Operations & Support

    Water Treatment O&M Companies

    Operations & maintenance contractors running water and wastewater assets under performance-based agreements.

    201 providers

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    SMR Projects Ltd – Xypex UK Distribution logo

    SMR Projects Ltd – Xypex UK Distribution

    United Kingdom

    Xypex is a non-toxic chemical treatment for the waterproofing and protection of concrete. Its primary and most distinguishing performance feature is its unique ability to generate a non-soluble crystalline formation deep within the pores and capillary tracts of the concrete; a crystalline structure that permanently seals the concrete against the penetration of water and other liquids from any direction. Xypex Crystalline Technology was developed in Vancouver in 1969. Since then, in both hemispheres, in every climatic challenge, and in widely varying construction situations, the technology has been tested and proven. In more than 90 countries, the proprietary crystalline waterproofing products of Xypex Chemical Corporation are stocked, sold and supported by a worldwide network of distributors and licensees such as SMR Projects Ltd. It has been over 50 years since Xypex Chemical Corporation first coined the phrase “Concrete Waterproofing by Crystallization”, a statement and concept that represented a radical departure from traditional surface-reliant barrier products of the day. Pursuing an entirely new path, Xypex developed a unique technology that takes advantage of the natural and porous characteristics of concrete. With water as the catalyst, Xypex’s proprietary chemicals react with the natural by-products of cement hydration (calcium hydroxide, mineral salts, mineral oxides, and un-hydrated and partially hydrated cement particles), forming a non- soluble crystalline structure within the interconnected pores and other voids in concrete. In this way, the crystalline structure becomes a permanent, integral part of the concrete matrix itself, preventing the ingress of water and other liquids even under strong hydrostatic pressure, and providing protection against harsh, aggressive environments. Since the introduction of Xypex, tens of thousands of concrete structures around the world have been waterproofed and protected with this unique crystalline technology and, over the years, extensive research, testing and performance success have furthered the awareness, understanding and confidence in Xypex, earning both the technology and the company an enviable reputation as the world standard in crystalline waterproofing. Using the high-power imaging capability of a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM), we display visual evidence that clearly differentiates Xypex from all other products in the waterproofing admixtures category. SEM is a technique whereby a precise photographic image of a microstructure is produced by scanning it with a focused beam of electrons. Extremely high degrees of magnification can be attained and, at x500 magnification, Xypex crystalline formations at work can be seen. Our SEM images show conclusively that the many and varied Xypex non- soluble crystalline structures formed within the concrete are unique, and truly have “… NO EQUAL.”

    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    Dam Maintenance & Repair
    Steve Vick International Ltd logo

