﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:siemens="com.siemens.websolutions"><channel><title>Siemens I&amp;S Press</title><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press</link><description>RSS Siemens I&amp;S Press</description><copyright>Copyright 2007 Siemens AG</copyright><generator>Siemens AG I&amp;S Press</generator><item><title>Quick and precise measurement of important water treatment parameters with the Siemens Photometer P15 plus, now with a measured value memory and real-time clock</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1992&amp;languageId=2</link><description>The new version of the Photometer P15 plus from Siemens Water Technologies has a measured value memory and a real-time clock. It can store the values of up to 16 of the most important water treatment quality parameters, together with their times of measurement. Factors that could impair measurement – such as excess turbidity of the water sample – are automatically detected and displayed. The illuminated display makes the device easy to use, even under difficult conditions. Parameters such as pH value, acid capacity, free and total chlorine content, chlorine dioxide, bromine, ozone and cyanuric acid can be measured quickly, easily and precisely.</description><pubDate>Jan 25, 2010</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens expands dewatering solutions into mining market with acquisition of Industrial Process Machinery </title><branche>Water/Wastewater, Mining</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1988&amp;languageId=2</link><description>By acquiring the American company Industrial Process Machinery (IPM), Manchester, New Hampshire, Siemens is continuing to expand its dewatering solutions offering for industrial applications. As of December 31, 2009, IPM is part of Siemens Water Technologies, a Business Unit of the Siemens Industry Solutions Division. In the future, Siemens will offer IPM filter presses worldwide, mainly within the scope of its solutions offering for the mining industry. With more than 100 global installations, IPM provides high-capacity filter presses for slurry dewatering, primarily to the mining and process industries. The purchase price was not disclosed.</description><pubDate>Jan 07, 2010</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens to provide a 95-MGD (360-MLD) pressurized membrane filtration system as pre-treatment for the Southern Seawater Desalination Plant (SSDP) in Perth, Australia</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1985&amp;languageId=2</link><description>The Southern Seawater Joint Venture (SSJV) has awarded Siemens a multi-million dollar contract to provide a 95-MGD (360-MLD) membrane treatment system for Water Corporation’s desalination plant in Binningup, south of Perth, Australia. When completed, the 40-MGD (151-MLD) plant will produce approximately 15% of Perth’s water supply. The existing Perth Seawater Desalination Plant currently provides 17% of Perth’s water supply, and when the Southern Seawater Desalination Plant is commissioned in 2011, a total of approximately 30% of Perth’s water will be supplied from climate-independent sources. </description><pubDate>Dec 17, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>High quality effluent helps Chinese city to restore water quality in Taihu Lake - Siemens commissions MBR system at Wuxi Xincheng waste water treatment plant </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1979&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies has commissioned a wastewater treatment system for the Wuxi Xincheng Plant in China´s Jiangsu Province. An upgrade to the existing wastewater treatment plant, the system includes a Siemens advanced Membrane Biological Reactor (MBR) system. It is producing of 30,000 cubic meters per day of high quality effluent that meets or exceeds the national discharge standard of Class I-A, allowing the treated water to be safely discharged to Taihu Lake. </description><pubDate>Nov 23, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens to equip Jeddah sewage treatment plant with one of largest odor control systems in Saudi Arabia </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1970&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies will supply a nine-piece odor control system at the 250,000 m3/d North Jeddah Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. As the STP is located next to the King Abdullah Aziz Airport in Jeddah, the Ministry of Water and Electricity requested that odor control equipment be installed. Valued at more than US$2 million, the system will consist of three different technologies located at five areas throughout the plant. Once completed by year’s end, this will be one of the largest odor control installations in all of Saudi Arabia. </description><pubDate>Oct 30, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Sinopec selects Siemens wet air oxidation technology for wastewater treatment at two new ethylene facilities </title><branche>Water/Wastewater, Oil&amp;Gas</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1965&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies will provide Zimpro wet air oxidation technology to treat wastewater at Sinopec’s Zhenhai and Tianjin ethylene plant projects in the Zhenhai District, Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, and in Tianjin, China. The systems will be used to treat sulfidic spent caustic wastewater streams generated in the production of ethylene. The energy-efficient wet air oxidation systems will destroy odorous sulfide pollutants and generate a biodegradable effluent that can be discharged to conventional biological wastewater treatment. The Zhenhai system will treat approximately 18.2 m3/hr of wastewater; the Tianjin system will treat 14.5 m3/hr.