto


Ambiental
Contact: Ezequiel; Filipe China; Carraco
Estrada de Coselhas - Largo da Maria Linda
Coimbra, Coimbra 3000-125. Portugal
Phone: 00351239704576
Fax: 00351239405880
Web address: www.ctga.pt
General Email: ctga.geral@ctga.pt
Over 20 years, CTGA has been developing activities
related to consulting and projects in the areas of
Hydraulic and Environmental Engineering. Its Engineering
Department encompasses the areas of Projects and On
Site Work Supervision, associated with: water supply
systems for domestic and/or industrial consumption,
including treatment, pumping, adduction, storage and
distribution; and drainage systems of domestic, industrial

and pluvial wastewater, including drainage, retention,


treatment and disposal. Its Environment Department
encompasses the areas of Scanning and Control of
Environmental Systems with a vast experience in WWTP,
IWWTP, WTP and Pumping Stations as well as of
Environmental Management.

Stand 133

Dalian Wedo Environmental Material and


Technology Co., Ltd
Contact: Anna Zhang
Room 2001.Guangrong Building No.90 Xian Road
Shahekou District
Dalian, Liaoning 116021. China
Phone: + 86-411-85862388
Web address: www.dlwedo.cn
General Email: yudu@dlwedo.cn
Dalian Wedo Environmental Material and Technology Co.
Ltd. founded in 2002 is an advanced high technology
enterprise working for environmental protection and
sewage treatment. Our business include: development and
manufacture of environmental products such as biofilm
carriers, design of environmental protection engineering,
overall contract of construction, professional running
management of environmental equipment, investment
management of environment program and professional
consulting services.

Stand 140

Danish Water Forum


Contact: Bjoern Kaare Jensen
Agern Alle 5
Hoersholm, Sealand 2970. Denmark
Phone: +45 4516 9038
Web address: www.danishwaterforum.dk
General Email: DWF@DANISHWATERFORUM.DK
The purpose of Danish Water Forum is strengthening the
Danish and international efforts in research, development
and innovation in the water sector and strengthening
the Danish water agenda by contributing to the Danish
knowledge and skills in water in international water
organizations and in international and European initiatives
on water.
We do this by promoting knowledge sharing on water
and exposure internationally of Danish water knowledge,
promoting cooperation in research, development and
innovation among stakeholder in the Danish water sector
and by contributing to the visibility of the Danish water
efforts as a mark of quality and efficiency.

Stand 140

Danish Water Technology Group


Contact: Ilse Korsvang
Glarmestervej 20A
Silkeborg, Jutland 8600. Denmark
Phone: +45 86 81 38 88
Fax: +45 86 81 31 14
Web address: www.dk-water.com
General Email: ilse.korsvang@dk-export.dk
Denmark has been developing sustainable, energy efficient
solutions for many years, with the main focus on combining
quality, energy efficiency and cost effectiveness. This makes
Danish suppliers valuable partners that offer you a high level
of know-how and experience. The Danish Water Technology
Group gathers these suppliers in a large network, making it
your shortcut to suppliers with lots of know-how. The Danish
suppliers operate within all facets of the water industry,
whether it is ground water, drinking water, process water,
wastewater, urban water issues etc.
Meet the Danish suppliers at booth no. 140.

Stand 250

De Watergroep
Contact:
Address: Vooruitgangstraat 189
1030 BRUSSELS. BELGIUM
Phone: + 32 2 238 94 11
Fax: + 32 2 230 97 98
Web address: www.dewatergroep.be
General Email: info@dewatergroep.be

De Watergroep is the largest water company in


Flanders (Belgium). We are an autonomous Flemish
water company offering products and services for the
complete water chain. We deliver drinking water to 2.9
million customers in 171 towns via a network of 31,000
kilometres of pipelines. Our total water production
amounts to 122.5 million m of water in 2013. In addition,
we apply a sustainable recycling approach for an
economically and ecologically sound management of all
links in the water chain: rainwater, ground and surface
water, drinking water, process water and wastewater.
We make water with a custom-made service.
Today, for tomorrows generation.

Stand 140

DHI (EcoWater)
Contact: Palle Lindgaard-Joergensen
Agern Alle 5
Hoersholm, 2970. Denmark
Phone: +4545169200
Web address: www.dhigroup.com
General Email: dhi@dhigroup.com
EcoWater is a Research Project supported through the
7th Framework Programme of the European Commission.
It aims at the development of meso-level eco-efficiency
indicators for technology assessment, through a systems
approach, and is implemented by a Consortium of 10
Institutes and Universities across Europe.
EcoWater will advance the current state-of-the-art
through:
The development of a methodological approach for ecoefficiency assessment
The elaboration of economic assessments across
service systems
The application of Value Chain Analysis tools, to
consider interactions among actors
The integration of all relevant resources, tools, results
and data into a toolbox for technology benchmarking, in
order to foster further applications.

Stand 288

DouroECI
Contact: Joaquim Beleza
Rua Esteiro Campanha 82,
Porto, Porto 4300-174. Portugal
Phone: + 351226101925
Web address: http://www.douroeci.com
General Email: douroeci@douroeci.com
Engineering, Consultancy, Innovation
Solving problems, finding solutions, thinking, developing
and implementing projects.
We operate throughout the water cycle and every project
we are associated with we promote the integrated vision
we have: on systems, entities and actors involved.
We have a clear focus on the end products that we
deliver, with an emphasis on what we know, in the state
of the art, in tailored solutions to end customers and
knowledge of the market, at all levels.

Stand 285

DCHTING PUMPEN Maschinenfabrik


& Co. KG
Contact: Michael Gabor
Wilhelm-Dchting-Strae 22
Witten, NRW 58453. Germany
Phone: +49 2302 969 0
Fax: +49 2302 690 443
Web address: www.DUECHTING.com
General Email: info@duechting.com
DCHTING PUMPEN Quality through experience
made in Germany
DCHTING PUMPEN, a privately owned company with
more than 75 years of experience in the field of advanced,
wear and corrosion resistant centrifugal pumps for use in
Flue Gas Desulphurisation (FGD), Seawater Desalination
Reverse Osmosis (SWRO), Mining and Chemical
Industry.
Our motto Quality Through Experience forms the basis
of our sophisticated product range. The capabilities of
our company in the construction, manufacturing, testing,
and commissioning of our products is highly respected
in the industries we serve. Our reputation is based on

a sustainable company policy, focusing on efficiency,


reliability, innovation, and through customer after-salesservice.

Stand 216

Efacec
Contact: Jose Silva
Rua Engenheiro Frederico Ulrich, AP. 3078
Moreira da Maia, Maia, Porto 4471-907. Portugal
Phone: +351229402000
Web address: www.efacec.com
General Email: comunicacao@efacec.com
Turnkey solutions for: Water, Solid Waste, Telecontrol and
Air (Emissions treatment / Climatization for Industry and
Services).

Stand 130

Emerson Process Management


Contact: Maurizio DE Francesco
Neonstraat 1
Ede, Gelderland 6718WX. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 318 495 555
Web address: www.emersonprocess.com
General Email: Flow.Europe@Emerson.com
Emerson Process Management, an Emerson business,
is a leading global supplier of products, services and
solutions that measure, analyse, control, automate
and improve process related operations across many
industries. Helping process industries better manage
plants through intelligent control systems and software,
measurement instruments, valves, and industry expertise.
The Company combines superior products and
technology with industry-specific engineering, consulting,
project management and maintenance services. Its
brands include PlantWeb, Syncade, DeltaV, Fisher,
Micro Motion, Rosemount, Daniel, Ovation and
AMS Suite.

Stand 262

EPAL - Empresa Portuguesa das guas


Livres, SA
Contact: Jos Sardinha
Av. da Liberdade, 24
1250-144, Lisboa. Portugal
Phone: : +351 213 251 106
Web address: http://www.epal.pt
General Email: epal@epal.pt
EPAL, the oldest and largest water supply company in
Portugal, supplies water to around three million people
and provides drinking water to Lisbons half a million
inhabitants. Known as a reference company in Portugal,
EPAL has developed modern management strategies
to improve overall company efficiency and attain
sustainable management from social, environmental and
economic perspectives. EPAL has achieved remarkable
improvements as regards water losses reduction, putting
Lisbon at the top of the global efficiency map. EPAL
continuously presents new products and services - to
either other water supply companies or consumers aiming to optimize services and further reduce costs.

Stand 213

EPAL - Empresa Pblica de gua de Luanda


Contact: Natlia Zongo
Rua Frederico Engels 3
Luanda, Luanda 1387. Angola
Phone: + 244222020166
Web address:
General Email:
EPAL-E.P. Angola public water company, whos social
object is carrying out studies, projects, capture,
production, distribution and sales of systems for drinking
water.
EPAL-E.P. guides its policies for an efficient and effective
public management and safeguarding of the public
interest. The last years Angola has diminished the sharp
deficit of drinking water supply, with the implementation
of new systems of water treatment and distribution, in the
provincial capitals, with emphasis for the project gua
para Todos. Simultaneously the two largest projects in
Sub-Saharan Africa-Bita and Quilonga, are ongoing.

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107

Twitter: @acciona_en

www.acciona.com

Exhibitor profiles
Stand 292

ERSAR - Entidade Reguladora dos


Servios de guas e Resduos / The Water
and Waste Services Regulation Authority
Contact: Mrio Caneira
Centro Empresarial Torres de Lisboa, Rua Toms da
Fonseca Torre G - 8.
Lisbon, Lisbon 1600-209. Portugal
Phone: +351210052200
Fax: +351210052259
Web address: www.ersar.pt
General Email: geral@ersar.pt
ERSAR - The Water and Waste Services Regulation
Authority, is in charge of regulating public water supply
services, urban wastewater management services and
solid waste management services in Portugal (mainland).
ERSAR is also the national authority for drinking water
quality. ERSAR developed its own regulatory model
based on an integrated approach to regulation, which
focuses on the structural regulation of the sector, on
the regulation of operators behaviour and in additional
regulatory activities. ERSARs financing comes from
regulation fees and drinking water control fees collected
from over 500 operators. Almost 70 people work at
ERSAR.

Stand 114

Esri
Contact: Lori Armstrong
380 New York St.
Redlands, CA 92373. United States
Phone: +1 909-793-2853
Web address: www.esri.com/water
General Email: larmstrong@esri.com
Company profile / products and services: Water,
wastewater, and storm water utilities around the world
use the Esri platform to manage infrastructure and assets,
improving planning, customer care, and administrative
processes. A location-based approach to managing your
enterprise helps you meet operational challenges.
Esris ArcGIS provides a common platform for accessing
all your business data, updating your network information,
integrating work orders, finding customer information or
preparing a report. Visualization and mapping features
give you an overall, connected view of your network in
relation to your customers and surrounding infrastructure.
Find out more by visiting www.esri.com/water, Contact
Esri staff iswater@esri.com

Phone: +31 70 3490 859


Web address: www.waterbenchmark.org
General Email: info@waterbenchmark.org
EBC (European Benchmarking Cooperation) Foundation
is a not-for-profit partnership of water utility associations
that offer an international benchmarking programme to
improve water services by learning from each other. EBC
annually organises benchmarking exercises for utilities
from all over Europe and beyond. Also, it facilitates
national/regional benchmarking programmes in close
collaboration with national water utility associations
through a so-called hub-structure. EBC welcomes visitors
at its meeting point in the Dutch country pavilion at the
IWA World Water Exhibition.

