Infrastructure, Networks & Equipment

    Industrial WWTP Companies

    Industrial wastewater plant builders handling complex effluent from manufacturing, mining, energy, and chemical sites.

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    Devram International logo

    Devram International

    Verified
    India1-50 employees
    Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) Filters · Fixed Bed Activated Carbon Adsorbers · Powdered MOF Adsorbent Systems +19 more
    apac · mea

    DEVRAM INTERNATIONAL, headquartered in Surat, India, is a pioneering enterprise specializing in Snow and Rainwater Management with advanced contamination reduction abilities for storage and artificial groundwater recharge. Established as the commercial wing of Shree Someshwar Education Trust (SSET), DEVRAM INTERNATIONAL is driven by a mission to provide tech-enabled, nature-based solutions that address the world’s most pressing water and climate challenges. The company’s work integrates Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) principles and contributes across the source-to-sea water management cycle, ensuring holistic restoration of the global water cycle. Its innovative portfolio includes rainwater harvesting systems, stormwater management, aquifer recharge, artificial glaciers, desert trenches, rooftop water filtration, and green infrastructure models. These interventions directly reduce salinity in soils and aquifers, restore ecological balance, and enhance resilience to droughts, floods, and climate change. As the commercial promoter of the Global Rainwater Management Program (GRMP), DEVRAM INTERNATIONAL advances the vision of GRMP as a Global Common Minimum Program (GCMP) for nations and international bodies. GRMP demonstrates how rainwater and snowwater retention can restore entire natural cycles, while delivering unmatched benefits across the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Alignment with the SDGs • SDG 2 (Zero Hunger): By reducing soil salinity, supporting organic farming, and ensuring water availability for agriculture, GRMP safeguards food security. • SDG 6 (Clean Water & Sanitation): DEVRAM’s recharge structures and contamination reduction technologies guarantee safe, sustainable drinking water for communities. • SDG 7 (Affordable & Clean Energy): By reducing dependency on energy-intensive desalination, GRMP lowers national energy bills and improves hydropower capacity. • SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure): DEVRAM integrates nature-based water infrastructure with industrial operations, reducing OPEX and water footprints. • SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities & Communities): Through stormwater management and aquifer recharge, GRMP mitigates urban flooding and secures municipal supplies. • SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption & Production): Promotes a circular water economy, reusing wastewater, biogas from organic waste, and aligning with industrial CSR. • SDG 13 (Climate Action): By lowering GHG emissions and cooling local climates through water cycle restoration, GRMP strengthens resilience to global warming. • SDG 14 (Life Below Water): Free-flowing rivers, improved aquaculture, and reduced dam-related aquatic pollution support marine and freshwater ecosystems. • SDG 15 (Life on Land): DEVRAM’s interventions restore wetlands, mangroves, peatlands, and biodiversity-rich ecosystems, addressing land degradation. • SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals): The company actively collaborates with UN agencies, governments, World Bank programs, and private investors to scale GRMP globally. Founders and Leadership Dhaval Pandya, Co-Founder of DEVRAM INTERNATIONAL and CEO of SSET, is a globally recognized sustainability leader. He co-developed the Global Rainwater Management Program (GRMP), recognized by the United Nations Global Water Partnership (GWP) and the Government of India. As a Technical Committee Member (WRD03) of the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), he contributes to national water policy frameworks. His work is featured in UNCCD IWRM Action Hub and global forums like COP, Stockholm World Water Week, and World Bank SDG reviews. Manalika Pandya, Co-Founder, plays a critical role in embedding social, gender, and educational dimensions into GRMP. Her focus on women empowerment, local capacity building, and community-driven adoption ensures the program’s sustainability at the grassroots. Impact and Recognition DEVRAM INTERNATIONAL has piloted groundbreaking projects such as: Kawas Village (Gujarat, India): A GRMP model village achieving self-reliance in water, organic farming, and biogas, while resolving conflicts with industries. Delhi’s Water Paradox (Figshare Study): Shows how GRMP can solve megacity water crises without costly desalination or dams. GSECL Surat Project: Demonstrates reduced industrial water costs through GRMP recharge planning, aligning profitability with SDG and ESG goals. These projects show GRMP’s potential to reduce industrial and municipal water supply costs by up 60%, avoid massive investments in desalination and dams, and enable nations to achieve water sovereignty. Core Competencies • Rainwater & Snowwater Harvesting • Artificial Groundwater Recharge & Salinity Reduction • Stormwater Management & Urban Flood Control • Transboundary Water Cooperation • IWRM & Source-to-Sea Water Governance • AI-Enabled Hydrological Modelling & Policy Analytics • Environmental Services Restoration (Wetlands, Mangroves, Peatlands) • Circular Economy.

