Amiad’s
microfiber filtration system.
First, the bad news: Clean water is in very short supply across the globe.
Now the good news: Amiad
Water Systems, founded 50 years ago at a kibbutz
near the Sea of Galilee, has built a successful business by providing solutions
to this pressing problem.
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Amiad’s filtration and treatment technologies bring clean
water to industries, households and farms in 70 countries — even in
remote areas such as Alaska, Antarctica, Siberia, Africa and Papua New Guinea.
Earlier this year, the Israeli company got more good news in the
form of $10 million worth of contracts won by its Australian subsidiary.
It will install automatic self-cleaning screen filters at a
desalination plant near Perth, which is doubling its 50-billion-liter annual
production capacity. And it will put automatic self-cleaning disc technology to
work in the pre-filter stage as one of Australia’s leading integrated
energy companies turns coal seam gas into liquefied natural gas.
That same self-cleaning disc filtration technology plays the
starring role in a 10-year deal that Amiad’s US subsidiary just signed
with shipbuilder Calgon Carbon to clean ballast water on new and existing
boats. The system will protect the marine environment by wiping out invasive
species in the ballast water before it gets returned to the sea.
An Amiad
installation in France.
“We adapt solutions to local needs, using Israeli
products,” says CEO Arik Dayan, who accepted a prize on behalf of Amiad
on February 28 from Mekorot, Israel’s national water carrier, in
recognition of Amiad’s contributions to Israel’s water industry.
It all flows from irrigation
In its first three decades, Amiad focused solely on water
filtration for irrigation systems — the backbone of Israeli agriculture.
“Modern irrigation sprinklers, micro-sprinklers and
drippers all have to have proper filtration,” Dayan explains to
ISRAEL21c. “So our first 30 years was mainly about developing that, first
in Israel and then through our subsidiaries in Australia and the US.”
The next two decades saw expansion into many related areas, most
recently addressing the problem of protecting membranes used in desalination
and oil and gas production, two key growth areas.
Amiad now has nine subsidiaries, encompassing about 680
employees worldwide. Its 450 Israel-based workers are split between Kibbutz
Beit Zera and Kibbutz Amiad’s 10-acre complex for research and
development, manufacturing, warehousing and training.
Dayan says 95 percent of Amiad’s manufacturing is done at
these two Israeli sites, while additional factories are turning out products in
Turkey, the United States, China and India. Business is flowing in as fast as
white-water rapids.
Amiad screen
filtration technology.
“Since water is very unique and precious for human beings,
that’s the growth driver for food and industry,” says Dayan.
“Our product pipeline is bigger than it was last year at the same time
because the company is always providing better and better solutions.”
Clean and green
Amiad’s main challenge is to convince contractors,
municipalities and engineering companies — traditionally a very
conservative market — that investing in its filtration systems will save
them money and energy, and will benefit Planet Earth in the process.
“We are selling long-lasting green solutions,” says
Dayan. The systems are compact, saving on valuable real estate, and they
don’t use chemicals to do their job. Many of them don’t even
require electricity.
Among Amiad’s proprietary solutions is an automatically
self-cleaning microfiber filter especially for drinking water. A weave-wire
screen system and a grooved-disk polymer filter are options for other
technology for clean water needs.
“The solution we apply depends on the water quality,”
Dayan explains.
“We are looking to provide more solutions, and as we
announce the Calgon contract we have many more projects in the pipeline.”
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