</description><pubDate>Oct 20, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens offers waste water treatment plants proven energy and operational cost-saving solutions with ESCO performance contracts</title><branche>Water/Wastewater, Power Generation</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1957&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens announces ESCO (energy service company) performance contracts are now available to municipal wastewater treatment customers in North America. An ESCO performance-based contract allows for an alternative funding method for a capital improvement in the wastewater plant that reduces energy use, operation costs, and labor. This is paid for from the guaranteed savings generated from implementing process improvements for the facility. </description><pubDate>Oct 12, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Brent Hillier to become new head of the U.S. Siemens Water Technologies business</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1960&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Effective October 1, 2009, Brent Hillier was named the new head of the U.S. arm of Siemens Water Technologies. By creating a business exclusively for the American market under Siemens Industry Inc., Siemens Water Technologies can better address its strongest market. “We want to concentrate more intensely than before on our customers in North America and support them with solutions that will help them master the coming challenges of environmentally compatible water management,” says Chuck Gordon, CEO of Siemens Water Technologies. </description><pubDate>Oct 12, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Reduce waste, reduce energy: 
Technology advancements highlight the benefits of biosolids management </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1958&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Costs associated with treatment and disposal of biosolids can be half of a communities’ operations budget. As cash-strapped cities are looking for ways to reduce costs, water technology providers such as Siemens are providing answers to reduce the cost of biosolids management, while providing a sometimes unexpected boost to the bottom line. Moreover, communities are finding that in addition to reduced operations costs, they have less waste and use less energy—a big benefit for the environment. </description><pubDate>Oct 12, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens develops a comprehensive odor control solution for wastewater collection and treatment plants </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1959&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies announces the Full Service Odor Control Program approach to helping wastewater collection and treatment facilities control odors at the lowest lifecycle cost. With a wide range of odor control technologies for the liquid and the vapor phase, Siemens can provide a single product or combination of equipment and treatment methods as well as customized service contracts that ensure long equipment life. Rather than take a “one size fits all” approach, Siemens treats every customer site and application as unique, making treatment recommendations based on data collected at the site. The final treatment solution may include one or more odor control products to achieve the best results in the most cost effective way. </description><pubDate>Oct 12, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens to provide waste-to-energy wastewater treatment system for Pearl Valley Cheese</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1962&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens has been awarded the contract to provide process equipment, design and start-up services for a wastewater treatment system at the Pearl Valley Cheese, Inc. production facility in Fresno, Ohio. The system will be designed to convert waste material generated during cheese production into a reusable biogas generated in the wastewater treatment process. This renewable energy approach allows Pearl Valley Cheese to receive a state funding grant, and reduces the amount of natural gas required to operate the facility’s boilers, which are used for providing steam for the cooking, cleaning and pasteurizing processes. The 50,000-gallon-per-day (GPD) (189,000 LPD) system, which will be able to handle a variety of waste streams and still meet effluent requirements, is scheduled for start up in the summer of 2010.</description><pubDate>Oct 12, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens to provide a BNR system for improving effluent quality at one of the largest municipal wastewater treatment plants in China</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1953&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies &amp; Engineering (Tianjin) Co., Ltd. (SWTE) signed a 42 million Renminbi (approx. 4.2 million Euro) contract with Tianjin Capital Environmental Protection Group Co., Ltd. in China (TCEPC) to provide a Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) system for upgrading and retrofitting the facilities of Tianjin Xianyang Road Wastewater Treatment Plant (Xianyang Road WWTP) in Tianjin, China. The BNR system will be designed to treat 450,000 m3 per day and to significantly improve the effluent discharge standard of Xianyang Road WWTP from the national standard of Class II to Class I. The project is scheduled for start up in April 2010.</description><pubDate>Sep 25, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens extends oil removal product and service offering in Saudi Arabia </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1945&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies and MyCelx Technologies Corporation (Gainesville, Georgia, USA) have reached an exclusive distributorship and service agreement to promote oil removal technology in Saudi Arabia. Siemens will use its sales and service organization in Saudi Arabia to distribute and support the MyCelx product line, which includes proprietary advanced coalescer and oil removal technology, as well as proprietary filtration media. </description><pubDate>Sep 01, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Memcor ultra filtration system for large city in Eastern China: Siemens awarded with project to upgrade Wuxi drinking water facility </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1937&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies received a contract from Wuxi Water Supply General Company in China’s Jiangsu Province to supply a turnkey water treatment solution for Wuxi Zhongqiao Water Supply Co., Ltd. Centerpiece of the solution will be a Memcor ultra filtration membrane system. It will produce 150,000 m3 per day high quality drinking water for the residents of Wuxi, making it one of the largest membrane-based drinking-water treatment projects in China. The order volume amounts to 40 million Renminbi ( approx. 