    Activated Carbon Filtration
    Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) Filters
    Multi-media Filtration (MMF) Systems
    +25 more
    manufacturing
    utilities
    Nereda logo

    Nereda

    United Kingdom

    Nereda® technology from Royal HaskoningDHV offers sustainable wastewater treatment solutions for municipal and industrial water. The natural sewage treatment process purifies water with minimal or no chemical usage by using the patented aerobic granular sludge technology. Compared to activated sludge technologies, the biological treatment power of the technology is much larger, while saving up to 50% on energy costs, delivering high quality effluent for low costs and requiring only a quarter of the area of conventional activated sludge installations. Biomass in the process develops as fast settling aerobic granular sludge. These granules have excellent settling properties, so the process does not require a separate time-consuming decant phase like conventional SBR’s. All the biological treatment processes take place simultaneously in the granules, requiring only one tank. The technology is very versatile; it can be developed as a new build or used to retrofit existing conventional CAS or SBR plants. The benefits of the technology include: Excellent treatment results and settling properties: Compared to activated sludge technologies, the biological treatment power of the technology is much larger as a considerably higher concentration of biological active mass is applied that in addition has a much higher content of microorganism that are crucial for biological nitrogen and phosphate removal. Sustainable: Compared to conventional wastewater treatment processes, the technology not only has significantly lower energy consumption and associated greenhouse gas emission, but also produces, commonly without the use of waste generating chemicals, a remarkably high effluent quality. Cost effective: The technology results in construction costs that are lower than for conventional technology as for example, tank volumes are up to four times smaller and less equipment is required. Small physical footprint: Its footprint at sewage treatment plants is reduced due to the full nutrient removal process taking place in one single reactor. Easy to operate: It has proved in operation to satisfy the most stringent purification requirements. Thanks to the nature of the technology, plant operation is easy and process performance robust. The technology is proven and applicable for even the largest applications. Currently, there are over 70 wastewater treatment plants in operation or under construction all over the world

    Designers
    SAVECO Environmental Limited logo

    SAVECO Environmental Limited

    United Kingdom

    SAVECO Environmental Limited is a member of the globally operating WAMGROUP – market leaders in bulk materials handling since 1968. SAVECO provides state-of-the-art solutions to customers in the United Kingdom and in the Republic of Ireland, providing a comprehensive product range of machines and equipment designed for effluent pre-treatment and sludge treatment in both municipal and industrial wastewater treatment plants, as well as livestock farming and biogas plants. Delivering innovative, market-oriented, and industrially manufactured products, SAVECO has a proven track record of success – working on major projects with Tier 1 & 2 Contractors as well as leading water utilities. SAVECO is determined to supply the most comprehensive range of equipment available to deliver a one-stop solution to its customers. SAVECO assures customers in any place in the world the highest possible quality product and service at a fair price.

    Accreditations
    Siltbuster Group logo

    Siltbuster Group

    United Kingdom

    Established for over 20 years, the Siltbuster Limited provides rapidly deployable, “modular off the shelf” water treatment solutions to the construction, industrial and municipal markets, with a client base ranging from the world’s most recognisable multi-national corporations to small enterprises. Siltbuster provides a wide range of water and wastewater treatment equipment for the industrial and municipal markets, including: Packaged lamella dissolved air flotation (DAF) units. Lamella clarifiers. Packaged biological treatment systems. Oil/water separators. Pipe flocculators. Reaction tanks. Containerised dosing systems. In the UK, Siltbuster has pioneered the concept of offering this plant through our extensive hire fleet. Approximately 20 major contracts and circa 50 smaller projects are undertaken each year for a diverse range of clients, many of which are some of the UK’s best-known companies. In addition to the industrial/municipal sector, Siltbuster has undertaken a number of mine water treatment projects in many countries, for example, the UK, Ireland, Greece, France, USA, Canada, Australia and Slovakia. The Siltbuster team pride themselves in their ability to react rapidly and in compliance with the project constraints, delivering mobile or permanent solutions tailored to meet your individual needs.

