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Increasing your business in the booming world market of water and wastewater technologies
By Ellen Bohon Zeytoun July 1, 2004
This article was adapted from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Global Water & Wastewater Export Market Plan.Access to safe drinking water and contamination of surface water bodies is a major problem in many areas of the globe. In the year 2000, approximately 1.1 billion people (18 percent of the world's population) lacked access to safe drinking water, and 2.4 billion (40 percent of the total population) lacked adequate sanitation. Most of these people live in developing countries, predominantly in rural areas. Over one-third of the urban water supplies in developing countries operate only intermittently, while roughly 40 percent of the drinking water supply is lost due to leakage in the distribution systems.
At the same time, countries have come to recognize that an adequate supply of clean water and effective wastewater treatment is essential for sustainable development. Governments and organizations around the world are investing substantial sums in water and wastewater improvements. These expenditures create real opportunities for U.S. companies to export water and wastewater equipment technology.Global Market Size and Characteristics
The global market for water and wastewater equipment and chemicals was estimated at $47 billion in 2001. Water-related services also represent a significant share of the $77.1 billion (2001) consulting and engineering market.
The United States, Western Europe, and Japan represent over 80 percent of the total market size, but those are mature markets with an average growth of 3 percent to 4 percent. At the same time, the economic recovery of emerging markets in Southeast Asia and Latin America from the 1997 crisis, rapid expansion of the Chinese economy, and broadening demand in the Middle East promise a return to the 10 percent to 20 percent pre-1997 market growth in the developing world.
With assistance from international donors, public sector agencies in developing countries, particularly in Asia, have launched multi-million-dollar spending programs in water supply and sanitation, and are encouraging private sector investments. The proportion of industrialized countries' development assistance devoted to water supply and sanitation increased steadily from 1986 to 1996, rising from 3.4 percent to 6.6 percent of total assistance. In terms of cash, bilateral commitments from industrialized countries for assistance to developing countries in this sector rose from $1 billion in 1986 to $2.9 billion in 1996 (these numbers do not include France). In absolute terms, Germany and Japan's donor funding was particularly large: Germany spent nearly $3.4 billion, while Japan invested $9.5 billion.
The Market in Industrialized Countries
The water and wastewater equipment markets in industrialized countries, including the United States, comprise roughly 80 percent of the global market, or approximately $34 billion a year. The U.S. market for water and wastewater equipment accounts for about half of this amount -- $17.1 billion in 2001 (Environmental Business International, 2003). However, these markets are growing slowly, and the demand is mostly satisfied by existing suppliers.
About the author
Ellen Bohon Zeytoun
Ellen Bohon Zeytoun is a senior international trade specialist in the Office of Environmental Technologies Industries at the U.S. Department of Commerce in Washington, D.C. Prior to joining the department in 1996, she worked for the U.S. Information Agency's Voice of America - Office of Cuba Broadcasting, as well as the Organization of American States. Zeytoun has an MA in international commerce and policy from George Mason University and a BA in Spanish and political science from the University of California, Davis. She can be contacted at (202) 482-0359.
American Rivers, a river conservation organization, recently commended the Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority for promoting water efficiency as the first source of supply in its recently released study,