Water and wastewater treatment for mining.

Mining is the foundation for virtually all industrial chains and, at the same time, is among the sectors that consume the most water. With increasing pressure for reuse and a circular economy, treating and recovering water is no longer an "operational cost" but a strategy for efficiency and sustainability.

Segment characteristics

High consumption and a focus on reuse.

It is a sector with a high demand for water throughout the beneficiation and solid-liquid separation operations, with increasing attention being paid to recovery for reuse in the process. Furthermore, the circular economy agenda places value retention at the center: reducing losses, avoiding rework, and transforming "leaks" into efficiency gains.

Challenges of the segment

Fine solids, complex pulps, and operational stability.

Stages such as thickening, filtration, and tailings disposal require fine control of turbidity, sedimentation, and dewatering, especially when there are very fine particles and more difficult-to-handle slurries. Added to this are practical challenges such as foam formation in flotation, dust control, and rheological behavior in slurry transfer and pipelines.

Recommended products

In this segment, coagulants, flocculants, antifoams, dust suppressants, rheology modifiers, and filtration aids are directly connected to the critical points of the process: clarification, water recovery, increased solids percentage, and operational stability. When properly applied, these inputs reduce water and energy consumption, decrease downtime, and make operations such as thickening, filtration, and slurry transport more efficient and predictable.