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Combining GE’s global water technology experience and expertise with Miahona’s established local presence and knowledge of regional water needs, the MoU provides a framework for promoting the use of advanced membrane technology such as Membrane Bioreactors in water reuse and the pursuit of wastewater treatment, wastewater reuse and zero liquid discharge projects in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Miahona and GE will also mutually cooperate on projects related to Well Injection utilizing GE ‘s advanced Increased Oil Recovery (IOR) and Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) solutions. A key expectation is for GE to deliver advanced technology and treatment solutions to meet the Kingdom’s environmentally conscious municipal and industrial wastewater discharge regulations.
"This MOU with Miahona reflects GE’s active response to the Kingdom’s call for more private sector initiatives to establish and manage water reuse projects and plants," said Joseph Anis, GE Energy’s president for the
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The MOU also builds on GE’s water technology presence in Saudi Arabia, and follows the opening last year of the 7,500 square meter GE Water & Process Technology Center in Dammam, which represents a $10 million investment.
With a presence that spans over 70 years in Saudi, GE has expanded its energy presence in the Kingdom through public-private partnerships and a strong footprint of facilities in service repair support and customer training centers in power, water and oil & gas. With more than 800 GE employees,
Notable recent projects featuring GE’s advanced energy solutions include Marafiq, the world’s largest independent water and power project with the capacity to produce more than 2.7 gigawatts of power and 800,000 cubic meters per day of desalinated water, thereby integrating water and power production at a single site. Other noteworthy GE water projects include providing a fleet of mobile water systems (for seawater and brackish water treatment) to the Al Tamimi group in the "GET Water" Partnership.
Currently more than 60 mobile units are in operation, with each unit capable of treating up to 1,500 cubic meters of water daily. GE has also supplied a300-bed facility to the
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