4. Industry and Water — From Zero-Discharge Factories to Industrial Symbiosis

A shift in industrial water use

Modern industries consume vast amounts of water — for cooling, cleaning, transporting materials, and processing products. But today, many companies are changing course: moving from passive water users to smart, circular systems that reuse water and minimize waste.

How Water Is Used in Factories

In industrial settings, water is used in many ways:

  • As a raw material (e.g., food and beverage industry)
  • As a process medium (rinsing, material transport)
  • For cooling and heat exchange
  • For industrial cleaning and sanitation

Traditionally, used water was simply discharged. Now, thanks to advanced technologies, the goal is to close the water loop.

Water recovery technologies — Real-World cases

Infographic detailing how water is used in industry, with examples of water recovery technologies such as membrane bioreactors, product condensation reuse, closed-loop cooling, and AI-based leak detection, concluding with industrial symbiosis for resource sharing.

1. Process Water Treatment and Recycling

Internal systems using membrane bioreactors (MBR) and advanced filtration can make process water reusable — even for food applications.

Example: PepsiCo cut freshwater intake by 70% across 21 plants using treated process water.

2. Recovering Water from Products

Some industries now extract water from raw materials during processing and reuse it internally.

Example: In PepsiCo’s snack plants, water released from frying potatoes is condensed and reused — saving up to 60 million liters per plant per year.

3. Closed-Loop Cooling Systems

Evaporative towers and condensers allow cooling water to be recirculated with minimal loss.

Example: Dow Chemical in the Netherlands uses treated municipal wastewater in its industrial cycles, saving 2.5 million m³ of freshwater annually.

4. Smart Monitoring and Predictive Maintenance

Sensors and AI algorithms detect hidden leaks, optimize processes, and improve quality control.

Example: In the automotive sector, smart water monitoring has identified and resolved micro-leaks, saving tens of thousands of cubic meters per year.

Industrial symbiosis

More and more companies are sharing water resources and by-products:

  • Wastewater from one process can become a resource for another

Example: Nutrient-rich wastewater used for agricultural fertigation

Coming Up…

In the next chapter, we’ll explore the tangible benefits of smart water management — environmental, economic, and reputational. You’ll see why water recovery isn’t just good for the planet — it’s great for business.