Essayer OR - Gratuit
Why India Must Tap Its Wastewater Prospects
Hindustan Times Ranchi
|July 02, 2025
India's water and wastewater treatment market, valued at $13.1 billion in 2023, is projected to reach $23.85 billion by 2033.
This number mirrors India's accelerating urbanization, climate fragility, and industrial thirst. In 2020, urban centers generated over 72.4 billion liters per day (BLD) of sewage; yet, the installed treatment capacity stood at just 31.84 BLD. The deficit of over 40 BLD represents a staggering gap in basic infrastructure. Progress here is unbalanced: Maharashtra treated over 8 BLD in end-2023, while Bihar treated under 0.4 BLD, despite comparable population pressures.
A country that aims to supply piped drinking water to every rural household continues to lose billions of liters of water daily because of inadequate treatment and reuse mechanisms. Can a water-secure India ever emerge if it continues to ignore wastewater?
India's industrial sector is a major player in this landscape. The industrial wastewater treatment sub-market was worth $1.44 billion in 2023 and is set to touch $2.4 billion by 2033.
Sewage treatment, meanwhile, remains the second-largest segment, growing from $5.01 billion in 2023 to a projected $9.08 billion by 2033. Water treatment, including desalination and recycling plants, dominates, climbing from $6.65 billion to $12.37 billion in the same period. This layered growth hints at the simultaneous pressures of urban expansion, rising demand for potable water, and tighter environmental mandates.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition July 02, 2025 de Hindustan Times Ranchi.
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