Stand 345

European Desalination Society


Contact: Miriam Balaban
University Campus Bio-Medico of Rome, Faculty of
Engineering
Via Alvaro del Portillo, 21
Rome, 00128. Italy
Phone: +39 348 88 48 406
Web address: www.edsoc.com
General Email: balabanmiriam@gmail.com

Stand 155

European Investment Bank


Contact: Hellen Meijer
98-100 Blvd Konrad Adenauer, Luxembourg,
Luxembourg L-2950 Luxembourg
Phone: +352 4379 1
Web address: www.eib.org
General Email: events@eib.org
The European Investment Bank is the European Unions
bank. As the worlds largest multilateral borrower and
lender by volume, the EIB provides finance and expertise
for sound and sustainable investment projects in Europe
and in emerging and developing regions across the globe.
In 2013, the EIB invested EUR 19bn in Climate Action
and over the period 2009-2013, the Bank invested
over EUR 18bn in water projects across the world. The
EIB is the largest source of loan finance for the global
water sector, supporting projects from drinking water to
sanitation and wastewater treatment, to flood and drought
risk management.

Estec - Estudos e Tecnologias da


Informao
Contact: Alexandre Pedro
Rua Terra das Vinhas, Quinta de Pises
Albarraque, Cacem 2736-902. Portugal
Phone: +351-219112700
Web address: www.estec.pt
General Email: estec@estec.pt
Estec is a company from the IT sector founded more than
20 years ago, and specializes in developing solutions for
the Water Industry.
Products:
WaterNet - Water Networks Management Software
(SCADA)
WaterNet Security Active Surveillance & Video
Monitoring Security Systems for Water Networks
Intelligent Leak Management - Leak Detection and
Management Software
Intelligent Water Metering Water (Utilities) Metering
Software
Services:
Deployment of Water Management Software
SCADA, Automation and Communication Systems
Software and Hardware Integration (M2M)
Software Development
Engineering Services

Stand 243

European Benchmarking Cooperation


Contact: Dieneke Krijbolder
c/- Bezuidenhoutseweg 12
The Hague, Zuid-Holland 2594 AV. The Netherlands

Stand 139

Federation of Japan Water Industries Inc


Contact: Ikuo Mitake
4-8-9 Kudan Minami, Chiyoda-ku
102-0074 Tokyo. Japan
Phone: +81-3-3264-2307
Web address: www.suidanren.or.jp
General Email: kokusai@jwwa.or.jp
Since its foundation in 1966, the Federation of Japan
Water Industries, Inc., has been contributed continuous
development of waterworks enterprise as the sole
representative organ of waterworks, industrial water
supply and sewerage industries at national level.

Stand 131

Festo AG & Co. KG


Contact: Armin Mller
Ruiterstr. 82
Esslingen, Baden-Wrttemberg 73734, Germany
Phone: +49 711 347 -0
Web address: www.festo.com/water
General Email: info@de.festo.com
Festo: Partner for water technology
Festo is a leading worldwide supplier of automation
technology and industrial training and education
programs. The Festo Group achieves sales revenues
of around 2.3 billion in its fiscal year 2013 and with
16,500 employees is represented worldwide in roughly
250 locations. Whether for municipal or industrial,
water or wastewater treatment: Festo offers individual
automation solutions from concept creation to smooth
operation. Powerful, economical and reliable solutions
from a single source. Ranging from actuator technology
to the field level, as individual components or as
preassembled customised system and solution, altogether
more intelligent automation.

Stand 250

Stand 147
Stand 125

by Global Water Intelligence magazine, and serves


23.5 million people. The company currently operates in
1,100 cities in 19 countries: Spain, Italy, Portugal, Czech
Republic, Poland, Romania, Montenegro, Bosnia, Mexico,
Peru, Chile, Uruguay, Algeria, Egypt, UAE, Saudi Arabia,
South Africa, Tunisia and China. In 2013, the company
obtained revenues of 900 million euro and had a backlog
of over 14 billion euro.

FAST Spa
Contact: Emilio Benati
Via Talete 2/4
Rubiera, Reggio Emilia 42048. Italy
Phone: +39 0522 622411
Fax: +39 0522 627194
Web address: http://www.fastautomation.it
General Email: info@fastautomation.it
FAST SpA, thanks to experience and know-how gained
in thirty years of activity, proposes a complete catalogue
of solutions and products able to meet every automation
and remote control requirement, from RTU to SCADA
systems.
In particular, the company developed an innovative
solution to adjust automatically the pressure depending
on changes in the water distribution system. The
advanced pressure control system operates in real
time both pumps and PRVs to minimise pressure and
to monitor leakage level and occurrence of pressure
transients. This solution is the best practice for advanced
pressure management as recommended by IWA practical
approach.

Stand 223

Flanders Knowledge Center Water


Contact: Stphanie De Man
Graaf Karel de Goedelaan 34
Kortrijk, West-Flanders 8500. Belgium
Phone: (+32) 56-24 12 61
Fax: (+32) 56-24 12 80
Web address: www.vlakwa.be
General Email: info@vlakwa.be
Providing Flanders with sufficient water of good quality
at a reasonable price is a major challenge. The key to
success is cooperation between enterprises, researchers
and government. The Flanders Knowledge Center
Water (Vlakwa) is the driving force. As not-for-profit
governmental organization, Valqua is an independent link
in the integrated water cycle.

Stand 347

FORMATO VERDE
Contact: Miguel Laranjo
Rua S. Roque da Lameira, 2129
Porto, Porto 4350-317. Portugal
Phone: +351 229352321
Fax: +351 229352322
Web address: www.formatoverde.pt
General Email: info@formatoverde.pt

FCC Aqualia
Contact: Isabel Plaza
Avda. Del Camino de Santiago, 40
28050 Madrid, Spain
Phone: + 34 91 757 38 25/6
Web address: www.aqualia.es
General e-mail: iplazag@fcc.es

Formato Verde is a European company, with headquarters


in Portugal, which focuses its activity on Education for
Sustainability. Aspiring to contribute to sustainable
development, Formato Verde develops a wide range of
communication, design and multimedia services and
products.

FCC Aqualia is the water management subsidiary of FCC,


one of Europes leading citizen services companies. It is
the third-largest water company in Europe and the sixth
largest in the world, according to the most recent ranking

Leader in content creation and in raising awareness for


sustainability, Formato Verde has expertise in areas such
as consulting, education, design, illustration, development
of specialized content, film production and multimedia.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

109

Exhibitor profiles
The company has a creative and multidisciplinary team
committed to promote a conscious behavior in the
community, and determined to meet the needs of clients
and partners.

Stand

FREZITE ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT


Contact Eduardo Von Hafe
Rua do Vau, 323, Apartado 134
Trofa, Porto 4786-909. Portugal
Phone: +351 252 400 758
Fax: +351 252 401 014
Web address: www.energia.frezite.com
General Email: energia@frezite.com
FREZITE - ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT is an
innovative company for engineered stand alone
solutions. We develop Solar Pumping Systems, Energy
Management Controls, Solar Lighting, Energy Portable
Units, Solar Gates and Fencing. Aware of the importance
of finding environmental solutions, Frezite products
provides autonomy with clean and renewable energy
sources.
Thinking OFF-GRID.

Stand 284

GEA Westfalia Separator Group GmbH


Contact: Joost Vliegen
Werner-Habig-Str.1
Oelde, NRW 59302. Germany
Phone: +49 2522 77 2380
Web address: www.gea.com
General Email: joost.vliegen@gea.com
GEA Westfalia Separator Group is a company of GEA
Group Aktiengesellschaft, which is a leading systems
provider worldwide for food processing industry and a
wide range of other process industries. GEA Westfalia
Separator Group, founded in 1893, is technology leader
and, backed up by 50 sales and service companies, offers
cutting-edge mechanical separation technology by means
of separators and decanters. The value-adding solutions
for the food and beverage industry, renewable resources,
the marine, oil & gas, energy sectors as well as chemicals,
pharmaceuticals and environmental technology are setting
standards in process efficiency and availability.

Stand 229

German Water Partnership


Contact: Claudia Iberle
Reinhardtstr. 32
Berlin, Berlin 10115. Germany
Phone: +49 30 3001991220
Fax: +49 30 3001993220
Web address: www.germanwaterpartnership.de
General Email: info@germanwaterpartnership.de
German Water Partnership is a joint initiative of
approximately 350 members from the German private
and public sectors. Combining commercial enterprises,
government and non-government organisations, scientific
institutions and water-related associations more than
25000 employees are active in more than 80 countries.
The fundamental aim of the network is to make the
outstanding German engineering, know-how and
experience in the water sector easily available to partners
and clients all over the world, in order to solve water
related problems and challenges, using sustainable
solutions and German innovative technologies. We stand
for Solutions you can trust. and quality services Made
in Germany.

Stand 202

Global Water Intelligence


Contact - Jon Maney
Suite C, Kingsmead House, Oxpens Road,
Oxford OX1 1XX United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 1865 204208
Fax: +44 (0) 186 204209
Web address: www.globalwaterintel.com
General Email: el@globalwaterintel.com
Global Water Intelligence publishes newsletters and
reports providing analysis and strategic data on the
international water market. Its flagship publication, the

110

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

monthly industry journal Global Water Intelligence (GWI),


has established itself as the market-leading publication
for developers, suppliers, financiers, governments,
utilities and municipalities seeking information and
analysis on water projects with an element of private
sector participation. If you want to find out more about
GWI products visit www.globalwaterintel.com. You can
sign-up for a FREE trial to Global Water Intelligence,
Water Desalination Report (www.desalination.com/wdr)
or DesalData (www.desaldata.com) and read executive
summaries of our latest reports.

Stand 140

Grundfos Holding A/S


Contact: Marie Hulgaard
Poul Due Jensens Vej 7
Bjerringbro, Jutland 8850. Denmark
Phone: +45 87 50 14 00
Web address: www.grundfos.com
General Email: info@grundfos.com
Grundfos is the worlds largest pump manufacturer,
founded in Denmark, with about 18,000 employees
globally. Grundfos Water Utility is a full-range supplier of
optimised water solutions with modular, energy-efficient
and intelligent products and services that can be tailored
and optimised for any given water utility application
using tried and tested technologies. Featured products/
solutions are SMART digital dosing, Demand Driven
Distribution and LifeLink sustainable water solutions.

