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Friday, February 5, 2010

Water Security and the Recession's Impact on Nanotech

Here are two great insights on water security in Israel and the recession’s impact on nanotech, both from Lux Research’s Lux Populi

1. Water Security Carries a High Cost for Israel’s Citizens:

Changes in Israel’s water industry are having a drastic effect on the nation’s water bills. At the start of the year, Israel’s national water company, Mekorot, which provides 80% of the nation’s water, increased water rates by 25%. Additionally, rates will increase by another 16% during this summer, and at least another 2% at the start of 2011. Currently, water rates range between $1.5 and $2 per cubic meter.

The additional money will help fund a rapid integration of desalination plants into Israel’s water infrastructure. Currently, Israel sources 80% of its drinking water from Lake Kinneret. However, recent water usage levels have caused the lake to drop 1.5 meters in the past two years, and created a total deficit of 2 billion cubic meters. In a report, Mekorot stated there is a 38% chance that the lake will drop to a level by the end of 2010 that prohibits further pumping.

Mekorot instituted a program in 2008 to drill relief wells, which reduced water sourcing from Lake Kinneret by nearly 50%. The company’s long-term water solution involves installing a series of desalination plants that draw from the Mediterranean Sea. Currently, three plants are fully operational, providing approximately 150 million cubic meters of water per year. A fourth plant in Hadera became operational in December 2009, and is expected to reach its full capacity of approximately 125 million cubic meters per year within a few months. Mekorot is planning on bringing two additional plants online by 2012, bringing the total production to 600 million cubic meters, or 80% of Israel’s residential demand. The Israel Water Authority predicts that the increased water production will end the country’s water shortage within three years.

Once completed, the company will invest an additional 5 billion ILS ($1.36 billion) to install a new east-to-west pipeline. The company will focus on reducing water loss with the new pipeline, but it has not made an estimate on the increase in yield at this time.

Even with such drastic rate increases, Mekorot’s CEO believes that the company will still endure heavy losses, and the company is already facing an $8 billion gap in the project’s funding. This indicates that the Israeli people can expect further increases over the coming years. The Israeli government has attempted to ease the impact on customers by temporarily suspending the national Drought Tax until April 2010. At this time, there are no additional plans for government funding or support of the project.

2. The Recession’s Impact on Nanotechnology

The economic downturn has hit key nano-enabled product segments hard, particularly automotive, construction, and electronics. The output of these three sectors is immense, accounting for 10% of the U.S. GDP in 2008, and 9% worldwide. Plus, because all are big end markets for nanomaterials and their intermediates, the disruption within them has rippled back up the value chain.

As a result, Lux Research has lowered its previous projections for nano-enabled product revenues by 21%: We now expect nanotechnology to generate $2.5 trillion in 2015. Hardest hit will be two nanomaterials and two types of nanointermediates.

Among materials, carbon nanotubes and ceramic nanoparticles will see the biggest impact from the recession, due largely to their out-sized applicability in the struggling automotive and construction sectors. The relatively diverse applications for ceramic nanoparticles will enable them to recover more quickly. Among nanointermediates, nanocomposites and coatings will take the biggest whack. However, both should return near previously projected revenue levels by 2015.

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