Saudi-Arabië vestigt record met ontzilting van 5 miljoen kubieke meter per dag
RIYAD, Saudi-Arabië –(BUSINESS WIRE)– Saudi-Arabië is voornemens 9 centrales voor ontzilting van water te bouwen in de stad Jedda aan de Rode Zee. De totale kosten bedragen meer dan 2 miljoen Saudische rial, maakte minister Abdulrahman Alfadley van Milieu, Water en Landbouw bekend.
De minister schreef in een tweet dat koning Salman en kroonprins Mohammed bin Salman opdracht hebben gegeven voor de bouw van de centrales. Die krijgen de capaciteit om per dag 240.000 kubieke meter water te verwerken.
Het nieuws over de plannen volgt op een historisch record dat het Bedrijf voor Omzetting van Zout Water onlangs bekendmaakte; een nieuwe ontziltingstechnologie verhoogde de productiecapaciteit tot 5 miljoen kubieke meter per dag, een internationaal record voor de ontziltingsindustrie.
Saudi Water Desalination Capacity Sets Global Record at 5 Million Cubic Meters a Day
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Saudi Arabia plans to build 9 water desalination plants on the Red Sea coastal city of Jeddah, at a total cost of more than SAR 2 billion, said Abdulrahman Alfadley, Minister of Environment, Water and Agriculture.
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Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman pays a visit to a desalination plant in Jeddah (Photo courtesy of Saudi Press Agency)
The minister tweeted that the project to build the plants was ordered by King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The plants will have a total capacity of 240,000 cubic meters of water per day.
The news of the plans came as Saline Water Conversion Corp (SWCC) said it had achieved a historical record in desalination technology that helped increase the production of desalinated water to 5 million cubic meters per day, a global record for the desalination industry.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman thanked SWCC for the achievements, as he paid a visit to a desalination plant in Jeddah on Wednesday.
“Increasing the production of desalinated water from 3.5 to 5 million cubic meters per day is a great achievement for Saudi Arabia,” the crown prince said during his tour at the plant.
In 2011, the volume of water supplied by the country’s 27 desalination plants in 17 locations was 3.3 million m3/day (1.2 billion m3/year).
Alfadley said the new plants, to be completed in less than 18 months, will boost production efficiency and cut operating costs for the SWCC, a government corporation.
These plants “will have a significant impact on improving the quality and scope of water services, in pursuit of the objectives of the National Transition Program 2020,” he said.
“This year, we achieved a record with the addition of 1.4 million cubic meters of desalinated water in 13 months, which is almost equivalent to the construction of a new desalination plant worth SAR 13 billion, without any additional capital costs.”
Water security is a key challenge for Saudi Arabia, which has invested heavily in seawater desalination, making the Kingdom the world’s largest producer of desalinated water currently.
SWCC Governor Ali bin Abdul Rahman Al-Hazmi said that all stations were working at full capacity “according to methodological and scientific foundations” to ensure employee and equipment safety.
*Source: AETOSWire
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20180125006048/en/
Contacts
The Center for International Communication, Ministry of Culture and Information, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Essam Al-Ghalib, +966595455467
cic@moci.gov.sa