Stand 241

GRUP ROMET
Contact: Toma Constantin
Sos Brailei nr 15
Buzau, Buzau 120118. Romania
Phone: +40 238-710 301
Fax: +40 238-710 300
Web address: www.romet.ro
General Email: romet@romet.ro
GRUP ROMET is one of the big Romanian suppliers for
water industry (water treatment equipment,
waste water equipment, hydrants, pumps, valves,
dismantling joints, couplings, pipes) for agriculture
(complete irrigation solutions: sprinkler irrigation
equipment, hose reel travelers, center pivots and lateral
move machines, drip irrigation equipment) GRUP ROMET
also supplies solar panels, radiant heating systems,
firefighting equipment, steel works and cast iron products
With capabilities over 150,000 sqm area and more than
800 employees, GRUP ROMET is one of the national
market leaders in the industrial fields the company acts.

Exhibitor profiles
PERMANENT Biofilm & Scale removal without chemicals,
in cooling towers, heat exchangers, tubes, pipes, tanks,
filters for industry, agriculture, aquaculture etc.
Prevention of growth on ship-hulls, tanks, boxcoolers,
propellers etc.

Stand 140

Hexa-Cover A/S
Contact: Soeren Madsen
Vilhelmsborgvej 5
Thisted, Jutland 7700. Denmark
Phone: +45 96 17 78 00
Fax: +45 97 91 26 13
Web address: www.hexa-cover.com
General Email: info@hexa-cover.com
The Hexa-Cover Floating Cover is perfect on almost any
form of fluid surface, and is used on almost all forms of
basins, lagoons, reservoirs, containers, ponds, tanks. HexaCover Floating Cover is the ideal solution for eliminating
such things as Emission, Evaporation, Organic growth,
Odor, UV-effect and Heat loss.
Hexa-Cover Floating Cover ensures:
Up to 99,9% coverage of the surface,
Up to 95% reduction of evaporation from water surface
Up to 95% stable, constant reduction of emission
Up to 90% stable and constant reduction of odors
Noticeable reduction in organic growth (algae, weeds etc)
Noticeable reduction in heat loss

Gutermann
Contact: Uri Gutermann
Sihlbruggstrasse 140
Baar, ZG 6340. Switzerland
Phone: +41417606033
Web address: www.gutermann-water.com
General Email: info@gutermann-water.com
GUTERMANN is a global technology leader and
innovator in intelligent water loss management products
and solutions. We cover the full range of conventional
acoustic leak detection technology and are the only
provider of permanent, fully automatic, correlating network
monitoring systems enabling utilities to accurately
pinpoint leaks within moments from their first alarm.
Established in 1948, the company has always been at the
forefront of new technological developments in the leak
detection industry. GUTERMANN is privately owned, with
headquarters in Baar, Switzerland, and regional offices in
Germany, France, UK, Canada, USA, Mexico, Peru, UAE,
Malaysia and Australia.

Stand 250

Harsonic bvba
Beeldstraat 79,
Sint Niklaas 9100, Antwerpen. Belgium
Phone: +32 37 66 30 05
Fax: +32 37 66 52 87
Web address: www.harsonic.com
General Email: info@harsonic.com

Stand 270

ISIFLO IBERICA
Contact - Jesus Maestro
C/ Bronce, 12 Nave A P.I Aimyr
San Martin de la Vega, Madrid 28330. Spain
Phone: +34916920553
Web address: www.isiflo.es
General Email: jmaestro@isiflo.es
Raufoss Water & Gas AS holds the trademark ISIFLO
- one of the leading brands on the European market for
water and gas distribution. The companys main products
are ISIFLO:
COMPOSITE FITTINGS
DUCTIL IRON
BRASS PRODUCTS

Stand 294

INDAQUA
Contact: Ana Baldaia
Joaquim Neves dos Santos n 122
4450-394 Matosinhos. Portugal
Phone: +3519214320840
Web address: www.indaqua.pt
General Email: indaqua@indaqua.pt
INDAQUA Industry and water management, SA is
a Portuguese company, wholly owned by Portuguese
shareholders and that the result of the strategic partnership
for the water sector between some large national economic
groups with skills in different areas and with great
international presence. Created to operate, essentially
within the municipal concessions and public-private
partnerships (PPPs), the Indaqua represents a clear bet in
the environmental sector and in managing the water cycle,
integrating capture and eater treatment, transportation and
distribution, collection and wastewater treatment.

Stand 331
Stand 111

changes in temperature and the hydrological regime.


This situation has driven the countrys leading water
knowledge centres, based in world-class universities, to
develop expertise and solutions to water management
challenges that are counted among the most innovative in
the world. These Australian universities and centres have
come together to showcase the latest research and multidisciplinary strategies in all aspects of water conservation,
including:
water recycling to catchment and ecosystem health
restoration
the design of smart water technologies
water sensitive urban design
groundwater management
integrated water management
the linking of new knowledge to new policy development.

Indstria e Ambiente
Contact - Vera Oliveira
Praa da Corujeira, 38
Oporto, Oporto 4300-144, Portugal
Phone: +351 22 589 96 25
Web address: www.industriaeambiente.pt
General Email: industriaeambiente@engenhoemedia.pt
Indstria e Ambiente is the only Portuguese technical
magazine of engineering and management of the
environment. Completing 20 years in the market, it is
assumed as a reference publication between managers
and technicians of private and public business sectors,
establishing the connection between university, industry
and society. The contents of the Indstria e Ambiente are
advised and reviewed by a group of renowned experts
in various fields of environment and related areas, who
integrate the Consultative Council, headed by Director Prof.
Dr. Antnio Guerreiro de Brito.

Stand 252

International WaterCentre
Contact: Mark Pascoe
333 Ann Street, Level 16
QLD Brisbane. Australia
Phone: +61 7 3014 0200
Web address: www.watercentre.org
General Email: admin@watercentre.org
WATER KNOWLEDGE CENTRES IN AUSTRALIA
As the driest inhabited continent on earth, Australia is
a land whose water resources are highly susceptible to

Stand 102

Italmatch Chemicals
Contact: Filip Dutoy
Parc Scienifique Fleming, Rue Laid Burniat 3
Louvain-la-Neuve, Brabant Wallon 1348. Belgium
Phone: +32476205068
Web address: www.dequest.com
General Email: f.dutoy@italmatchgroup.com
The Dequest Business is offering specialty additives to
meet the needs of these industries that deal with water
management or deal with processes or applications
where water plays a crucial role. More than 50 years ago,
Dequest pioneered the development of phosphonates.
Dequest phosphonates have been the product of choice
for antiscalants, dispersants, corrosion inhibitors and
chelants in various applications for many years. Today
Dequest offers a broad range of water management
additives including Dequest phosphonates, Dequest
P acrylic / maleic based (co-) polymers, Dequest PB
biological polymers and tailor made products for specific
applications.

Stand 110

Itron
Contact: Lucile Montant
Itron France, 9 Rue Ampere
Mcon, Bourgogne 71000. France
Phone: +33 (0)3 85 29 39 00
Web address: www.itron.com
General Email: Lucile.Montant@itron.com
Itron is a world-leading technology and services company
dedicated to the resourceful use of energy and water.
We provide comprehensive solutions that measure,
manage and analyse energy and water. Our broad product
portfolio includes electricity, gas, water and thermal
energy measurement devices and control technology;
communications systems; software; as well as managed
and consulting services. With thousands of employees
supporting nearly 8,000 customers in more than 100
countries, Itron applies knowledge and technology to
better manage energy and water resources. Together, we
can create a more resourceful world.

Stand IWA

INTERNATIONAL WATER ASSOCIATION


Global Operational Office
New Babylon, Anna van Buerenplein 48, 11th floor
2595 DA The Hague. The Netherlands
Web address: www.iwahq.org
General email: water@iwahq.org

Hosting a series of presentations, events, book launches


and social activities, the IWA stand is the place to meet,
greet and network.

Stand 225

FMBR has been applied in many small towns or rural


areas of China.
Innovation and sustainability have been driving JDL
forward globally.

Janz
Contact: Ana Vinagre
Estarda de Chelas 187
Lisboa, Lisboa 1900-151. Portugal
Phone: +351 218611432
Fax: +351 218687870
Web address: www.resopre.pt
General Email: ana.vinagre@resopre.pt

Stand 343

JANZ, the Portuguese manufacturer of metering solutions


with an unrivalled know-how, uses all its expertise in
the production of water metering technology and the
manufacture of high precision parts. JANZ is a century-old
brand that brings together experience and a commitment
to excellence, investing in differentiation through the
innovation of its products and the quality of its services.
Driven by outstanding quality patterns JANZ notoriety
is a result of its high accuracy in development in all the
products. JANZ: a 100% Portuguese brand with a global
reputation acclaimed in Europe, South America, Africa
and Asia.

The gua&Ambiente magazine is a Portuguese


specialized monthly publication dedicated to the
environment and sustainable economy market, focusing
primarily on economic and business issues. The
information is presented with rigour, independence and
objectivity, in the form of news items, analysis, opinions,
covering breaking news in the environment market,
business affairs, new technology, political decisions and
their economic and business impact and interpreting and
forecasting trends in the respective areas: water, energy,
waste, sustainable economy, eco-economy. With a 15
year track record, gua & Ambiente was recognised in
the market from the outset as a leading publication for
the sector.

Jornal gua & Ambiente


Contact: Joo Belo
Rua da Madalena, n.191 - 4 andar
Lisboa, Lisboa 1100-319. Portugal
Phone: +351 21 880 61 20
Web address: www.ambienteonline.pt
General Email: marketing@about.pt

Stand 139

Japan Sewage Works Association


Contact: Akira Katagiri
Uchikanda Suisui Bldg. 2-10-12 Uchikanda, Chiyoda-ku
102-0074 Tokyo. Japan
Web address: www.jswa.jp/en/jswa-en/
General Email: kokusai@ngsk.or.jp
Japan Sewage Works Association was established in
1964. JSWA is an organization of 1469 municipalities
members and around 1,000 private companies. The
mission of JSWA is to represent the interests of Local
Governments in wastewater management. For this
purpose, JSWA act as spokesperson and custodian of
knowledge networking by carrying out a wide range of
activities.

Stand 139

Japan Water Works Association


Contact: Ikuo Mitake
4-8-9 Kudan-Minami Chiyoda-ku
102-0074 Tokyo. Japan
Web address: www.jwwa.or.jp
General Email: jnc@jwwa.o.jp
Japan Water Works Association(JWWA), a Public Interest
Incorporated Association, was established on May 12th,
1932 with the aim of introducing water supply facilities
and developing water supply technologies in Japan.
JWWAs main activities include research and study of
water supply management, technologies and water quality.
JWWA also provides various service such as inspection
and certification of water related products and support
water utilities. Those activities are quite essential for
peoples daily life as well as social and economic activities
in Japan.