    Steve Vick International Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Steve Vick International (SVI) is dedicated to delivering cost-saving solutions for damaged, redundant or outdated underground pipework. Since its foundation in 1981, SVI has been at the forefront in developing products and techniques for the repair, renovation and decommissioning of pipes. Predominantly our work has been in the gas industry but increasingly we are undertaking projects in the water and nuclear sectors. We are the UK’s leading producer of Pipe Coil Trailers and offer a range of Pipe Handling equipment such as Handlers, Crackers and Cutters. Some of our latest innovations include the PE Pipe Cutter, the Pipe Feeder for Pre-Insulated coiled pipe, PE Live Head for Live Mains Insertion, the Perpetual Pipe Pusher, FBOS (Foambag Operation on Stubs) and SMARTester. WATER: For over 20 years water utilities and their contractors in the UK and overseas have used our pipe handling equipment to improve their efficiency and safety. Today our products include Pipe Handlers, Pipe Coil Trailers and Pipe Cutters as well as our patented DRAINBLOCK™ and RATBLOCK™ sealing systems. GAS: In the UK we are major suppliers to all the gas distribution networks. Many of the techniques we have pioneered have become the preferred methods of working in the industry and our resin foam sealant products and associated equipment are key to many of the cost-saving renovation processes used. NUCLEAR: SVI offer solutions to the problems associated with decommissioning and sealing disused pipework, ducts, sleeves and ventilation shafts. Our technology can also be designed for the mass filling of large and complex voids and is a lightweight alternative to cement grout. We have worked at Hinkley, Sellafield, Harwell, Chapelcross and Hunterston. CONTRACT SERVICES: A rapidly expanding part of our business is our Contract Service department who are well known for their work in the field of renewing and repairing underground gas pipes, for the UK Gas Distribution Networks. However, they are becoming increasingly involved in projects being undertaken by water utilities, electricity providers, rail networks, civil engineers, construction companies and local councils. This reflects the range of skills and expertise available to solve on-site problems associated with pipe repair, renovation, and diversion. Located strategically around the UK the highly skilled team can provide a fast response, emergency repairs and a rapid call out service which is offered 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. HIRE: We offer specialist plant and equipment for the Utilities Industries. Products available for hire include our Pipe Handlers, Perpetual Pipe Pusher, Pipe Coil Trailers, Rapid Rotary Cutters, Rapid Window Cutters, MACAW Pipe Crackers, CRACKERJACK and Mini Purge. All our hire equipment comes with onsite support from our highly experienced engineers and our products are fully maintained and serviced at our depots. All equipment is also available to purchase. SMARTester: SMARTester is the wireless pressure test system, that ensures absolute traceability and best practice. The system combines: SMARTester pressure sensor, an intuitive App and a Dashboard database of test evidence. Together the 3 components work to give you confidence that your tests are highly accurate, fully compliant and that evidence is traceable.

    Networks - Water Supply
    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    Cadman Cranes Ltd logo

    Cadman Cranes Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Cadman Cranes is a leading provider of lifting solutions in the UK with over 50 years’ experience and a reputation for quality, reliability and safety. At the very forefront of sustainability within the industry, Cadman Cranes offer responsible and collaborative turn-key solutions across all industries. From depots in Colchester and Brentwood, Cadman is ideally positioned to cover the East of England and beyond, living and breathing its mission to provide safe lifting solutions to industry and communities in a collaborate, considerate and sustainable way. Cadman has always placed great importance on delivering so much more than just crane hire. Its values are focussed on the success of its clients, its people and its community, and it takes great pride in going the extra mile on every job, no matter how big or small. Cadman Cranes add value to your hard work and offer a full-service lifting solution that goes far beyond just crane hire. It doesn’t just look for customers, it looks for partnerships based on trust, quality and safety. Services include: Contract lift services: Our complete package service is ideal for those who require a fully managed lifting solution, removing your risk and liability, and ensuring that we deal with all of the ‘heavy lifting’. Crane hire services: Cadman Cranes is the leading crane rental company in the East of England, providing crane hire across London, Essex, East Anglia, and all over the UK. With cranes available 24/7, 365 days a year, we are well positioned to keep your operations moving. Tank clearance, dredging, and grab solutions: Cadman Cranes offers innovative tank clearance solutions with our custom-designed grab attachment. The remote-controlled grab, mounted to the hooks of our mobile cranes, can reach up to 60 meters and handle a variety of materials, including sewage waste, sludge, grit, mud, and sand. This service is ideal for wastewater treatment plants, sewage facilities, digester tanks, aeration tanks, ports, and any industrial sites that require regular tank cleaning, maintenance, or dredging. Specialist lifting equipment for utility installation projects: Utilising our range of specialist lifting equipment, we have assisted on some of the most complex utility installation projects throughout the East of England, solving problems currently unimaginable by other mobile crane hire companies. Our innovative Compact Crawler Cranes, in combination with our remote-controlled telescopic hydraulic grab, have proved invaluable in providing the highest level of service and crane hire to the utilities sector. If you would like to work with Cadman Cranes or are looking to add a safe and considerate crane hire solution to your list of approved suppliers, Cadman would love to hear from you.