    Treatment Process Technologies
    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    SPP Pumps Ltd logo

    SPP Pumps Ltd

    United Kingdom

    For more than 140 years SPP Pumps has been a leading designer and manufacturer of centrifugal pumps and associated systems, a global principal in design, supply and servicing of pumps, pump packages and equipment for a wide range of applications and industry sectors. This includes water and wastewater treatment, oil and gas production, airports, hotels, construction, mining and for large industrial plants. Low life cost and environmental considerations are fundamental design priorities. With its exceptional expertise and experience, the company’s robust, trusted engineering has provided critical performance across the water industry. As a UK manufacturer, SPP are a leading supplier of clean and wastewater pumps to the Water Industry and has long established Framework agreements with many of the major Utilities throughout the UK and Northern Ireland. SPP Pumps has extensive experience of designing and delivering highly efficient ‘Pump as Turbine’ (PaT) solutions capable of rapid return on investment. Small hydro-electric power production provides a convenient, cost-effective source of renewable energy.

    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    SUEZ Advanced Solutions UK Ltd logo

    SUEZ Advanced Solutions UK Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Unique integrated water solutions and unrivalled expertise. Suez Advanced Solutions UK deliver innovative methods of water and wastewater management throughout the UK. Working with a wide range of customers in the industrial and utility sectors, SUEZ Advanced Solutions UK are focussed on tailored and integrated process solutions for measurable results. Suez Advanced Solutions UK’s suite of environmental technologies and services deliver optimised methods of water network management for the water sector. Utilising a wealth and depth of experience in water and sewerage networks, a wide range of pioneering and innovative process solutions are now successfully providing commercial benefits to water companies, and improving service quality for the end user. Our industrial water specialists deliver bespoke solutions based on the specific needs and process requirements of the customer, to provide reduced costs, energy and water consumption. Committed to continuous development through technical innovation, Suez Advanced Solutions UK transfer knowledge and expertise from a diverse range of industrial sectors, offering a comprehensive understanding of processes and relevant environmental and industry legislations.

    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    Asset Management
    EE

    Eragon Enviro Tech. (Xiamen) Co., Ltd.

    Verified
    China51-200 employees
    Reverse Osmosis (RO) · Inclined Plate Settlers (Lamella Clarifiers)
    china · apac · europe

    Eragon Enviro Tech (Xiamen) Co., Ltd. is a specialized provider of industrial water and wastewater treatment solutions, supporting engineering teams, EPC contractors, and industrial clients in solving complex water challenges. We focus on process design, system integration, equipment manufacturing, and modular system supply for industrial wastewater treatment, water reuse, ultrapure water (UPW), and advanced ZLD/MLD applications. Our solutions are applied across semiconductor, electroplating, electronics, and new energy industries, as well as other industrial sectors dealing with complex wastewater streams. We help clients improve system reliability, optimize process stability, reduce operational risks, and meet stringent discharge and reuse standards in demanding industrial environments. With in-house engineering capability and manufacturing strength, we support global partners from design to execution for high-performance water treatment systems.

    mining-quarrying
    chemicals-pharmaceuticals

    Industrial Wastewater Treatment Plant Design: Load Characterisation, Process Selection, and Discharge Compliance

    Industrial wastewater treatment plant (IWTP) design begins with comprehensive effluent characterisation: flow measurement (instantaneous, average, peak hour, and total daily), BOD5 and COD (including COD:BOD ratio indicating biodegradability - below 2 indicates readily biodegradable, 2 to 5 is moderately biodegradable, above 5 indicates recalcitrant compounds), suspended solids, nutrients (TN, TP), pH range (typically 4 to 11 for industrial), and specific contaminants (heavy metals, hydrocarbons, solvents, priority substances). Design flow for plant sizing is typically 1.5 to 2.0 times average daily flow for biological processes and 2.5 to 3.0 times average daily flow for physical-chemical processes to accommodate peak hydraulic loads without process upset.