Stand 142

Jiangxi JDL Environmental Protection Co.,


Ltd.
Contact: Shelley Huang
459 Industrial Road, Changleng Overseas Investment
Zone
Nanchang, Jiangxi 330100. China
Phone: +86-755-86325385
Fax: +86-755-86325385
Web address: www.jdlhb.com
General Email: 997184853@jdlhb.com
JDL Environmental Protection Co., Ltd (JDL), a leading
Chinese developer and manufacturer specialized in
systematic equipment of wastewater treatment and
reuse, offers exceptional FMBR and MRHM systems for
customers all over the world.
FMBR perfectly integrates membranes and multiple
bio-processes to remove BOD, Nitrogen and Phosphor
synergistically and simultaneously from sewage without
discharge of excess organic-sludge; without workers on
duty for daily operation. For low-cost and high-efficiency,

Stand 140

Kamstrup
Contact: Ramn Lpez Faras
Nez de Balboa, 29
Madrid, Madrid ES-28001. Spain
Phone: +34 914 35 90 34
Web address: www.kamstrup.com
General Email: info@kamstrup.es
Kamstrup serves utilities with long-term stable technology
that enables simple and cost effective metering, collection
and management of energy and water consumption data.
Kamstrup provides a full range of metering solutions
for heat, cooling, electricity and water. Solutions
include smart grid applications, intelligent energy and
water meters, communication infrastructure for smart
metering and data management systems. Kamstrup is
a global player with a strong international position and
representations in more than 50 countries. Headquartered
in Skanderborg, Denmark, Kamstrup employs 800 people.

Stand 127

KERN Elektronik AG
Contact: Beat Gilgen
Kammistrasse 11
Interlaken, BE 3800. Switzerland
Phone: +41 33 823 74 04
Web address: www.hydrometrie.ch
General Email: info@hydrometrie.ch
Development and production of transit-time water velocity
measuring equipment for open channels and rivers, data
loggers specialised for hydrometric in remote areas with
GSM or satellite data communication. Server-based or
single user data base software for hydrometry.

Stand 243

Kiwa NV
Contact: George Mentjox
Sir Winston Churchill-laan 273
Rijswijk ZH, 2288EA. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 70 4144400
Web address: www.1kiwa.com
General Email: info@kiwa.nl
Established by the Dutch Water Works Kiwa since
1948 grew out in to an independent international
quality authority, permanently occupied with improving
processes, products, employees and organisations. We
offer services in the fields of inspection and certification,
benchmarking, asset performances management, training,
inspection, research and technological know-how. Kiwa
has offices in over 20 countries and offers its services
world wide.

Join the conversation on Twitter: @iwa2014lisbon #iwa2014lisbon

www.iwa2014lisbon.org

111

Exhibitor profiles
Stand 139

KUBOTA Corporation
Contact: Takao Yamanaka
1-3, Kyobashi 2-Chome, Chuo-ku
104-8307 Tokyo
Japan
Phone: +81-3-3245-3150
Web address: www.kubota.co.jp
General Email: takao.yamanaka@kubota.com
Food, water and the environment are indispensable for
human beings. The KUBOTA Group continues to support
the future of the earth and humanity by contributing
products that help the abundant and stable production
of food, help supply and restore reliable water, and
help create a comfortable living environment through its
superior products, technologies and services.

Stand 128 A

Likuid Nanotek S.L.


Contact: Elena Meabe
Paseo Mikeletegi 71-planta 1, Parque Tecnolgico de
San Sebastin
Donostia-San Sebastin, Guipzcoa 20009. Spain
Phone: + 34943223841
Web address: www.likuidnanotek.com
General Email: info@likuidnanotek.com
Likuid is a tech company that supplies ceramic
membranes and filtration solutions for water, energy and
industrial applications. Likuid manufactures inorganic
membranes with the best technology available. Based
on that, the company designs and develops cartridges,
modules and complete filtration solutions. Filtration
systems for MBRs, tertiary filtration, RO pre-treatment,
oily wastewater treatment, produced water, etc.

Stand 217

KWR
Contact: Hans Ruijgers
Nieuwegein, Utrecht 3430 BB. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 30 6069 610
Web address: www.kwrwater.nl
General Email:communicatie@kwrwater.nl
As an internationally renowned research centre, KWR
contributes with its applied research to a sustainable
water cycle and to the availability of safe and clean
drinking water. Bridging science to practice is KWRs
mission. Our staff of 170 work on innovative projects in
the Netherlands and, increasingly, elsewhere in Europe. In
co-makership with clients, they create integrated solutions
that, where possible, are optimised by a multidisciplinary
approach. KWRs areas of expertise are divided into
three knowledge groups: Water Quality & Health, Water
Systems & Technology, and Knowledge Management.
Meeting the water sectors challenges demands that a
wide variety of stakeholders work together. They need to
collaborate and create the critical mass required to build
the scientific expertise needed for water cycle issues,
and to achieve commitment in addressing contemporary
water challenges. Our ultimate goal naturally is to
develop practical solutions based on solid science. KWR:
Bridging science to practice.

Stand 252

Leighton Contractors
Contact: Rob Evans
Level 8, Tower 1, 495 Victoria Avenue
Chatswood, 2067 Sydney. Australia
Phone: +61 2 8668 6000
Web address: www.leightoncontractors.com.au
General Email: info@leicon.com.au
Leighton Contractors offers integrated solutions in water
management across the entire water cycle. We have
proven expertise in all types of assets from complex
treatment plants to storage, pipelines, networks and
capital works programs. Every aspect of our delivery is
focused on achieving first-class outcomes for our clients
including smart planning, fast-track construction, best
practice safety and a seamless transition to operation.

Stand 243

LG Sound BV
Contact: Anne Gierveld
Platinastraat 7
Zoetermeer, Zuid-Holland 2718 SZ. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 (0) 70-7709030
Web address: www.lgsonic.com/
General Email: info@lgsonic.com
Since 1999, LG Sound has been a leading international
manufacturer of algae control systems. Our products
provide an environmental-friendly solution to effectively
control algae in lakes, reservoirs, treatment plants and
other applications. Over the last decade, more than
10.000 LG Sonic products have been successfully
installed in 52 different countries. LG Sound manages
to keep at the edge of the market by holding worldwide
approved certificates, patents and know-how for algae
and biofilm control, ultrasonic technology and continuous
monitoring under the trademark LG Sonic

112

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Exhibitor profiles
Stand 229

Messe Berlin GmbH / WASSER BERLIN


INTERNATIONAL
Contact: Cornelia Wolff von der Sahl
Messedamm 22
Berlin, Berlin 14055. Germany
Phone: +49 30 3038 2085
Web address: http://www.wasser-berlin.de
General Email: wasser@messe-berlin.de
WASSER BERLIN INTERNATIONAL is a capital goods
trade fair and congress with a clearly defined profile and
focus on water and wastewater, which is conducted every
two years in the German capital by Messe Berlin. The
integrated congress and trade fair provides a coherent
answer to the technically advanced exhibition themes
in the face of the highly dynamic market development.
Products and services that require explanation are
presented in line with industry standards and positioned
in a competitive environment. The next event will be taking
place March 24-27, 2015.

Stand

Masdar
Contact: Hoda Fahmy
P.O. Box 54115
Abu Dhabi. United Arab Emirates
Phone: +971 2 653 333
Web address: www.masdar.ae
General Email: hfahmy@masdar.ae
Masdar a wholly owned subsidiary of the Mubadala
Development Company was launched by the
government of Abu Dhabi in April 2006 with the mandate
to become a world leader in the renewables and
clean technology sector. A wide ranging, multifaceted
initiative, Masdar integrates the full renewable and clean
technology life-cycle from research to commercial
deployment with the aim of creating viable alternative
energy solutions. Masdar provides a platform for the
development of renewable energy and low-carbon
technologies at a global level while creating a new clean
energy growth-generating sector in the Emirate. Masdar
Special Projects delivers renewable energy and clean
technology projects to remote locations where it is
difficult to operate.
Spanning the globe from Africa to the Pacific Islands
Masdar Special Projects has a broad portfolio that
includes renewable energy, water technology, sustainable
agriculture and desalination projects. Clients include
governments, non-profits, aid programs, military, NGOs,
private companies and individuals. The team is comprised
of problem-solvers and project managers who are
experienced in executing tailored programs that are
sustainable and economically viable.

Stand PIA

Maynilad Water Services, Inc. (Maynilad)


MWSS Complex, Katipunan Avenue
Balara, Quezon City 1105. Philippines
Phone: +632 981-3451
Fax: +632 981-3452
Web address: www.mayniladwater.com.ph
Maynilad Water Services, Inc. (Maynilad) is the water
and wastewater services provider for the 17 cities and
municipalities that comprise the West Zone of the Greater
Metro Manila area. The West Zone has a land area of
540 km2 and a population density of 17,735 per km or
5,358% more than the Philippine population density of
331 per km.

Stand 109

MDPI
Contact: Alexander Thiesen
Klybeckstrasse 64
Basel, Switzerland 4057. Switzerland
Phone: +41 61 683 77 34
Web address: www.mdpi.com
General Email: support@mdpi.com
MDPI.com is a platform for peer-reviewed, scientific
open-access journals operated by MDPI AG Basel,
Switzerland. Journals published by MDPI include the
International Journal of Environmental Research and
Public Health (Impact Factor 1.998), Marine Drugs
(Impact Factor 3.978), and Molecules (Impact Factor
2.428)

Stand 139

Stand 243

Stand 252

Stand 118

The Netherlands Water Partnership (NWP) is your


gateway to the Dutch Water Sector and your point of
information when looking for water-related solutions from
the Netherlands. The Netherlands Water Partnership
is your connection to the right water expertise in the
Netherlands, whether this concerns technological,
organizational, financial or environmental questions in
relation to water. Expertise in the entire water chain: from
source to all possible water-users, from use to recycling
and re-use, from solutions at sea to remote sensing from
space. Visit www.dutchwatersector.com and www.nwp.nl

Phoslock Water Solutions Ltd is an Australian company


that manufactures and sells Phoslock a modified
bentonite clay developed by the CSIRO of Australia - as
an algal prevention and phosphorus management tool for
eutrophied waterways. Phoslock removes bio-available
phosphorus from water bodies and forms a reactive
capping on sediments that continues to bind phosphate
released under anoxic conditions. Extensive ecotoxicity
tests have been conducted and approvals to use
Phoslock have been obtained in many countries. Over the
past decade, Phoslock has been applied to more than
200 lakes worldwide with outstanding results.

The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC)


was set up as a multi- sectoral regulator by Government
of Ghana in October, 1997 under the Public Utilities
Regulatory Act, 1997 (Act 538) as part of the utility
sector reform process to regulate the provision of utility
services in the electricity and water sectors. By virtue of
the Energy Commission Act, 1997 (Act 541) PURC also
has regulatory responsibility over aspects of natural gas
services. Under Act 538, PURC is an independent body
and is not subject to the control of any authority in the
performance of its functions.

Netherlands Water Partnership


Contact: Sandra Borst
Bezuidenhoutseweg 2
Den Haag, Zuid-Holland 2594 AV. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 70 3043700
Fax: +31 70 3043737
Web address: www.nwp.nl / www.dutchwatersector.com
General Email: info@nwp.nl

Phoslock Water Solutions Ltd


Contact: Nigel Traill
Suite 403, Level 4, 25 Lime St
Sydney NSW 2000. Australia
Phone: +44-7956-111194
Fax: +49-4205-3175757
Web address: www.phoslock.com.au
General Email: ntraill@phoslock.com.au

METAWATER Co., Ltd.