    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation
    PBJ Engineering Services Ltd logo

    PBJ Engineering Services Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Do you need Thermal Hydrolysis Plant operational support, training and maintenance? Does your critical water process equipment require contract support and safety assurance? Visualise your assets and maintain operational efficiency through our 360 degree image capture. Invest in your operations through our professional training and technical support services. PBJ Engineering delivers a range of services to support your wastewater treatment and process facilities – we specialise in THP systems and Steam Boiler services, including CEA and BOAS accreditation.  Our team is available nationally to support you, on a contract, project or emergency basis. Supporting your facility and team with a programme custom designed to your needs, typically includes elements of: Whole System Contracts Consultation and Best Practice Commissioning and Maintenance Optimisation and Monitoring Refurbishment and Rebuild Component Fabrication and Supply Training for BOAS and CEA accreditation Some of our typical on-site activities include full capabilities in; Thermal Hydrolysis Plants Steam Boilers Sludge Dewatering Processes Water Treatment Coil and Heat Exchangers Pumps Our ancillary support services includes; 360O Image Capture – Virtual Plant Training and Maintenance Boiler Log Books – Custom design & print Boiler House design – Advice and guidance Equipment – Hire services and component spares Our priority is the safety of all personnel and the operational efficiency of your facilities.  We work with you and your team, to maintain and support your infrastructure – protecting your people, investment and optimising your asset performance. Our team is qualified with CITB / SMSTS, Achilles, and CEA / BOAS. Project involvement includes: Thames Water: Basingstoke THP (commissioning, operation, training, optimisation, maintenance) Beckton THP (energy surveys) Chertsey THP (operation, training, optimisation) Crawley THP (commissioning, operation, training, maintenance, part supply) Crossness THP (operation, optimisation, energy reduction, training, energy surveys) Longreach THP (operation, training, optimisation) Oxford THP (operation, optimisation, fault finding) Riverside THP (water treatment installation, design, energy surveys) Severn Trent: Finham THP (operational support) Strongford THP (operation, training) Southern Water: Goddards Green THP (operational support & performance monitoring) Others: Nestles – Trowbridge – steam boiler operational contract (24 hour call out) Heathrow airport – hot water boiler – scale cleaning

    Renewables & Energy Management
    Asset Maintenance & Rehabilitation

    Water and Wastewater Operation and Maintenance Services: Contract Models, KPIs, and Asset Performance

    Operation and Maintenance (O&M) services for water and wastewater treatment facilities span routine operations (process control, chemical dosing, sampling, data recording), planned preventive maintenance (PPM: servicing pumps, valves, instruments, and rotating equipment on schedule), reactive maintenance (breakdown response, emergency repair), and performance management (KPI monitoring, regulatory compliance reporting, asset condition tracking). O&M contract models range from in-house operation (utility employs its own operations and maintenance staff) through managed service (external contractor provides staff and manages O&M under performance contract) to full design-build-operate-transfer (DBOT: contractor designs, builds, and operates for a concession period of 15 to 25 years before handback).

    PPM programmes for water treatment assets are structured around equipment criticality and manufacturer recommendations. Pumps: oil/grease lubrication quarterly, mechanical seal inspection 6-monthly, vibration analysis 6-monthly (predictive maintenance trigger: vibration velocity above 4.5 mm per s RMS per ISO 10816-3 Class III), impeller inspection and clearance check annually. Blowers and compressors: oil change 3 to 6-monthly, air filter replacement 3-monthly, belt tension check monthly (V-belt tension tolerance plus or minus 5 percent). UV systems: lamp intensity check weekly, sleeve cleaning monthly, lamp replacement at intensity below 70 percent of new-lamp value (typically 12 to 24-month lamp life). Membrane systems: CEB weekly, CIP quarterly, integrity testing daily or monthly per regulatory requirement.

    O&M contract performance is measured by KPIs aligned with regulatory compliance and customer service. Typical KPIs: treatment process compliance (effluent quality parameters within consent limits, target 99.5 percent compliance), uptime or availability (proportion of time the treatment plant is operational and producing treated water at rated capacity, target above 99 percent for critical infrastructure), response times (PPM completion within schedule: 95 percent on time; reactive maintenance response: critical faults within 2 hours, minor within 24 hours), and unit cost (cost per m3 of water treated, benchmarked against industry database). Performance-based contracts include KPI-linked payment (bonus for outperformance, financial deduction for underperformance), creating incentive alignment between operator and asset owner.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What does a water treatment O&M contract typically include?

