Ultrafiltration Membrane Project for the Fengzhen Jieyuan Reclaimed Water Reuse Plant in Inner Mongolia


The Jieyuan Reclaimed Water Utilization Plant in Fengzhen City is located in the Fluorine Chemical Industry Park (East Zone) of Fengzhen City, Ulanqab City, Inner Mongolia. It covers an area of 22 mu and has a designed treatment capacity of 24,000 tons per day. The plant employs an integrated process consisting of “fiber disc filtration—ultrafiltration—disinfection.” The raw water produced meets the Class I B standard specified in the “Emission Standards for Pollutants from Urban Sewage Treatment Plants” (GB18918-2002), and the treated water meets the requirements for “boiler feedwater” as outlined in the “Water Quality for Industrial Use in Urban Wastewater Recycling” (GB/T19923-2005).

Nanshan Tap Water Group Water Treatment Project


Nanshan Group was founded in the early days of China’s reform and opening-up policy. After more than four decades of hard work and perseverance, it has now grown into a large-scale private joint-stock enterprise group—a village-enterprise integrated entity—that consistently ranks among the top 500 Chinese enterprises. This project, spanning five consecutive phases, has achieved a total daily water production capacity of 52,000 tons and is one of the earliest projects in Shandong Province to adopt ultrafiltration technology in municipal tap-water systems.

Beijing No. 10 Water Plant Water Treatment Project


The No. 10 Water Plant in Beijing is located in Dingfuzhuang, Chaoyang District. With a designed daily water supply capacity of up to 500,000 cubic meters, it is one of the supporting projects for Beijing's South-to-North Water Diversion Project. Upon completion, it will improve the water supply situation in parts of Chaoyang, Tongzhou New City, and Yizhuang. According to the plan, after the No. 10 Water Plant is completed, its water sources will come from both the Miyun Reservoir and the Yangtze River water diverted to Beijing under the South-to-North Water Diversion Project, gradually achieving dual-source water supply. The Canpure submerged ultrafiltration membranes used in this project represent the first membrane system project for the South-to-North Water Diversion Project, with a treatment capacity of 16,000 tons per day.

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