How the city of Atlanta used drives to go green and keep a pumping station online.
aging infrastructure
Van Pol also spoke on transitioning from oil and gas to water and how smart water technologies can be an asset.
This bill is a compromise between Biden’s original budget proposal and the Senate’s—it is still subject to House approval.
Aging water infrastructure led to issues for Texas residents this winter.
WEF Legislative Director Steve Dye says aid for low-income ratepayers will “help slow the bleeding.”
Engineers' groups says progress has been made but improvements in some sectors at desperate levels.
Advanced instrumentation allows municipalities to solve aging infrastructure issues and open a potential new revenue source.
Shifting trends in water use and changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world’s sewer systems.
Disposable wipes and other non-dispersible products are the modern-day curse for older wastewater lift stations and pumps.
Pumps & Systems (P&S) sat down with Walt Erndt (WE), Vice President & General Manager Municipal Market at CRANE Pumps & Systems, to discuss our failing water systems.
Shifting trends in water use and changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world's sewer systems.
An industry with aging infrastructure and increasing demands needs better monitoring technology.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (April 7, 2016) – Rudolph Chow, director of the Baltimore Department of Public Works, testified today on behalf of his agency, the Water Environment Federation (WEF), and the WateReuse Association at the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing, “The Federal Role in Keeping Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Affordable.”
Shifting trends in water use and changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world’s sewer systems.
Shifting trends in water use and changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world's sewer systems.
Shifting trends in water use and changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world’s sewer systems.
Shifting trends in water use and a changing sewage composition cause complex problems for the world’s sewer systems.
As municipalities adopt this lift station technology, they are seeing reduced costs and a more productive workforce.
CHICAGO (Feb. 15, 2013) – The need to meet new environmental standards, the growing demand for water and the need to replace obsolete infrastructure are causing U.S. water utilities to embark on thousands of capital improvement projects. These projects are tracked in the McIlvaine North American Public Water Plants and People.