    A comprehensive water treatment O&M contract covers: (1) Routine operations - process monitoring and control (SCADA observation, manual readings every 4 to 8 hours, process adjustments), chemical dosing management (ordering, receiving, dosing pump calibration and setpoint management), statutory sampling and analysis (daily, weekly, monthly per licence and consent conditions); (2) Planned preventive maintenance - all scheduled maintenance activities per PPM schedule (pump services, filter backwashes, instrument calibrations, UV lamp replacements); (3) Reactive maintenance - attending and resolving breakdowns, fault investigations, emergency call-out 24/7; (4) Regulatory compliance management - record keeping, licence reporting, Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI) or Environment Agency submissions, corrective action when parameters approach limits; (5) Asset management inputs - condition assessments, capex recommendations, lifecycle planning support. Contract duration: 3 to 5 years for managed service; 15 to 25 years for DBO/DBOT.

    What is the difference between PPM and reactive maintenance?

    Planned Preventive Maintenance (PPM) is maintenance carried out on a time-based or condition-based schedule to prevent equipment failure before it occurs: oil changes, seal replacements, filter cleaning, calibration checks, and vibration monitoring conducted at fixed intervals (daily, weekly, monthly, annually) regardless of whether the equipment shows signs of failure. The cost of PPM is predictable and budgeted. Reactive maintenance (corrective maintenance, breakdown maintenance) is carried out in response to an equipment failure or fault: emergency pump repair after bearing failure, UV lamp replacement after unit alarm, valve repair after gland leak. Reactive maintenance costs are unpredictable and often significantly higher than PPM due to emergency contractor call-out rates, expedited spare parts, and production downtime costs. Industry target: PPM should represent 80 percent or more of total maintenance hours; reactive below 20 percent. A well-executed PPM programme reduces reactive maintenance frequency, overall maintenance cost, and unplanned downtime.

    How is O&M cost benchmarked for water utilities?

    O&M cost benchmarking uses: (1) Unit cost metrics - cost per m3 of water produced ($0.15 to $0.60 per m3 for conventional drinking water treatment; $0.30 to $1.20 per m3 for advanced treatment including membranes and UV); cost per population equivalent served per year ($50 to $150 per PE per year for WWTP O&M); (2) Industry database benchmarks - Ofwat cost benchmarking model (UK) uses totex (total expenditure) benchmarking across all 17 regulated companies to identify relative efficiency; NACWA utility benchmarking (US) for wastewater; AWWA benchmarking programme for water; (3) Process-specific benchmarks - aeration energy 0.3 to 0.6 kWh per kg BOD removed (activated sludge); chemical cost $0.05 to $0.20 per m3 for coagulation (surface water); UV energy 0.02 to 0.05 kWh per m3 at 40 mJ per cm2; (4) Labour productivity - staff hours per ML treated per day; automation and remote monitoring reduce staffing requirements by 20 to 40 percent versus manually operated plants.

    What qualifications are required to operate a water treatment plant?

    Operator qualification requirements vary by jurisdiction and plant type. UK: Water Industry Registration Scheme (WIRS) - competency-based registration for drinking water treatment (Level 3 to Level 6 WIRS qualification depending on plant complexity: Level 3 for simple groundwater, Level 6 for multi-stage surface water treatment including membranes and advanced oxidation). Environment Agency requires qualified operators for WWTP discharge permits. US EPA: state-issued drinking water and wastewater treatment operator certification required in all 50 states; grades T1 to T4 for treatment, D1 to D4 for distribution (AWWA certification framework); minimum grade required determined by plant complexity and population served. EU: no harmonised EU requirement; member states set national qualification requirements. Operator training programmes: CIWEM (UK), WaterNZ, AWWA, and state water environment associations provide technical training courses and competency assessments.

