One trillion gallons of water recycled with Xylem technology
Xylem’s new 2020 Sustainability Report tracks the company’s progress in tackling critical global challenges of water access, affordability and resilience.
Xylem is helping its customers re-use more than one trillion gallons (4.3 billion cubic meters) of water, according to its 2020 Sustainability Report, Solving Water for a Resilient World. The company’s technology also prevented 369 billion gallons (1.4 billion cubic meters) of polluted water from potentially flooding communities and entering local waterways. Water re-use and pollution prevention are two of Xylem’s signature sustainability goals, targeted for achievement by 2025.
The reuse of more than one trillion gallons is equivalent to almost two million Olympic swimming pools. Other 2020 highlights from the report include Xylem helping 4.1 million underserved people get access to clean water and sanitation, doubling philanthropy to provide COVID relief to colleagues and communities, and nearly half of Xylem’s major facilities now operating on 100% renewable electricity.
Deployment of advanced water technologies is driving the dramatic sustainability gains, around the world. The City of South Bend, Indiana, optimized its existing wastewater network with artificial intelligence systems to deliver an 80 percent reduction in sewer overflows. A treatment plant in Cuxhaven, Germany, cut aeration energy use by 30 percent using Xylem technology. And a water utility in Malaysia identified more than 300 leaks in its network using sophisticated in-pipe sensors, helping dramatically reduce the loss of treated water.
“Bringing access to sustainable, clean and affordable water to more people around the world – while protecting the environment – is both our purpose and our business,” said Patrick Decker, Xylem’s president and CEO. “The achievements detailed in this report show how, together, our colleagues and our customers are making a big difference in our communities. Technology can do a lot to make the world more sustainable and more resilient, but these results come from the commitment, dedication, and even heroism of the people we’re so privileged to serve and work with, every day. It’s within our power to solve urgent challenges like water scarcity and affordability, now, and create a more water-secure world for future generations.”
In 2020, Xylem made significant progress toward its sector-leading 2025 signature sustainability goals, despite the additional challenges of COVID-19. Through its advanced products and technologies, the company helped customers reduce their carbon footprint by 0.7 million metric tons of CO2, equivalent to keeping 150,000 passenger cars off the road for a year. Xylem is now running almost half its major facilities on 100% renewable electricity, and has committed to transition its global vehicle fleet to electric and hybrid, targeting an initial 45 percent reduction in fleet CO2 emissions by 2023.
In addition to advancing its existing sustainability goals in 2020, Xylem made new commitments to address the pandemic’s impact, around the world. The company doubled philanthropic investments and extended new support to employees, business partners and the communities they serve. It also expanded relationships with its global NGO partners, like Americares and UNICEF, supporting 4.1 million people in underserved communities to get access to water and sanitation and providing 3.6 million people with water education to raise awareness and improve their quality of life.
“As a company, we recognize the opportunity we have to lead, given the breadth of our technologies and our global reach,” said Claudia Toussaint, Xylem’s Chief Sustainability Officer. “We navigate difficult times in ways that make us stronger and more resilient – and support our customers and communities to do the same. With that mindset, we pulled together across our organization, and with our partners around the globe, to help mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 while continuing to deliver on our sustainability commitments.”
“If anything, the pandemic has made the economic and social value of water networks and other critical infrastructure more apparent than ever,” continued Toussaint. “We know they are always essential, but we all learned how critical they are in times of crisis. They’re also a potential driver of economic recovery, and a pre-requisite for broad-based prosperity. The shocks of the last year have heightened everyone’s awareness of the need for greater resilience and equity, and the imperative of a sustainable future.”
To learn more about Xylem’s sustainability progress, download Solving Water for a Resilient World.