4.2 million Euro). The plant is scheduled to start up at the beginning of 2010.</description><pubDate>Aug 04, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens Water Technologies commissions on-site mobile treatment equipment and services for produced water at a major oil company’s site in the Western United States</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1935&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens Water Technologies has commissioned a produced water treatment system for a major oil company’s site in Western U.S. The system, consisting of on-site mobile equipment and services, recycles flowback water through the treatment process to provide a source of “frac” water for reuse. Sized for 6,000 barrels per day (bpd), the mobile system consists of a flotation unit, media filtration and cartridge filtration. The heart of the system is the Veirsep system; a horizontal flotation system that incorporates several unique technologies to separate oil, grease and suspended solids from the flowback stream. The system also supports the customer’s green objectives by conserving fresh water and avoiding greenhouse gas emissions.</description><pubDate>Jul 27, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens to provide sustainable process water system for Dr. Pepper Snapple Group’s new Victorville, California bottling plant</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1922&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens has been awarded a multi-million-dollar contract by The Benham Companies to provide a process water system for Dr. Pepper Snapple Group’s (NYSE: DPS) new bottling plant in Victorville, California. The treated water will be used to make purified bottled water and a variety of soft drinks. The 1,200-gpm (273-m3/hr) system will include media and carbon filtration, nanofiltration, reverse osmosis and ultraviolet disinfection, and is designed to recover more than 90% of the water. Siemens will design, install and start up the system, which is scheduled for commissioning in early 2010.</description><pubDate>Jul 08, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens introduces point-of-use advanced oxidation system for TOC reduction in semiconductor applications </title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1921&amp;languageId=2</link><description>Siemens has introduced an effective method for removing total organic carbon (TOC) in point-of-use (POU) ultrapure water treatment systems for semiconductor applications. This proprietary advanced oxidation process, referred to as the VANOX POU system, will consistently reduce TOC to 0.5 parts per billion (ppb) and can treat seasonal TOC variations in feed water. This is important, since TOC elevations above 1.0 ppb can directly affect the manufacturing process, significantly impacting product yields. </description><pubDate>Jul 06, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Greater flexibility in controlling swimming pool water quality: New software update for Depolox Pool measurement and control system</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1920&amp;languageId=2</link><description>In order to simplify measurement and control of the water quality in swimming pools and spas, Siemens Water Technologies is now offering a new software update for the Depolox Pool measurement and control system. The update provides greater flexibility in adapting the DIN contact – which passes on information on the hygiene parameters to the swimming pool control system – to the regulations applicable at the place of use. Moreover, it is now easier to combine the Depolox electronics module with any Depolox measuring modules. The software update also enables additional links to fieldbus systems and therefore supports data exchange with higher-level systems as well. The Version 2.10 software update can now be downloaded from the Internet for free.</description><pubDate>Jul 03, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Reliable instrumentation communication within complex plant structures: 
Measuring and control systems from Siemens Water Technologies become fieldbus-capable</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1916&amp;languageId=2</link><description>SFC, MFC and Depolox Pool measuring and control systems from Siemens Water Technologies can now be easily connected to plant level PLC systems via optional fieldbus modules. This reduces the overhead wiring considerably. Whereas data exchange from the instrumentation to plant level PLC systems has previously relied on available 4-20 mA outputs, the fieldbus modules expand this communication to a greater number of read and write functions.</description><pubDate>Jun 26, 2009</pubDate></item><item><title>Siemens highlights R&amp;D efforts, regional activities at Singapore Water Week</title><branche>Water/Wastewater</branche><link>http://info.industry.siemens.com/press/Details.aspx?pressArticleId=1911&amp;languageId=2</link><description>“The Asia Pacific region is like no other from a water perspective. It is a region that faces some of the most serious water and climate issues juxtaposed with the leading, and most innovative, water research and development in the world,” said Chuck Gordon, President and CEO of Siemens Water Technologies at the Singapore Water Week (SIWW) held June 22-26.</description><pubDate>Jun 22, 2009</pubDate></item></channel></rss>