Contact: Katsuhiro Yambe
JR Kanda Manseibashi Bldg, 1-25, Kanda-sudacho,
Chiyoda-ku
101-0041 Tokyo. Japan
Phone: +81-3-6853-7344
Web address: www.metawater.co.jp/eng/index.html
General Email: yambe-katsuhiro@metawater.co.jp

Stand 252

NICTA
Contact: Carly Perry
Level 5, 13 Garden Street
Eveleigh, NSW 2015. Australia
Phone: +61293762079
Web address: www.nicta.com.au
General Email: Carly.Perry@nicta.com.au

Stand 286

Company profile / products and services: Since


METAWATER was established, its corporate mission
has been to contribute to the solution and maintenance
of safe and stable water environments. METAWATERs
proprietary ceramic membrane filtration system has paved
the way for new-generation solutions that save energy
and space and reduce costs and maintenance expenses
in the water treatment field. METAWATER works closely
with customers to deal directly with the actual conditions
in each locate to solve problems specific to individual
communities to offer solutions not only tailored to unique
requirements, but also designed to meet the trend of the
times demands.

NICTA is Australias Information & Communications


Technology (ICT) Research Centre of Excellence, driving
innovation through high quality research, research training,
commercialisation and contract research. Our research
focuses on use-inspired basic research that benefits
industry, the community and the national interest. Since
NICTAs inception in 2002, NICTA has built strong
research capability in Software Systems, Networks,
Machine Learning, Computer Vision and Optimisation.
Specifically, the Water Pipe Failure Prediction project is
using data-driven techniques to improve prediction of
probability of pipe failures for water utilities. Intelligent
predictions reduce maintenance costs, prioritise capital
spend and minimise disruption to water supplies and the
community.

Piedmont specializes in flexible stainless steel couplings


for corrosive and high-pressure environments. Our
expertise in the water industry has a long history, which
allowed us to develop a unique product for the water
treatment industry. Piedmont flexible couplings are design
to offer safe and reliable service. You can trust the quality
of our products and their efficiency.

Stand 256

Miya
Contact: Noa Uni
Shaul Hamelech 23, Tel Aviv, N/A 6436724, Israel
Phone: +97237779816
Web address: www.miya-water.com
General Email: info@miya-water.com
Miya optimizes water supply in urban water systems
worldwide. It partners with utilities to design and
implement comprehensive technology-based solutions
that significantly improve the clients financial and
operational efficiency, while also enhancing customer
service levels, reducing energy consumption, and
lowering contamination and health risks, to benefit people,
the community and the environment. Miyas solutions
comprise an audit of the citys water system, full project
planning, on site execution, maintenance, and training.
Miya has vast experience in implementing successful
water efficiency projects around the globe.

Stand 248

Naldeo
Contact: Didier CARRON
55 rue de la Villette
LYON cedex 3, 69425. France
Phone: +33472918370
Web address: www.naldeo.com
General Email: siege@naldeo.com
Naldeo is a French leading engineering and consulting
firm serving public and private entities in the fields on
water, environment, energy and waste management.
Naldeo holds experience in very large projects over the
world such as advisory services for EUR 3 billion PPPs
in water operation, technical assistance for wastewater
treatment plants up to 6 million-population equivalent or
non revenue water study in Cape Verde.

Stand 250

Pantarein
Egide Walschaertsstraat 15, unit 18
2800 Mechelen. Belgium
Phone: +32 (0)15 42 47 74
Web address: www.pantarein.be
General Email: info@pantarein.be
Pantarein is a wastewater treatment specialist. We design
and build water treatment systems tailored to companies
needs. We also have extensive experience with the
optimisation and operation of wastewater treatment
plants. Depending on your wishes and needs, we offer all
conceivable services for treating your wastewater, from a
feasibility study through construction and commissioning
of the system. You can also turn to Pantarein for complete
turnkey deliveries.

Stand 241

PET COMUNICATIONS
Contact: Florin Alexe
Strada Caraiman nr 3
Constanta, Constanta 900117. Romania
Phone: +40 241 514416
Fax: +40 241 831066
Web address: www.pet-constanta.ro
General Email: office@pet-constanta.ro
PET COMUNICATIONS is a private company founded in
1994, which is working on medium electrical installation
market, low voltage and automation.Over the years, PET
has developed gradually, today reaching the stage of a
company that offers complete solutions and services for
both civil and industrial segment. The dynamic of our work
illustrates that we have a positive evolution , thing that it
is possible thanks to the values by which we are guiding:
quality and compliance with customer requirements.

Piedmont
Contact: Greg Madden
1048 La Mirada Court
Vista, Ca 92081. United States
Web address: www.piedmontpacific.com
General Email: sales@piedmontpacific.com

Stand 208

POLTANK, SAU
Contact - Carme Marin
Pol.Ind. Pla De Poliger Sud - sector 1
Sant Jaume De Llierca, Girona 17854. Spain
Phone: + 34 7243900
Web address: www.poltank.com
General Email: sales@poltank.com
POLTANK is the manufacturing company of pressure
filters in fiberglass-reinforced polyester (GRP) belonging
to Fluidra group. Thanks to our 4 production facilities
in Spain and one in U.S., we have a large production
capacity to design the filters according to customers
specifications. The filters can be supplied with lateral
system or with nozzle plate. We can produce both
vertical and horizontal equipment of different sizes up to
3,4 m diameter with different connections and internal
components. Our filters can be used for swimming
pools, aquaculture, mining, irrigation, water treatment,
desalination and other industrial applications.

Stand 164

PRotOK
Contact - Biljana Bacun
Ilocka 27, 10000 Zagreb. Croatia
Phone: +385 1 3041772
Fax: +385 1 3041774
Web address: www.protok.com
General Email: info@protok.com
The IT company PRotOK Ltd. has specialized in the
design and implementation of information systems for
municipal infrastructure (mainly water supply and sewage
systems) based on GIS technology. Our staff, civil
engineers, surveying and software engineers, along with
the twenty-year experience, guarantee that our software
solution is approached in the right, interdisciplinary way.
The main activity is the development of own software
applications that meet all needs of utility companies.
As an IT company, PRotOK Ltd. often supports various
design companies in order to help with the realization of
their projects. The most significant references are utility
companies from Zagreb. Dubrovnik, Zadar, Pula in Croatia
and Maribor, Novo mesto, Celje in Slovenia.

PURC - Public Utilities Regulatory


Commission
Contact Deborah Bonney
P.O. Box CT 3095 Cantonments, No. 53 Liberation Road
Ridge, Greater Accra, Accra. Ghana
Phone: +233302244181-3
Fax: +233302244188
Web address: www.purc.com.gh
General Email: info@purcghana.com

Stand 268

Pure Technologies Ltd


Contact: Koen Kinsbergen
300, 705 - 11 Avenue SW
Calgary, AB T2R 0E3. Canada
Phone: + 1-855-280-7873
Web address: www.puretechltd.com
General Email: info@puretechltd.com
Pure Technologies is a world leader in the development
and application of innovative technologies for inspection,
monitoring and management of physical infrastructure.
Pures expertise and technologies are being used
worldwide to help mitigate deterioration and reduce
capital loss. Pures inline leak detection technologies are
capable of identifying small leaks in water and wastewater
pipelines, reducing non-revenue water and preventing
leaks from becoming ruptures. Our Assess and Address
engineering services platform is driven by a suite of
world-renowned technologies that help operators develop
cost-effective management programs. With our riskbased prioritization software PureNet, we can maximize
risk reductions at minimum cost.

Stand 135

PWP - Portuguese Water Partnership


Contact: Ana Carlos
Centro Impresario Torres de Lisboa, Rua Toms da
Fonseca
Torre G, 7. Piso 1600-209 Lisboa. Portugal
Phone: +351210052209
Fax: +351 201 052 259
Web address: www.ppa.pt
General Email: geral@ppa.pt
The Portuguese Water Partnerships mission is to promote
an effective link between professionals, institutions and
companies in order to project the knowledge and skills of
the Portuguese water sector in the world, and to catalyse
opportunities in international markets and in the area of
cooperation within the framework of the development of
sustainable projects in line with Development Goals.
The PWP intends to bring together the efforts of the four
essential components of the water sector: companies,
ranging from design to management, including equipment
suppliers and construction contractors; universities and
research centres; professional associations and NGOs;
and public administration institutions.

Stand 252

Rock Solid Group Pty Ltd


Contact: Martin Roubal
11/7 Commercial Court
Tullamarine, Vic 3043. Australia
Phone: +613 9335 6122
Fax: +61 9335 6733
Web address: www.rocksolidgroup.com
General Email: info@rocksolidgroup.com.au
RSG is a provider of non-destructive testing technology
BEM & WIP. These devices are typically applied to
the condition assessment of pipeline assets as well as
other engineering structures such as tanks, bridges and

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www.iwa2014lisbon.org

113

Exhibitor profiles
tunnels. Besides the development and provision of this
technology and associated software RSG also provides
a full range of engineering consultancy supported by the
condition data collected.

Mannesmann Line Pipe is committed to excellence and a


can-do approach to customer needs and services.

and wastewater disposal systems. SIWA, also based on


TIA and TIP, provides integrated electrical engineering
answers to the challenges posed by water transport and
distribution.

Stand 333

Stand 272

Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu


Contact: Mohammed Al-Qahtani
Yanbu, West Region
P.O. Box 30031 / 51000. Saudi Arabia
Phone: +96613216716
Web address: www.rcyj.gov.sa
General Email: qahtanim@rcyanbu.gov.sa
The Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu was founded
in 1975 by a sound and prudent decision taken by
our wise leadership to construct industrial complexes
throughout the Kingdom Moreover, the Royal Commission
policies is to offer adequate infrastructure and services in
both Industrial Cities (Jubail and Yanbu)
FOR RESULT achieved has led the Saudi leadership to
commit further industrial expansion with the launching
of JUBAIL 2 and YANBU 2 industrial cities expansion
projects. Most recently, a Royal Decree was issued to
the effect of entrusting the Royal Commission with the
management and administration of Ras Al-Khair, MINERAL
Industrial City.

Stand 243

Royal HaskoningDHV
Contact: Annemie Otten
Laan 1914 no 35
Amersfoort, Amersfoort 3818 EX. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 6 15 94 39 64
Web address: www.royalhaskoningdhv.com
General Email: info@rhdhv.com
Royal HaskoningDHV is a leading independent,
international engineering consultancy service and
technology provider with over 130 years of experience.
Our 6,500 professionals deliver their services from 100
offices in 35 countries in the fields of asset management,
aviation, buildings, energy, industry, infrastructure,
maritime, mining, strategy, transport, urban and rural
planning, water management and water technology.
Together with partners and clients we create exciting
solutions in the fields of wastewater, industrial water
treatment, drinking water, water management, and water
in the city. We deliver state of the art, patented and
award winning products and technologies - like Nereda,
Crystalactor and OPIR.

Stand 220

SAINT-GOBAIN PAM
Contact - Christian Schmitt
21 Avenue Camille Cavallier BP129
Pont-a-Mousson, France 54700. France
Phone: + 33 3 83 80 67 89
Fax: + 33 3 83 80 07 14
Web address: www.pamline.fr
General Email: christian.schmitt@saint-gobain.com
Manufacturer of completes systems pipes.