    Process selection follows contaminant type. High-BOD organic wastewater (food and beverage, pulp and paper, brewing): aerobic activated sludge (conventional or sequencing batch reactor, SBR) or anaerobic digestion at above 2,000 mg per L COD for energy recovery. High-nitrogen effluents (fertiliser, food processing): nitrification-denitrification with anoxic zones (Modified Ludzack-Ettinger, 4-stage Bardenpho). Heavy metals: chemical precipitation at optimum pH, coagulation-flocculation, and sludge dewatering. High TDS brines: ZLD by crystalliser or evaporation. Hydrocarbon-contaminated: air flotation (DAF at 30 to 50 microns bubble size) for oil removal plus biological treatment for dissolved fraction. MBBR and MBR are increasingly preferred for brownfield retrofit where footprint is constrained.

    Regulatory compliance is driven by discharge consent conditions: direct discharge to surface water (permit from Environment Agency in UK, state NPDES permit in US) specifies limits for BOD, SS, COD, ammonia, pH, and sector-specific pollutants. Discharge to sewer (trade effluent consent from water company or industrial pretreatment permit in US) specifies limits upstream of the municipal WWTP. Non-compliance penalties: Environment Agency prosecutions lead to fines of $10,000 to $1M plus remediation costs; US Clean Water Act violations up to $37,500 per day per violation. Environmental management systems (ISO 14001) reduce non-compliance risk by formalising effluent monitoring, permit condition tracking, and process control responses.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What industrial effluent requires its own treatment plant?

    Industries with wastewater that cannot be discharged directly to sewer without pretreatment include: food and beverage (high BOD, typically 1,000 to 10,000 mg per L vs 250 to 500 mg per L sewer limit); electroplating (heavy metals and cyanide, above trade effluent consent limits); pharmaceutical (active pharmaceutical ingredients, solvents); petrochemical (hydrocarbons, TPH); tanneries (chromium, high TDS); semiconductor (metals, fluoride, IPA); and landfill (high COD, ammonia, variable heavy metals). Most water companies set trade effluent consent limits triggering pre-treatment: BOD above 500 mg per L, SS above 500 mg per L, pH outside 6 to 10, specific substances (chromium, cyanide, mercury) above agreed limits. Failure to treat before discharge is an environmental offence under Water Industry Act 1991 in the UK.

    What is the difference between aerobic and anaerobic wastewater treatment?

    Aerobic treatment (activated sludge, biofilm systems) uses oxygen-consuming bacteria to oxidise organic compounds to CO2, water, and new biomass. Achieves BOD removal above 95 percent, producing sludge at 0.3 to 0.5 kg dry solids per kg BOD removed. Requires continuous aeration (energy 0.5 to 1.5 kWh per kg BOD at 2 to 4 mg per L dissolved oxygen). Anaerobic treatment (UASB, EGSB, anaerobic lagoon) degrades organics without oxygen, producing biogas (60 to 70 percent methane, energy value 22 MJ per m3) and much less sludge (0.05 to 0.10 kg DS per kg COD). Economic for COD above 2,000 mg per L where biogas revenue offsets capital cost. Anaerobic is cost-effective at large scale and high-strength waste; aerobic follows as a polishing step to achieve discharge standards (aerobic effluent BOD below 20 mg per L vs anaerobic effluent BOD 100 to 500 mg per L).

    How do you meet zero liquid discharge for industrial wastewater?

    Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) eliminates all liquid effluent from a facility, recovering water for reuse and concentrating dissolved solids to a solid or paste. The treatment train: (1) Conventional pretreatment (coagulation, biological treatment) to remove organics and suspended solids; (2) Reverse osmosis to recover 70 to 80 percent of water at low energy cost (3 to 6 kWh per m3); (3) Brine concentration by High-Efficiency Reverse Osmosis (HERO, pH 10 to 11 to prevent scaling) or Mechanical Vapour Recompression (MVR) evaporator to 15 to 20 percent TDS (energy 10 to 20 kWh per m3 of water recovered); (4) Crystalliser to produce dry salts for disposal or sale (energy 50 to 80 kWh per m3 of final brine). ZLD capital cost is $2M to $50M for 1,000 to 10,000 m3 per day; applicable where discharge prohibition, water scarcity, or salt value (lithium, sodium sulphate) justifies the capital and operating cost.

