Two Ecolab associates working in the grass at Mexico Plant Certified as Water Stewardship Leader

Ecolab Cuautitlán Izcalli, Mexico Plant Certified as Water Stewardship Leader

Implementation of Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) Standard Case Study
Published December 2021 | Updated June 2024


Background

Ecolab’s manufacturing facility located in Cuautitlán Izcalli, Mexico is a blend plant that primarily produces industrial cleaning and sanitizing chemicals. The Cuautitlán Izcalli facility sources water from the Rio Cuautitlán Catchment. Wastewater is discharged into municipal drains that feed into the Río Cuautitlán after treatment. In alignment with Ecolab’s commitment to a holistic approach to water management approach across its high-risk manufacturing facilities, the company implemented the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) International Water Standard at its Cuautitlán Izcalli plant.

 

Situation

Ecolab’s 2030 Positive Impact goals include reducing water impact by 40% per unit production across the enterprise and restoring greater than 50% of absolute water withdrawal volume at high-risk sites. Aligned with these enterprise goals, the local team’s enterprise objective was to reduce annual water use per ton of product by 3.3% on average each year from a 2018 baseline. After the site further assessed the facility for opportunities to decrease water across operations, they furthered the goal, to reduce the sites water intensity by 7% each year. 

Water reduction opportunities were identified in the following areas: washout optimization in hold tanks and production tanks, valve upgrades and preventative maintenance around the site. Prioritization of these opportunities involved collaboration across the Corporate Sustainability and Cuautitlán Izcalli Engineering and Safety, Health and Environment teams.

A comprehensive risk assessment was performed leveraging insights from Ecolab’s Smart Water Navigator, the World Resources Institute (WRI) Aqueduct Atlas and the WWF Water Risk Filter to identify shared and site-level water challenges. Implementation of water withdrawal reduction projects was prioritized based on risk probability and impact to site-level and community stakeholders. Of the five water outcomes of the AWS Standard, Cuautitlán Izcalli focused on sustainable water balance, good water quality status and good water governance balancing relevancy and risk to the site. 

 

Solutions

The following projects help improve the facility’s water balance and have been completed to reduce overall water use:

  • Implementation of a rainwater collection and purification system for use throughout operations
  • Replacement of spray balls for optimized washout efficiency and to reduce wash water consumption
  • Optimization of process equipment washout processes
  • Reduction in water use for reverse osmosis and deionization system regeneration
  • Installation of high-efficiency bathroom fixtures and valves
  • Improvements made to the hold tank washing system

The following projects are considered for future enhancements:

  • Wastewater treatment improvements to allow the facility to recycle wastewater and reuse it in site applications
  • Valve upgrades to reduce sink water losses
  • Various tank wash water reuse and collection projects

These combined efforts contribute to the Cuautitlán Izcalli plant’s progress toward their 7% water reduction goal year over year.


Impact

  • Water eROI icon

    Water
    47%

    Reduction of total water intensity from a 2018 base year
  • Total Value Delivered:

    $19,800
    Annualized risk-adjusted cost savings

Ecolab’s Water Stewardship Position formalizes Ecolab’s global commitment to responsible water stewardship by identifying opportunities for the company and its customers to use water resources in a manner that benefits business, communities and nature.

AWS Certification Plant Imagery

Performance

The Cuautitlán Izcalli site achieved a
47% reduction of total water intensity from a 2018 base year,
equivalent to $19,800 USD in annualized risk-adjusted cost savings


Water Governance

At the plant level, the safety, health and environment manager is responsible for wastewater testing and compliance and account for effluent discharge. The site’s maintenance supervisor is responsible for sewage discharge, water consumption control and water savings projects and accountable for the operation of the wastewater treatment plant, soft and deionized water and the rain collection system.

To maintain good water quality of both process water and wastewater, internal daily water testing is carried out in addition to third-party wastewater testing every three months. The water is treated to remove colloids, sediment and hazards from the wastewater. If a spill or water-related issue were to occur, the site has a robust incident response plan that includes a root cause analysis of the original incident, a review by the leadership team, documentation in an internal reporting platform and communication of mitigation strategies during monthly site meetings. The site has not had any water related violations in the past year.

The Sustainability Team is guided and advised by the Sustainability Executive Advisory Team, which is made up of the company’s senior business and divisional leaders. In addition, Ecolab’s Water Stewardship position and Safety, Health and Environment (SHE) position are publicly available and serve as commitments to and guidance on water-related issues and compliance. Ecolab’s Water Stewardship position formalizes Ecolab’s global commitment to responsible water stewardship by identifying opportunities for the company and its customers to use water resources in a manner that benefits business, communities and nature. Ecolab’s SHE position outlines the company’s commitment to excellence in safety, health and environmental practices and performance across global operations.

 

Water Stewardship Journey

In addition to internal operational improvements, Ecolab’s Cuautitlán Izcalli facility’s external water stewardship activities are ongoing. Shared challenges between the plant and relevant, local stakeholders include water scarcity, infrastructure and finance for water-related projects and water quality. To address these shared issues, Ecolab collaborates with other water users in the basin. The Cuautitlán Izcalli site team has shared its AWS certification journey with over 30 businesses, non-governmental organizations and government institutions in the watershed. Additionally, Ecolab is a part of a coalition of businesses in Cuautitlán that addresses safety events in the area.

To contribute to the health of important water-related areas, 100 volunteers from the Cuautitlán Izcalli and Lerma, Mexico sites partnered with The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and ProNatura to plant 2,000 trees in the community of San Andres Totoltepec in Mexico City in 2019.

In 2021, more than 90 volunteers for the Cuautitlán and Lerma plants helped build mobile cisterns for low-income families in the community of Piedra Grande, Huixquilucan, Estado de Mexico. These cisterns will allow them to store and filter water that can be used for human consumption, animals or food production. From their volunteer work 20 families and more than 200 people will benefit from this work.

In 2023, the Cuautitlán plant joined three volunteer programs including leading a handwashing education event for a local secondary school. Planting more than 600 trees and helping to restore and maintain green areas of a park by through clean up activities and planting succulents and volunteering with chinampa agriculture in Xochimilco.

On top of local water stewardship efforts, Ecolab’s global giving program, Solutions for Life, enhances the company’s mission to conserve and protect fresh water through partnership with two global NGOs: TNC and Project WET Foundation.


This case study was created to comply with AWS indicators 5.1.1, 5.2.1, 5.3.1. 5.4.1, 5.4.2, 5.5.1, 5.5.2 and 5.5.3. For more information, please contact sustainability@ecolab.com.


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