Stand 321

114

Scranton Gillette Communications


Contact: Hal Gillette
3030 W. Salt Creek Lane, #201
Arlington Heights, IL 60005. United States
Phone: +1 847-391-100
Fax: +1 480-949-3044
Web address: www.wwdmag.com
General Email: hgillette@sgcmail.com
Water & Wastes Digest is published monthly exclusively
for 80,000-plus decision makers in the municipal
and industrial water, wastewater and water pollution
industries. Water & Wastes Digest s editorial mission is
to provide unique, comprehensive content that covers
timely news, industry trends, technical solutions and best
practices concerning the supply, collection, treatment and
distribution of drinking water; the collection, treatment and
disposal of wastewater; and hazardous waste pollution
control.

Stand 104

SebaKMT A member of the Megger Group


Contact: Silvia Paulino
Calle Florida 1 Nave 16, Parque Empresarial Villapark
Villaviciosa de Odn, Madrid 28670. Spain
Phone: + 34 916 16 54 96
Web address: www.megger.com
General Email: info.es@megger.com
SebaKMT is the worlds leading developer and
manufacturer of equipment and systems for fault
measurement, diagnosis and location of cables. It is also
well known for its leak location and inspection systems. In
both cases SebaKMT offers portable and vehicle mounted
solutions since 1971. SebaKMT has two production sites
in Baunach and Radeburg, in Germany. There, the highest
quality and liability are offered, with solutions for avoiding
major drinking water losses and for protecting our costly
energetic and water resources.

Stand 229

Sewerin GmbH
Contact: Lutz Hoernschemeyer
Robert-Bosch-Strasse 3
Guetersloh, NRW 33334. Germany
Phone: +495241-3940
Fax: +495241-394444
Web address: www.sewerin.com
General Email: info@sewerin.com
Hermann Sewerin GmbH. Technology leader for gas and
water leak detection equipment. The Sewerin group of
companies is an internationally successful, family owned
group with its headquarters in Gtersloh, Germany. The
core business is the development, production and global
distribution of electronic measuring equipment for the
gas and water supply and distribution industry. A global
distribution network covering more than 80 countries
makes Sewerin one of the leading companies in its field
of expertise.

Salzgitter Mannesmann Line Pipe GmbH


Contact: Paulo Santos
In der Steinwiese 31
Siegen, Northrine Westfalia 57074. Germany
Phone: +49 271 691-0
Fax: +49 271 691-299
Web address: www.smlp.eu
General Email: info@smlp.eu

Stand 205

Salzgitter Mannesmann Line Pipe is your worldwide


partner for HFI (high frequency induction) longitudinally
welded steel pipe at the forefront of technology. This
includes oil and gas line pipe, pipe for drinking water
and sewage systems, tubes for machinery and plant
construction as well as oilfield tubes, pipe for longdistance heating systems and structural tubes. Our
product range is rounded off by a wide range of fittings,
pipe accessories and project related services. As part of
the Business Unit Energy within Salzgitter AG, Salzgitter

From drinking water purification and wastewater treatment,


from seawater desalination to water transportation and
distribution, Siemens meets all municipal and industrial
water management requirements. The companys
portfolio incorporates sustainable solutions that lower
energy consumption, minimize water losses and reduce
lifecycle costs. With Totally Integrated Automation and
Totally Integrated Power, Siemens offers end-to-end
solutions perfectly adapted to the special requirements
of water management. Siemens therefore provides the
foundation for reliable and highly efficient water supply

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Siemens
Contact: Antnio Carvalho
Rua Irmos Siemens, 1
Alfragide, Amadora 2720-093. Portugal
Phone: +351214178579
Web address: www.siemens.pt
General Email: marketing.ad.pt@siemens.com

Stand 135

Sisaqua-Sistemas de Saneamento Bsico,


S.A.
Contact: Francisco Machado
Av. Salvador Allende, 25, Avenida Salvador Allende, 25,
Oeias 2780-163 Oeiras. Portugal
Phone: +351 21446 51 00
Fax: +351 21 441 37 32
Web address: www.sisaqua.pt
General Email: geral@sisaqua.pt
From Consulting to Operations, SISAQUA detains full
knowledge and capabilities to Design, Manage and
Operate Water and Wastewater infrastructures. We
operate 35 wastewater treatment plants, 110 pumping
stations and 250 km of piping. We provide technical
studies, basic, detailed design and works supervision for
water, wastewater and waste infrastructures. Coupling
Operation to Studies, allows to continuously feed the
knowledge cycle. As we operate plants we learn about
safety, accessibility, capacity, design, equipments
durability and adequacy. We use such knowledge to
better design the plants, which thus become easier
to operate. This virtuous cycle is a trademark of our
company.

Stand 241

SIVECO Romania
Contact: Irina Socol
Victoria Park
Sos. Bucuresti-Ploiesti 73-81, Corp C4, Sector 1,
Bucuresti, 013685. Romania
Phone: +40 (21) 3023300
Fax: +40 (21) 3023391
Web address: www.siveco.ro
General Email: office@siveco.ro
SIVECO Romania is the leading Romanian software
house and one of the most successful regional
leaders in eLearning, eHealth, eAgriculture, eCustoms,
eGovernment and eBusiness from Central and Eastern
Europe.
The company develops and exports software products
and high value added consultancy projects to countries
within the European Community, The Middle East, North
Africa and the CIS area.

Stand 107

SkyJuice Aqua Solutions


Contact: Rhett Butler
36 Somerset Street
Mosman, Sydney, NSW 2088. Australia
Phone: +61438880621
Fax: +61299691948
Web address: http://www.skyjuice.org.au
General Email: rhett.butler@optusnet.com.au
Ultrafiltration water filtration units. Potable water filtration
systems.

Stand 282

Smart Water Metering Inc.


Contact: Parisa Abbasi
70 Absolute Ave., Suite 1606
Mississauga Ontario, Ontario L4Z 0A4. Canada
Phone: +16476601295
Fax: +16476601296
Web address: www.smart-water-metering.com
General Email: info@smart-water-metering.com
Smart Water Metering (SWM) Inc. is a company
incorporated and domiciled in Ontario Canada. Since
2012, the focus of this company has been concentrated
on the innovations and technological developments
applicable to the management of groundwater resources.
This incorporation has invented and patented a new
class of meters called Smart Energy and Water Meter
that integrates an electricity meter and a water meter
into one package. This apparatus, which is designed

WATER LOSSES:
ARE YOU GETTING A CLEAR PICTURE?
When it comes to building an effective Non Revenue Water reduction strategy, it all comes
down to one thing, data.
For decades, Itron has been providing water utilities with reliable and efficient data creation,
collection, management, and utilization. This unique expertise, in creating actionable,
decision driving data for utilities, empowers Itron to be the ideal partner to improve network
efficiency through a complete Non Revenue Water reduction programme.
Together, lets create a more resourceful world.
Come and visit us during the IWA Lisbon World Congress,
21-26 September 2014, booth # 110

Exhibitor profiles
for electro-pumps, can measure and register both the
electricity consumed by the pump and the amount of
water extracted out of the well or water source.

long-lasting hydrophilic property. The membrane can


also offer a simple and cost effective solution to treat oilcontaminated wastewater without any pre-treatments.

to implement new water development projects; various


measures are also adopted to upgrade its services to
customers.

Stand 222

Stand 137

Stand 139

Springer
Contact: Fritz Schmuhl
Van Godewijckstraat 30
Dordrecht, 3311 GX. The Netherlands
Phone: +31(78)6576281
Web address: www.springer.com
General Email: fritz.schmuhl@springer.com
Looking to publish your research? Learn about our print
and electronic publication services, including Open
Access! Get high-quality review, maximum readership and
rapid distribution. Come to our booth or find us online:
www.springer.com. You can also browse key titles in your
field and buy (e)books at discount prices. With Springer
you are in good company.

Stand 140

State of Green
Contact: Tanya Jacobsen
Vesterbrogade 1E
Copenhagen, Seeland 1620. Denmark
Web address: www.stateofgreen.com
General Email: info@stateofgreen.com
Company profile: State of Green is a public-private
partnership founded by the Danish Government, the
Confederation of Danish Industry, the Danish Energy
Association, the Danish Agriculture & Food Council
and the Danish Wind Industry Association with the aim
of sharing Danish green solutions internationally. Our
website www.stateofgreen.com is your gateway to
Denmarks innovative water solutions, companies and
utilities as well as relevant news and insights on water
related matters. We also offer you to take advantage of
the lessons learned by leading Danish companies and
institutions through a customised State of Green Water
Tour in Denmark.

Stand 264

Suez Environnement
Contact: Florie Lozivit
Tour CB 21 16 Place De LIris
92040 Paris La Dfense. France
Phone: +33 (0)1 58 81 55 66
Web address: www.suez-environnement.fr
General Email: Florie.lozivit@suez-env.com
With 79,220 employees, SUEZ ENVIRONNEMENT
supplies 92 million people with drinking water, and 65
million with sanitation services. It provides nearly 52
million people with waste collection services and recovers
over 14 million tons of waste as secondary raw materials
and energy. To protect the future, we promote a more
efficient use of resources: optimize processes, create
alternatives water resources, and give waste second
life. In the growth model of the circular economy, SUEZ
ENVIRONNEMENT is a leading player. We position
ourselves as a partner for cities and industry to support
them in making the most of their resources.

Stand 298

Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd.


Contact: Takashi Harada
5-33, Kitahama 4-chome, Chuo-ku,
Osaka, Osaka 541-0041. Japan
Phone: +81-6-6220-4337
Fax: +81-6-6220-4104
Web address: http://global-sei.com
General Email: harada-takashi@gr.sei.co.jp
Since establishment in 1897 as a manufacturer of wires
and cables in Japan, Sumitomo Electric has expanded
the business to various other segments through its own
R&D efforts. Sumitomo Electric now offer innovative
products and technologies on a global basis in
automotive, information & communications, electronics,
environment & energy and industrial materials. Within
its portfolio, Sumitomo Electric offer PTFE-made hollow
fibre micro/ultra filtration membrane with excellent
mechanical strength, heat/chemical resistance, and

116

Exhibitor profiles

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

SWAN Analytische Instrumente AG


Contact: Rene Koenig
Studbachstrasse 13
Hinwil, (ZH) 8340. Switzerland
Phone: +41 44 943 63 00
Fax: +41 44 943 63 31
Web address: www.swan.ch
General Email: communications@swan.ch
SWAN Analytische Instrumente AG
SWAN is a leading manufacturer of on-line analytical
instruments with headquarters in Switzerland. The
applications range from ultrapure water, feedwater, steam
and condensate monitoring as well as potable water
and industrial water up to swimming pool and sanitary
water applications. Parameters: Ammonium, Chlorine /
Ozone / ClO2, Conductivity and Resistivity, Hydrazine /
Carbohydrazide, Hydrogen, Nitrate, Oxygen (dissolved),
pH, Phosphate Redox (ORP), Silica, Sodium, Turbidity,
Total Organic Carbon (TOC).