    Case Study·Industrial water utility, multi-site O&M contract, Yorkshire
    Challenge

    A chemicals group operating five process water treatment plants across two Yorkshire sites was managing O&M in-house with a team that had accumulated significant tribal knowledge but no documented PPM programme. A CQC audit found 34 percent of planned maintenance overdue, three critical chemical dosing pumps without service records, and one UV system operating below 70 percent lamp intensity without an alarm.

    Approach

    An O&M managed service contract was awarded following a competitive tender. The incoming operator completed an asset condition survey across all five plants within 60 days, loaded all assets into IBM Maximo CMMS, and built a 12-month PPM schedule aligned with manufacturer intervals and BS EN 13306. Critical spare parts were identified and minimum stock levels agreed with the client. A SCADA alarm rationalisation exercise reduced nuisance alarms from 240 per month to 38.

    Outcome

    PPM completion rate reached 97 percent within six months. The three critical dosing pumps were serviced and calibrated; UV lamps were replaced and intensity verified at 100 percent. Total reactive maintenance incidents fell by 58 percent year on year. The client reported zero regulatory compliance failures in the first 24 months of the contract.

    Questions to Ask Shortlisted Providers

    1. 1

      What is the scope boundary between O&M (revenue spend) and capital maintenance (capex), and who authorises capex works?

      An ambiguous capex/opex boundary creates disputes when major repairs are needed; the contract must define decision rights and approval thresholds clearly.

    2. 2

      What CMMS platform will be used and who owns the asset data at contract end?

      Asset data and maintenance history have long-term value; the client should retain data ownership and confirm export rights in the contract.

    3. 3

      What KPIs apply and what are the financial consequences of underperformance against each?

      KPI-linked payment structures vary widely; understanding which KPIs carry financial penalties versus warnings is essential for pricing risk.

    4. 4

      What is the minimum response time for a critical process failure and what is the out-of-hours call-out protocol?

      24/7 cover for critical water treatment assets usually requires a separate standby rota and remote monitoring; the cost of this cover must be explicit in the contract price.

    5. 5

      What regulatory submissions is the O&M operator responsible for and who carries liability for a compliance failure?

      DWI and EA submissions carry legal liability; the contract must clearly allocate responsibility between operator and asset owner for each compliance obligation.

    What Drives Cost in This Category

    Number of assets and plant complexity

    PPM labour hours scale directly with asset count and complexity; a five-plant contract with 200 major assets requires 3 to 5 full-time equivalent operators, dominating the fixed contract cost.

    24/7 standby and response requirement

    Out-of-hours standby cover for critical infrastructure adds 20 to 40 percent to base O&M cost; response time commitments of 2 hours or less require dedicated local standby personnel.

    Chemical supply and management

    Chemical procurement and dosing management can represent 15 to 25 percent of total O&M cost; consolidated purchasing through the operator may reduce unit costs by 5 to 15 percent versus client self-supply.

    Regulatory reporting and laboratory analysis

    Statutory sampling, accredited laboratory analysis, and DWI/EA reporting add 30,000 to 120,000 GBP per year depending on permit complexity and sample frequency.

    Key Regulations & Standards

    Water Industry Registration Scheme (WIRS)

    Competency-based operator registration for drinking water treatment; Level 3 to Level 6 qualifications required depending on plant complexity; all operators at regulated water company sites must hold appropriate WIRS registration.

    DWI Regulation 28 (WS(WQ)R 2016)

    Requires water companies to notify DWI of failures against prescribed concentrations or values; the O&M operator must have documented escalation procedures to trigger notification within the required timescales.

    EA Environmental Permit (Operator Competency)

    Environmental permits require the operator of a regulated site to demonstrate sufficient competency; the O&M contractor assumes the operator role and must meet the technical competency conditions of the permit.

    BS EN 13306:2017 (Maintenance Terminology)

    Provides standardised definitions for PPM, corrective maintenance, condition-based maintenance, and reliability-centred maintenance used in O&M contracts; alignment with this standard avoids scope disputes.