Friday, November 4, 2022

IDA 2022 World Congress a Global Meeting of Desal Minds


After changes of venue and multiple delays due to the Covid pandemic, the 2022 International Desalination Association (IDA) World Congress was finally held in Sydney Australia, October 9-13. It is the first time I have been to this conference, or any truly international water conference for that matter, and it was exciting and inspirational to see the global networking and established relationships across continents and the open sharing of technical knowledge and experiences. Everyone was drawn together by a common interest in water treatment, mostly by desalination, and protecting the earth’s most natural resource, no matter the country, language or culture. I may sound a bit cliché, but I was truly moved by the spirit and sense of common cause of the conference.

What’s New is the World of Desal? Brine Mining!

The main focus of the technical program was seawater desalination but there were some interesting topics and new developments being discussed in the desal world. Most notable to me was how to handle waste concentrate and a lot of interest in brine mining. Highly concentrated brine is being seen as a potential resource for rare earth metals, including lithium. First there needs to be processes to concentrate brine higher than conventional seawater membranes and companies such as Gradient and Toyobo presented on osmotically assisted RO (OARO) processes that can concentrate brine from a seawater process up to 130,000 mg/L TDS without needing significantly higher pressures. Osmotic assistance is provided by applying a saline stream on the permeate side, which lowers the osmotic pressure difference across the membrane, allowing permeate production at feed pressures less than the osmotic pressure of the feed. There is also interest in ultra-high pressure membranes and housings for achieving higher seawater recoveries and therefore higher brine concentrations, but I think if the counterflow processes are feasible, they are a safer and probably lower energy option.

 Once you have the highly concentrated brine, you have to extract the valuable constituents and from one presentation I saw from Dr. Monsalvo from Aqualia, that involves a lot of treatment steps… So it looks to me the recovered metals would need to be very valuable to offset the high cost of extraction. With world shortages in these elements, I’m sure with continued research the extraction costs will go down making these processes more feasible. There is no shortage of research in this area! There were also many presentations looking at minimizing the environmental impact of brines, indicating the industry realizes this needs to be addressed to ensure desalination is a viable water supply solution into the future.

Wastewater reuse also had a prominent share of the program, recognizing the role of desalination in reuse applications, with several dedicated sessions and two panel discussions, one of which I was very pleased to participate on.


The IDA Water Reuse Panel I was excited to be part of

I was also very impressed with how the technical sessions and panels were all conducted in the exhibit hall in walled-off areas, so it was easy to jump from session to session or to a panel discussion without leaving the hall. Meals were also served in the same area keeping attendees together all day. This is a great model for other conferences if it is logistically possible.

I can’t say I have anything negative to say about the show. Very professional production, great technical content, great networking, awesome venue! As long as you were able to get to Sydney… 

The comments and opinions in this post are my own and not those of my employer.

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