Stand 139

Swing Corporation
Contact: Nobuaki Tanaka
7-18 Konan 1-chome, Minato-ku
108-8470 Tokyo. Japan
Phone: +81-3-6830-9001
Web address: www.swing-w.com/en
General Email: tanaka.nobuaki01@swing-w.com
Swing Corporation combines the strengths of three
Japanese companies; Ebara Corporation, Mitsubishi
Corporation and JGC Corporation. Established in Japan
as Ebara Corporation in 1920 and providing services in
over 50 countries, Swing Corporation operates over 300
water treatment facilities 24 hours per day, 365 days
per year. Using water and environmental technologies
developed in Japan over many decades, Swing
Corporation is building a multi disciplinary water business
to meet local needs in Japan and international markets.

Taisei Kiko Co., Ltd.


Contact: Hideto Saito
Umeda Kita-ku 1-1-3-2700
530-0001 Osaka. Japan
Phone: +81-6-6344-7784
Web address: www.taiseikiko.com
General Email: overseas@taiseikiko.com

Stand 218

Stand 135

TaKaDu
Contact: Rotem Shemesh
4 Derech HaChoresh
Yehud, Israel 56470. Israel
Phone: + 972 (3) 5555100
Web address: www.takadu.com
General Email: info@takadu.com

Stand 299

Stand 126

Founded in 2004, the award-winning Syrinix has grown


to become a leader in the development and delivery of
intelligent pipeline monitoring solutions. Syrinix aims to
provide utilities with real-time information to manage their
networks actively and effectively and support utilities to
increase the resilience of their networks whilst lowering
operating costs thus enabling them to do more with less.

Taylor & Francis Group partners with researchers,


scholarly societies, universities and libraries worldwide
to bring knowledge to life. As one of the worlds
leading publishers of scholarly journals, books, ebooks
and reference works our content spans all areas of
Humanities, Social Sciences, Behavioural Sciences,
Science, and Technology and Medicine.

Stand PIA

Stand 162

Taipei Water Department(TWD) as a public utility operator


under the Taipei Municipal Governments jurisdiction,
TWD is responsible for supplying some 2.5 million cubic
meters of high-quality potable water a day to over 3.8
million users in the Taipei metropolis. Thats an arduous
task. Thanks to the hard work and unreserved devotion
of all employees, TWD always has done its job well. Yet,
the Department is not contented with its remarkable
accomplishment so far. It is constantly making efforts

Technology Limited
Contact: Tom Woolley
Ravenstor Road, Wirksworth, Matlock
Derbyshire DE4 4FY. United Kingdom
Phone: + 441629823611
Web address: www.technolog.com/
General Email: technolog@technolog.com
Technolog has 30 years experience in the design and
manufacture of battery powered data loggers and
pressure control products specifically for the utilities
and environmental monitoring. Technolog is committed
to producing quality products designed to function
underground and withstand harsh environments at
attractive prices. Our range includes the Cello GSM
SMS/GPRS pressure & flow logger featuring frequent
data transmission, two way communication and
sophisticated alarm regimes. Technolog also produce
Cellos for use with 4-20mA depth transmitters, rain
gauges and shaft encoders and have an ATEX approved
integrated Cello ultrasonic level monitor. Go to www.
technolog.com for further information.

Company Network:
Tokyo, JAPAN (Head Office) / Jakarta, INDONESIA /
Hanoi, VIETNAM / Shanghai, P.R.CHINA / Kuala Lumpur,
MALAYSIA / Riyadh, SAUDI ARABIA

Taipei Water Department


Contact: Kai-Ping Chang
No. 131, Changxing Street
Taipei, Taipei 10672. Taiwan
Fax: + 886-2-87335804
Web address: http://english.twd.gov.tw/
General Email: twd032@twd.gov.tw

Stand 112

Since its foundation in 1941, Taisei Kiko has pioneered


Japans water, sewage, and gas pipeline maintenance
sector. We continuously engage on the frontier of
technological innovation in product development
and maintenance work. Taisei Kiko has reputation for
leading the under pressure construction work in pipeline
maintenance and as a major manufacturer of various
pipeline joints, such as flexible expansion joint which
moves like humans joint to protect the pipeline from
earthquakes land settlement. Taisei Kiko resolves to
supply necessary products for the development and
maintenance of waterworks infrastructure, in Japan and
overseas.

TaKaDu is a leading provider of Integrated Water Network


Management, enabling water utilities to improve efficiency
and make smarter decisions. Using advanced statistical
and mathematical algorithms, TaKaDu harnesses
utility data, translating it into actionable insights and
transforming the way water networks operate. The
solution offers a comprehensive decision-making platform
that can be integrated across the utility from the analyst
monitoring the network to the executive team considering
long-term strategic investments. TaKaDus solution is
cloud-based, can be implemented within weeks, and
can be integrated with various IT systems. It is currently
deployed by water utilities in Europe, Australia, and Latin
America.

Syrinix
Contact: Emma Flack
Hethel Engineering Centre, Chapman Way
Norwich, Norfolk NR14 8FB. United Kingdom
Phone: +44 1953 859 128
Web address: www.syrinix.com
General Email: info@syrinix.com

specifications. Beside the filters we can offer automation


systems for the automatic control of the filtration process.

Taylor & Francis


Contact - Alan Crompton
4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxford. United
Kingdom
Phone: +44 207 017 6000
Web address: http://www.tandfonline.com
General Email: alan.crompton@tandf.co.uk

Technol d.o.o.
Contact: Roki Baruca
Industrijska cesta 6e
6310, Izola. Slovenia
Phone: +38656625340
Fax: +38656625341
Web address: www.technol.si
General Email: technol@siol.net
Producer of FRP vertical & horizontal pressure multimedia
filters for water treatment, desalination. Storage tanks,
sedimentation tanks, oil separators and other equipment
for aggressive environments by request. Fiberglass is an
ideal material for aggressive environments as it is highly
chemical resistance and 100% corrosion free.
All of our products are manufactured under project

TECNILAB PORTUGAL, SA
Contact: Alnico Vargas
Rua Gregrio Lopes, Lote 1512 B
Lisboa, Lisbon 1449-041. Portugal
Phone: +351 21 722 08 70
Fax: +351 21 726 45 50
Web address: www.tecnilab.pt
General Email: geral@tecnilab.pt
Tecnilab Portugal, SA maintains a market leadership
position in sectors such as Water, Energy and Industry,
offering products, solutions and services where the
excellence of the equipment, combined with the
knowledge of its technicians, guarantee the quality of
the after-sale service. The main products and solutions
presented are: Hydraulic Control Valves, Telemanagement
and automation Systems for Drinking Water and
Wastewater and On-line Sampling and Analysis Systems.

Stand PIA

The University of Queensland


Contact: Howard Leemon
C/- UniQuest Pty Ltd, Level 7, Building 78
Staff House Road
St Lucia, Qld 4070. Australia
Phone: +61 7 3365 4037
Fax: +61 7 3365 4433
Web address: www.awmc.uq.edu.au
General Email: h.leemon@uniquest.com.au
The Advanced Water Management Centre (AWMC)
at The University of Queensland is an internationally
recognised centre of excellence in innovative water
technology and management. An award winning
multidisciplinary team and research portfolio covers the
breadth of the urban industrial water cycle, achieving
sustainable outcomes for the global water industry.
AWMC research has led to products and services
including SeweX, an advanced modelling tool for
predicting and managing sulfide corrosion in sewers,
Cloevis, a low cost method for preventing sulfide
corrosion, and Lodomat, a low cost method for sludge
pre-treatment.

Stand 139

Tokyo Waterworks
Contact: Ami Sekine
8-1, Nishi-Shinjuku 2-chome
163-8001 Tokyo. Japan
Phone: + 81 3 5320-6336
Web address: www.waterprofessionals.metro.tokyo.jp/
index.html
General Email: international_affairs@waterworks.metro.
tokyo.jp
Tokyo Waterworks supplies water to about 13 million

Tokyo citizens and its scale and quality of operations are


one of the greatest in the world. Our advantages are :
Low non-revenue water percentage (NRW:3%)
Water quality management system capable of dealing
with the water quality of any water resources
Water supply control and management 7days &24hours
High collection rate (99.9%)
We ensure a stable supply of clean water and support
residents of Tokyo and all urban functions. Besides
we cooperate with overseas utilities through these
advantages.

Stand 210

Toray Membrane Europe AG


Contact: Christina Kuhn
Grabenackerstrasse 8b, P.O.Box,
Mnchenstein, BL 4142. Switzerland
Phone: +41 61 415 87 10
Fax: +41 67 415 87 20
Web address: www.toraywater.com
General Email: info@toraywater.com
Toray Membrane Europe AG (TMEu) is a trading arm
of Toray Industries (Japan), an established leading
supplier of membrane products for water. TMEu
provides membrane elements for the entire spectrum of
separation processes from microfiltration to ultrafiltration,
nanofiltration and reverse osmosis. Membrane
configurations include flat sheet polyvinylidenefluoride
(microfiltration for membrane bioreactors), spiralwound polyamide/composite (nanofiltration and
reverse osmosis applications), and hollow-fiber PVDF
(ultrafiltration) types,. Typical applications include water
purification, desalination, valuable concentration and
dairy liquids processing. An extensive scope of auxiliary
chemicals (antiscalants, cleaning agents, and biocides)
complements the scope of supply, with a team of
experienced experts.

Stand 128 B

TORO EQUIPMENT S.L.


Contact: Teresa San Jose
C/ Sauce s/n 47193
La Cisterniga Valladolid. Spain
Phone: +34983403047
Fax: +34983403048
Web address: www.toroequipment.com
General Email: toro@toroequipment.com
Toro Equipment is a leading European company
specialized in the design and manufacture of equipment
for industrial and urban wastewater treatment, water
processing, water reuse and sludge treatment. We offer
our customers the best water treatment solutions, based
on more than 20 years experience in the design and
manufacture of equipment, as well as commissioning.
We offer custom solutions for both the private and
public sectors, and have supplied equipment to more
than 45 countries worldwide, with international markets
accounting for more than 70% of our sales.

Stand 214

Trojan Technologies
Contact: Jean-Phillipe Cailleres
3020 Gore Road
London, Ontario N5V 4T7. Canada
Phone: +1 519-457-3400
Fax: +1 519-457-3030
Web address: www.trojantechnologies.com
General Email: info@trojanuv.com
We enable customers to meet their water quality
objectives by providing eco-efficient solutions that
reduce and recover costs, energy, resources and space.
Collaboratively solving problems with our customers,
we deliver low-risk, innovative technologies that offer
sustainable results. We ensure greater water confidence
and environmental stewardship for people, industries
and municipalities, improving the lives of over one billion
people globally. At those areas in the market where water
problems constitutes a threat to the economy, Valqua
initiates, coordinates and facilitates:
- International research, development and innovation
projects;
- Partner search;
- Knowledge transfer (leading edge technology and
policy).

