GE Water Filters, Quenching the Worlds Thirst


Born from the mind of the great inventor Thomas Edison General Electric merged with Thomson Huston Company in 1892. The company has taken off since then as a leader of industry to become in 2009 the world’s largest company.

Since the days of the lighting sector, GE has ventured out and diversified. Today, General Electric has a Conglomerate of businesses; Aviation, Aircraft, Jet Engines, Electricity, Entertainment, Finance, Gas Turbine, Generation Industrial Automation, Lighting, Medical Imaging Equipment, Medical Technology, Medical Software, Motors, Railway Locomotives and Wind Turbine.

Impact On Environment

Given the multi-national presence of a corporation the size of GE, one would naturally assume that it would have had, over the years, in one or another of its divisions, a negative impact on the environment. Like many other large businesses, GE has in the past been responsible for extensive environmental damage, but it is unique in that it has resolved to become a champion of the environment rather than its enemy. Since 2004, through a variety of pro-conservation initiatives GE has dedicated itself to preserving and protecting the environment. These initiatives are working: GE has not only met but exceeded its own goal for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 1.01 million metric tons; and it has decreased its overall energy use by 4.42 million MMBtus.

No Water Brings More More Crisis

Water shortages and unsafe water hinder the growth of nations around the world. In response to the limited amount of clean and safe drinking water around the planet GE has created a water filter. GE has poured all available resources into creating a filter that strives to improve conservation, reuse, and increase the availability of safe drinking water

In a case study, GE is at the forefront of a profound transformation converting one of the plants more abundant yet unusable resources to an essential substance of life. Using a reverse osmosis process that is more energy efficient and cost effective than alternative methods the largest desalination plant in Africa has been built. On February 2008 the Hamma plant in Algeria’s capital was opened and is currently supplying clean drinking water to over 1.5 million people. Using this new initiative to kick start its environmental campaign, GE water filter is quenching the worlds thirst for clean water one country at a time.

GE water Filter & Process Technologies is revolutionizing the recycling of waste water in the American southwest and around the world. In the city of Tempe, AZ, GE with its GE water filter project has increased the productivity of the citys water reuse capabilities enormously, allowing the recycling of an additional 2.5 billion gallons of water per year. With eco-imagination and new GE water filter processes, the purity of recycled water is now making it a valuable resource, changing the environment, changing lives and bringing new hope to a thirsty world.

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Posted on July 7th, 2009 by Zachus J Winestone and filed under gardening | No Comments »
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