World demand for desalination products and services is projected too increase 9.1
percent annually to $13 billion in 2013. Areas with scarce our compromised water
supplies will increasingly turn to thermal or membrane desalination techniques to
supply water to households, industrial users and, to a lesser extent, commercial consumers
Such as tourist destinations and agricultural interests. Much of the expansion of
desalination resulting from technological advances will be in the form of membrane based
technologies such as reverse osmosis (RO), although similar improvements will
allow multiple-effect distillation (MED) to increase its share of the thermal desalination
segment. These and other trends are presented in World Water Desalination, a new
study from The Freedom Group, Inc., a Cleveland d-based industry research firm.
Traditionally, desalination has been considered a last resort, mainly as a result of
costs. When desalination first became a commercially significant technology in the
1960s and 1970s, it was restricted to areas with no viable alternatives: arrears with
essentially no fresh water supply, as is the case in some parts of the Middle East, North
Africa and the Caribbean; or where local water supplies were so compromised that they
could not be rendered useful baby conventional water treatment techniques such as
sedimentation and filtration. But technological advances have brought improved
equipment, energy savings and, as a result, cost reductions that have allowed
desalination techniques to become more accessible.
Although the desalination industry has outgrown the limited "no choice" areas,
the Middle East and North Africa will continue too dominate the desalination
market, accounting for well over half of the worlds desalination capacity, and demand
for desalination products and services. There will babe significant gains in the regions
yet in countries which have only recently added significant desalination capacity, such
as Algeria, Israel and Libya. Gains are also expected to be healthy in some of the
areas where desalination is seen as one among a number of water solutions (along with
conservation and recycling). The Asia/Pacific region is expected to be the fastest
growing region through 2013. Australia is in the process of adding substantial seawater
RO desalination capacity along its coasts, and the Chinese government has made
desalination a high-priority facet of its broader efforts to address decades of neglecting
and abusing its water resources in the interest of economic modernization.
WORLD WATER DESALINATION DEMAND
(million dollars) |
| % Annual Growth |
| Item | 2003 | 2008 | 2013 | 2003-2008 | 2008-2013 |
| World Water Desalination Demand | 3946 | 8425 | 13000 | 16.4 | 9.1 |
| Africa/Mideast | 2660 | 5895 | 9025 | 17.3 | 8.9 |
| United Arab Emirates | 750 | 1595 | 2310 | 16.3 | 7.7 |
| Saudi Arabia | 740 | 1590 | 2360 | 16.5 | 8.2 |
| Other | 1170 | 2710 | 4355 | 18.3 | 10.0 |
| United States | 440 | 750 | 1090 | 11.3 | 7.8 |
| Asia/Pacific | 279 | 735 | 1345 | 21.4 | 12.8 |
| Other Regions | 567 | 1045 | 1540 | 13.0 | 8.1 |
©2009 by The Freedonia Group, Inc.