Portable Sanitation Association International

July 3 PDF

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W EEKLY EDITION JUNE 19, 2019 Pharmaceuticals in Wastewater: Implications for the Portable Sanitation Industry By Karleen Kos, PSAI Executive Director P AGE 13 3. If waste treatment plants grow less likely to accept portable sanitation loads or the cost of disposing there goes up, operators will have to increase their prices to customers. They will also have to choose between continuing to pay the disposal fees at the treatment plant or investing in their own on site treatment solution. On sit e solutions may become more feasible for mid - sized operators as the cost to dispose goes up. 4. There is good potential for an increased market for on site waste treatment solutions – especially those that recycle the water for ongoing use by the operator. 5. Mo re research is needed, but it appears now that no one method of treating wastewater does as good a job of removing these pharmaceutical chemicals as multiple treatment methods. There is a significant business opportunity for inventors and entrepreneurs to improve waste treatment technologies that remove the chemicals more quickly and cheaply. What do you think? How will increased attention to trace pharmaceuticals in the treated water supply affect your business? Let us know at info@psai.og

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