    How is industrial wastewater sludge managed?

    Industrial wastewater sludge composition and quantity depend on the treatment process: chemical precipitation sludge contains metal hydroxides (heavy metals, up to 25 percent dry solids metal content) and must be characterised as hazardous if TCLP metals exceed thresholds. Biological sludge from activated sludge contains 60 to 80 percent volatile solids and 1 to 3 percent total solids in secondary clarifier underflow. Sludge handling sequence: thickening (gravity belt or drum thickener, from 0.5 to 3 to 4 to 6 percent DS), dewatering (belt press to 15 to 25 percent DS, screw press to 20 to 30 percent DS, centrifuge to 20 to 35 percent DS), and disposal (landfill for hazardous, anaerobic digestion then land application for non-hazardous biological sludge, incineration for pharmaceutical or contaminated sludge). Disposal cost: industrial hazardous sludge $200 to $600 per tonne, non-hazardous $50 to $150 per tonne.

    Case Study·Pharmaceutical manufacturing
    Challenge

    A pharmaceutical API manufacturer in the East Midlands discharged a mixed effluent stream (6,000 mg per L COD, pH 4 to 9 swing, trace solvents including acetonitrile and THF) under a water company trade effluent consent with a COD limit of 500 mg per L. Solvent spikes caused consent breaches and the water company had issued a formal notice under Water Industry Act 1991 Section 125.

    Approach

    Installed a two-stage treatment plant: neutralisation tank with automated pH dosing followed by UASB reactor achieving 70 percent COD removal, then a 4-stage Bardenpho activated sludge system for polishing to below 200 mg per L COD. Solvent segregation and batch neutralisation upstream eliminated pH swings. Solvent recovery by distillation was installed on high-strength solvent streams to reduce load to the IWTP.

    Outcome

    Effluent COD consistently below 300 mg per L over 24 months of operation. No consent breaches in the period following commissioning. Biogas from the UASB (280 m3 per day at 65 percent methane) was captured and used in the site boiler, displacing 3,500 GBP per month of natural gas. Sludge production from biological treatment was 60 percent lower than a fully aerobic alternative due to the anaerobic pre-stage.

    Questions to Ask Shortlisted Providers

    1. 1

      Have you characterised our effluent across the full range of production campaigns, not just during steady-state, and what is your design basis for peak hydraulic and peak load events?

      Industrial effluent variability is the single biggest source of IWTP underperformance. A plant sized for average conditions will fail during peak production campaigns or solvent changeover events. Ask for the design peak factor (typically 1.5 to 3 times average flow, 2 to 5 times average COD load) and how the plant manages these events without consent breach.

    2. 2

      What is the biodegradability of our specific compounds and does your process design account for any recalcitrant or inhibitory substances?

      Standard biological treatment fails for effluents with COD:BOD above 3 to 4, or for effluents containing compounds toxic to biological treatment such as antibiotics, heavy metals, or chlorinated solvents. If your effluent contains these, biological treatment must be pre-treated or supplemented with advanced oxidation. A designer who quotes biological treatment for a solvent-heavy effluent without toxicity testing is under-scoping the problem.

    3. 3

      What trade effluent consent limits apply to our discharge point, and have you confirmed with the receiving water company that the proposed plant design will consistently meet those limits?

      Trade effluent consents are site-specific and water-company-specific. Some consent limits include time-averaged limits and instantaneous never-to-exceed limits. A plant design should demonstrate, by treatability testing and modelling, that it meets both the average and the worst-case instantaneous limits. Consent breaches attract surcharges or formal notices under Water Industry Act 1991 Section 125 and can lead to supply termination.

    4. 4

      What sludge quantity and classification do you expect, and have you confirmed disposal routes and costs for the specific sludge composition?

      Industrial sludge disposal cost depends heavily on hazardous waste classification. Heavy metal precipitation sludge from electroplating is hazardous waste at 300 to 600 GBP per tonne. Biological sludge from a food-industry IWTP may be non-hazardous at 50 to 100 GBP per tonne. An IWTP design without confirmed sludge disposal route and cost can produce a plant that is technically compliant but economically unviable.

    5. 5

      What online monitoring and automated response does the plant include to detect and prevent consent breaches before effluent leaves site?