Stand 140

Unisense Environment A/S


Contact: Mikkel Barker
Tueager 1
Aarhus N, Jutland 8200. Denmark
Phone: +45 89449500
Fax: +45 89449549
Web address: www.unisense-environment.com
General Email: mb@unisense-environment.com
Unisense Environment A/S has developed the Worlds
only N20 (nitrous oxide) Wastewater Sensor for direct
Measurement in wastewater treatment processes.
Nitrous oxide is a strong green house gas 320 times
more potent than CO2 and emissions of N20 can
account for as much as 90% of total carbon footprint
from wastewater treatment. The N2O Wastewater
System from Unisense Environment enables real-time
and on-site quantification of dissolved N2O and emission
from wastewater treatment processes. New state-ofthe-art bioprocess and emission mitigation controls can
be developed using N2O sensor input yielding a clear
environmental advantage over standard control regimes.

Stand140

VCS Denmark Ltd.


Contact: Henrik Werchmeister
Vandvaerksvej 7
Odense C, Funen 5000. Denmark
Phone: +45 40 80 84 00
Web address: www.vcsdenmark.com
General Email: hew@vcsdenmark.com
VCS Denmark is one of the largest water utilities in
Denmark and offers a wide range of consultancy services,
innovative solutions and hands-on training programmes
turning advanced theory and technologies into practical
water knowledge.
Among our services are:
NRW reduction strategies and management
Process optimization in water & wastewater treatment
plants
Training in welding of PE pipes
Energy optimization and CO2 reduction
Capacity building
Drinking Water Supply of the Future is the key word
for a Danish comprehensive development project, which
focuses on the future challenges facing drinking water
utilities. This project is headed by VCS Denmark. For
more information - look at www.futurewater.dk.

Stand 243

Vewin
Contact: Dieneke Krijbolder
Bezuidenhoutseweg 12
The Hague, Zuid-Holland 2594 AV. The Netherlands
Phone: +31703490859
Web address: www.vewin.nl
General Email: info@vewin.nl
Vewin is the association of drinking water companies in
The Netherlands. Vewin represents the common interests
of its member utilities in national and international
politics and institutions. The ten Dutch drinking water
companies provide water of outstanding quality. Their
unique selling point is the absence of chlorination, due to
a long-standing focus on water quality from source to tap.
Besides water quality, the sector pays much attention to
provide sustainable and efficient services to the customer.

Stand 243

Water Alliance
Contact: Hein Molenkamp
Agora 4
Leeuwarden, Friesland 8934 CJ. The Netherlands
Phone: +31582849044
Web address: www.wateralliance.nl
General Email: info@wateralliance.nl
Water Alliance is a unique partnership of public and
private companies, government agencies and knowledge
institutes involved in the Dutch water technology. We
support small and medium enterprises in the water
technology industry in terms of matchmaking, marketing
and business development. We are based at the

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117

Exhibitor profiles
WaterCampus, the Netherlands. We supply an innovative
eco-system that facilitates the complete innovation
chain; from idea to research & development, specialized
laboratories, an application centre and various demosites to launching customers and to business with
companys worldwide. We help companies to find the
best way through the innovation chain to cover their
needs.

Stand 243

Stand 250

Wetsus, centre of excellence for sustainable water


technology is a facilitating intermediary for trend-setting
know-how development. Wetsus creates a unique
environment and strategic cooperation for development
of profitable and sustainable state of the art water
treatment technology. The inspiring and multidisciplinary
collaboration between 90 companies and 18 EU research
institutes in Wetsus results in innovations that contribute
significantly to the solution of the global water problems.
Wetsus acts as Technological Top Institute for Water
technology, located in Leeuwarden, at the WaterCampus.
Wetsus scientific research program is defined by the
private and public water sector and conducted by leading
universities.

Waterleau
Radioweg 18
3020 Herent. Belgium
Phone: +32 16 650 657
Fax: +32 16 650 663
Web address: www.waterleau.com
General Email: info@waterleau.com
Waterleau is an environmental technology provider
offering turnkey solutions for industrial and municipal
clients in the fields of water, air, waste treatment as well
as energy recovery. Waterleau counts more than 1000
references in 82 countries. Water treatment: municipal
and industrial wastewater treatment, drinking water
production, process water production, water re-use
and desalination. Air treatment: chemical pollutants
abatement, flue gas de-dusting and desulphurization,
VOC and odour control. Waste treatment: sludge
digestion, drying and incineration, municipal solid waste,
industrial as well as medical waste incineration. Energy
recovery: biogas production from anaerobic digestion of
sludge and biomass. Waste-to-Energy from industrial and
municipal waste.

Stand 219

Watershare
Contact: Bianca van der Wolf
PO Box 1072
Nieuwegein, Utrecht 3430 BB. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 30 6069 582
Web address: www.watershare.eu
General Email: bianca.van.der.wolf@kwrwater.nl
Meeting water sector challenges with Watershare
Since the launch of Watershare at the IWA World
Water Congress & Exhibition in Busan in 2012, the size
of its membership and number of its expert tools have
grown. Watershare is a collaborative platform for top
applied research institutes in the public water sector.
Its members combine their scientific and institutional
strengths and share their best expert tools to assist
their end-user clients, in Europe and beyond. Thanks
to Watershare, its members can take the lead in their
own countries in offering advanced and very practical
solutions to their clients water utilities, municipalities,
water agencies helping them meet their daily and
long-term strategic challenges. At the 2014 IWA World
Water Congress & Exhibition in Lisbon, Watershare will
participate in the scientific programme and the exhibition,
and we look forward to welcoming our international
colleagues to our stand no. 219 and sharing knowledge
with them in person.

118

IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition Lisbon 2014

Wetsus
Contact: Hester Henstra
Agora 1
Leeuwarden, FR 8934 CJ. The Netherlands
Phone: +31 58 284 30 00
Fax: +31 58 284 30 01
Web address: www.wetsus.nl
General Email: info@wetsus.nl

Stand 341

WEX - The Water and Energy Exchange


Contact: Chiara Borolo
2nd Floor, 16 Crucifix Lane
London SE1 3JW. United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 207 403 2773
Fax: +44 (0) 207 403 2821
Web address: www.w-e-x.com
General Email: cbortoli@wex-global.com
The Water and Energy Exchange(WEX) combines an
outstanding conference programme of internationally
renowned expert speakers, with a schedule of preselected one to one meetings. Every delegate receives
a personalised agenda that means that at WEX, you
are able to be completely time efficient attending only
those seminars and meetings in which you have chosen
to participate. WEX attracts a wide range of highlevel executives, with both commercial and technical
backgrounds, working in both the public and private
sector. This diversity is reflected in the conference
programme.

Stand 141

The National Committee for the 7th World


Water Forum
Contact Hyesuk (Sue) Jeong Davis
14 F Goosan Tower, Bangbaecheon-ro 91
Seocho-gu, Seoul. South Korea
Phone: +82 2 6009 9444
Web address: http://eng.worldwaterforum7.org
General Email: secretariat@worldwaterforum7.org

Notes

The 7th edition of the worlds largest water event will


gather over 35,000 participants from the international
water community: academics, research institutions,
enterprises, professional networks, governments and
policy-makers, IGOs and NGOs. More details can be
found online at: http://eng.worldwaterforum7.org

Stand 247

Xylem Inc.
Contact: Ellen Hermans
Solenbergstrasse 5
Schaffhausen, CH-8207. Switzerland
Phone: +41526445200
Web address: www.xylem.com
Xylem is a leading water technology provider, enabling
customers to transport, treat, test and efficiently use
water in public utility, residential and commercial building
services, industrial and agricultural settings. The company
does business in more than 150 countries through a
number of market-leading product brands, bringing broad
applications expertise with a strong focus on finding
local solutions to challenging water problems. Xylem
is headquartered in Rye Brook, N.Y. (U.S), with annual
revenues of $3.8 billion. Xylem has been named to the
Dow Jones Sustainability World Index for advancing
sustainable business practices and solutions worldwide.

Stand 139

Yokohama Water Business Association


Contact: Akiko Takeuchi
23 Yamashita-cho, Naka-ku
231-0023 Yokohama. Japan
Phone: +81-45-663-0161
Web address: www.city.yokohama.lg.jp/kankyo/gesui/
ywbc/index-en.html
General Email: su-kokusaijigyo@city.yokohama.jp
The City of Yokohama, second largest city in Japan
has been nominated by the World Bank as one of the
first six global best practice Eco2 Cities that balance
ecological sustainable development and economic urban
growth. Japans modern waterworks and sewerage
systems originated in Yokohama in 1887 and now the
City of Yokohama offers safe and stable service to 3.7
million citizens. Yokohama Water Business Association,
organization of public-private partnership, contributes to
water supply and sewerage utilities overseas, making use
of advanced technology of private sector and knowhow
of public sector in planning, construction, operation &
maintenance, and management.

With its core value of implementation, the 7th World


Water Forum will take place in Daegu & Gyeongbuk of
Korea from April 12 to 17, 2015. The World Water Forum
is the largest water-related event organized by the World
Water Council every three years.

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119

18TH AfWA
CONGRESS
18me CONGRS
AAE

NAIROBI WATER
Improving Relia bilit y

18me CONGRS ET EXPOSITION DE


LASSOCIATION AFRICAINE DE LEAU

EPAL - Empresa Pblica de gua, E.P.

Projects Bita and Quilonga Grande:


strong boosters of EPALs growth
EPAL

E.P.,

company

Currently EPAL - E.P. leads

Always focused on the service

responsible for the capture,

two major projects: Water

to citizens, EPAL E.P. prides

production, distribution and

Treatment Stations at Bita

itself on its constant commit-

commercialization of water in

and Quilonga Grande. These

ment for the achievement of a

the city of Luanda, has been

projects have as main goal

modernized,

reaching increasingly impor-

the design and construction

and efficient system, which

tant goals towards moderni-

of new facilities of water

will reach in 2017 at least 1

zation, aiming the exponen-

caption,

million customers with a

tial increase of water supply.

distribution in order to provi-

production

and

regular potable water supply.

de the necessary amount of


water to supply all the population of Luanda.

Always Serving Citizens of Angola

8935_IWA Exhibitors Advert_FINAL V2.indd 1

24/07/2014 17:56:10

accomplished

Expert tools to help clients


meet their goals.

frrom

PUB

KWB
OptiValves ensures an optimal valve maintenance programme over
the life-cycle of a drinking water distribution network. It includes an
improved inspection procedure per valve and a maintenance
programme targeted at the most important valves in the network.
Watershare is the collaborative platform for top applied research
institutes in the public water sector. Members share their best expert
tools like OptiValves to assist end-user clients. Watershare experts
can take the lead in their own countries in offering advanced and very
practical solutions to water utilities, municipalities and water agencies,
helping them meet their daily and long-term strategic goals.
Watershare: Sharing the knowledge, building the network,
serving the community.

Visit us
at IWA Lisbon

stand no.

219

Watershare is
principal sponsor
of IWA Lisbon 2014.

watershare.eu

KWRW131_IWA-watershare-adv-Progr_book_v5.indd 1

17-07-14(w 29) 08:23

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