Expanding Market for Pumps in India

25.06.2015

Technology for processing drinking water and treating wastewater—and the many kinds of pumps needed for this—is one of the main exhibition sections at IFAT India. India´s leading environmental technology fair will be taking place for the third time at the Bombay Exhibition Centre (BEC) in Mumbai, between October 13 and 15, 2015.

This event will again be bringing together decisionmakers and users of this technology with the international companies that supply high-tech products and services, including from the pumps segment.

Demand for pumps is rising

Worldwide demand for pumps that transfer liquid is set to increase in the coming years at an annual rate of around 5.5 percent, with the expected market volume reaching USD 84 billion in 2018. This is one finding of a recent study by international market researchers Freedonia. Alongside the oil and gas industry, as well the chemicals industry, water management is one of the main fields of application for pumps. According to the analysts at Freedonia, two factors are driving the demand for pumps worldwide: The first is that developing and newly industrializing countries are gradually improving their water and wastewater infrastructure, and the second is that the industrialized nations are replacing and upgrading their now ageing facilities.

Sales in Asia

In particular Asian countries, such as China and India, will account for a considerable proportion of future demand for modern pump solutions. Consultants Frost & Sullivan, for example, expect annual sales of displacement pumps in China to rise from around USD 1.19 billion in 2013 to around 2.01 billion in 2018. This represents a rate of increase year-on-year of eleven percent.

For India, the international market researchers and consultants TechSci Research forecast an average annual growth in the market of twelve percent between 2015 and 2020.

Among the most important drivers behind this development, say the analysts, is Indian agriculture, which is increasingly drawing on ground water for irrigation purposes. Business is also being boosted as a result of state initiatives to improve the water infrastructure and drinking water supplies across the subcontinent. And, last but not least, the industrial sector is making a significant contribution to the pumps market in India, namely in power stations, chemical companies and water and wastewater processing facilities. In this connection, the report by TechSci cites the rapid expansion in the use of desalination technology in India. In the coming years around 15 such installations are expected to go into service, and high-performance pumps are an essential part of the technology that goes into them.

According to a report by the Tata Strategic Management Group in cooperation with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, sales of centrifugal and displacement pumps in India reached the equivalent of USD 1.34 billion in the financial year 2012/13.

The pumps market in India has considerable potential—all of which adds up to an excellent basis for exhibitors and visitors doing business at the upcoming IFAT India.

More articles on this topic

Replacing Diaphragm Pumps with Peristaltic Chemical Metering Pumps Helps Arizona City Improve Reliability

13.11.2024 -

The City of El Mirage, Arizona has significantly improved reliability and reduced maintenance at its water and wastewater treatment facilities since replacing its diaphragm pumps with 13 Qdos 20 peristaltic chemical metering pumps supplied by Watson-Marlow Fluid Technology Solutions (WMFTS). The pumps were installed at remote well sites and a wastewater reclamation facility.

Read more

Efficient Water Usage Through Innovative Filtration

13.09.2024 -

Water shortages are already the cause of numerous conflicts around the world. As a result, it is not only the economical use of this vital resource that is coming more into focus. Companies are working flat out on new technologies that improve water purification. In this way, even industrial water can be turned back into safe and clean drinking water.

Read more