      Online COD monitors, TOC analysers, and pH sensors on the effluent channel provide early warning before discharge to sewer. An automated emergency diversion to a holding tank prevents consent breaches during process upsets. Ask specifically whether the plant includes a consent-compliance monitoring system and an automated response to detected limit exceedances.

    What Drives Cost in This Category

    Effluent COD concentration and biodegradability

    Capital cost of an IWTP scales approximately with organic load. A plant treating 100 m3 per day at 1,000 mg per L COD (100 kg COD per day) costs 200,000 to 600,000 GBP. The same flow at 5,000 mg per L COD costs 800,000 to 2,000,000 GBP due to larger reactor volumes, more sludge dewatering capacity, and additional treatment stages. Non-biodegradable COD requiring advanced oxidation adds 50 to 200 percent to capital cost.

    Trade effluent surcharge avoided

    Water companies in the UK charge trade effluent surcharges proportional to the strength and volume of discharge above standard consent strength (Mogden formula). A 100 m3 per day discharge at 2,000 mg per L COD and 500 mg per L SS may attract annual trade effluent charges of 30,000 to 80,000 GBP. An IWTP reducing discharge COD to 200 mg per L and SS to 100 mg per L can reduce trade effluent charges by 70 to 85 percent, with payback of 3 to 7 years on capital investment.

    Sludge disposal cost

    Sludge disposal is typically 20 to 40 percent of IWTP operating cost. Chemical precipitation sludge from electroplating is hazardous waste at 200 to 600 GBP per tonne, contributing 50,000 to 200,000 GBP per year for larger sites. Biological sludge from food industry IWTPs is non-hazardous at 50 to 120 GBP per tonne. Sludge dewatering with a centrifuge or belt press (capital 50,000 to 300,000 GBP) reduces disposal volume by 5 to 10 times.

    Energy cost for biological treatment

    Aerobic biological treatment requires aeration at 0.5 to 2.0 kWh per kg BOD removed. For a 1,000 kg BOD per day IWTP, annual aeration energy costs 50,000 to 200,000 GBP at 0.15 to 0.20 GBP per kWh. Anaerobic pre-treatment at COD above 2,000 mg per L reduces net energy cost by recovering biogas energy and reducing aerobic treatment load by 60 to 80 percent.

    Key Regulations & Standards

    Water Industry Act 1991 -- Trade Effluent Consent

    Under Water Industry Act 1991 Section 118, any non-domestic discharge to the public sewer requires a trade effluent consent from the sewerage undertaker. Consent specifies maximum flow, strength limits (COD, BOD, SS, pH, specific contaminants), and timing restrictions. Discharge without consent or in breach of consent conditions is an offence under WIA 1991 Section 118(5), punishable by fine up to 20,000 GBP per incident in magistrates court or unlimited fine at Crown Court.

    Environmental Permitting Regulations 2016 -- Direct Discharge to Surface Water

    Industrial facilities discharging treated effluent directly to surface water require an environmental permit from the Environment Agency under EPR 2016. The permit specifies discharge limits aligned with Water Framework Directive receiving water quality standards. Non-compliance triggers permit review, enforcement notices, and prosecution. Large discharges are subject to WFD objectives for achieving Good Ecological Status, which may require more stringent limits than technology-based standards.

    EU Industrial Emissions Directive 2010/75/EU (retained in UK)

    The IED applies to large industrial installations above specified capacity thresholds for energy, chemicals, waste management, and intensive agriculture. IED requires application of Best Available Techniques for pollution prevention including wastewater treatment. BAT Conclusions for relevant sectors specify minimum wastewater treatment performance and monitoring requirements. IED installations must comply with Environmental Permit conditions incorporating BAT-based effluent limits.

    COSHH Regulations 2002 -- Hazardous Effluent Handling

    IWTP operators handling industrial wastewater containing hazardous substances (solvents, acids, alkalis, heavy metals) must conduct COSHH assessments for operator exposure risk. Confined space entry into IWTPs requires a confined space permit under the Confined Spaces Regulations 1997. Chemical storage for treatment reagents (coagulants, acids, anti-scalants) requires risk assessment, appropriate PPE, and emergency spill response procedures per COMAH 2015 where threshold quantities are exceeded.