Grundfos: Be, Think, Innovate (blue stripe)

NEWS RELEASE

For more information, contact:
Dan Prangsgaard
Grundfos Pumps Corporation
913.608.6046
dprangsgaard@grundfos.com

John O'Reilly
O'Reilly/DePalma
815.469.9100, ext. 302
john.oreilly@oreilly-depalma.com

Additional Resources

Grundfos Home Page

 

News / Product Releases

Grundfos Pumps to Halve Water Consumption For Irrigation at Fresno Facility During 2011

Grundfos Pumps Day of Values: 17,000 People In 1,200 Workshops Worldwide, Discussing 6 Revitalized Values

Grundfos Furnishes Energy-Saving Pump System for New LIVESTRONG Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kan.

Grundfos Pumps unveils the MAGNA™ 32-100

Grundfos Hydronic Heating Zone Valves Feature Removable, In-Line Actuators For Easier Installation and Servicing

Grundfos “Pumps on Tour” Hosts Local Industrial Trade For Fun Day at the Ballpark on Chicago’s South Side

Grundfos 2010 “Pumps on Tour” Truck Begins its 48-City Journey

New Generation of Circulator Pumps Spurs Dramatic Energy Savings for Off-Grid, Solar Home

Grundfos Launches ‘Thinking Buildings Universe’: Complete Online Resource for Pump Products and Applications

Grundfos “Impossible Tour” Revs Along With Stop at Orange County Choppers’ LEED Facility

Grundfos “Impossible Tour” Concludes Journey across America With 14-City Northeast Swing during October and November

Grundfos ALPHA Pump Unveiled at Historic Air Hanger

Grundfos Pumps Unveils ALPHA, a New Generation of Circulators, With Power-Consumption Savings of up to 80% or more

 


Case Studies

Circulator Pumps With ECM Technology Next Trend In Intelligent Hydronics Design

New Generation of Circulator Pumps Spurs Dramatic Energy Savings for Off-Grid, Solar Home

 

 

Grundfos Pumps to Halve Water Consumption For Irrigation at Fresno Facility During 2011

Group

Pump manufacturer's sustainability investment to boost water supply for Fresno residents and growers by eliminating use of potable water for campus irrigation

Download / View News Release:

icon-ms-word  MS-Word (.doc)

icon-document  Text (.txt)

icon-pdf  Acrobat (.pdf)

Image Gallery

— Grundfos Pumps Corporation today announced that it will voluntarily cut in half the amount of potable water used to irrigate its 27-acre campus here during 2011, with plans to eliminate the practice entirely by the end of 2012. As a result, the global pumps and pumping systems manufacturer will save roughly 3 million gallons (11,300 cubic meters) of potable water during 2011 - enough to fill four Olympic‐sized swimming pools. In 2013, the facility plans for all campus irrigation to be supplied by reclaimed water.

"Water is one of the most precious resources in the San Joaquin Valley, and therefore conservation is crucial to the region’s economic prosperity and sustainability," says David Mortensen, senior vice president of finance and quality manager for Grundfos. "The reduction of the amount of water used by the Grundfos Fresno facility increases the amount of water that is available for use by the local community."

To achieve a reduction of this scale – among the first and most ambitious of any California corporation, according to Mortensen, – the company will redesign its entire campus master plan.

 

GRUNDFOS SUSTAINABILITY

The Grundfos Pumps Corporation is committed to operating its business in an environmentally sustainable way, creating sustainable solutions all the way from cradle to grave. Following is an overview of the organization's many sustainable initiatives:

GRUNDFOS – FRESNO

  • Water-Conserving Landscape – Water-wise and native plant species selected for the Fresno facility's landscaping is expected to reduce the demand for irrigation by more than 50 percent during 2011, and completely eliminate the use of potable water for landscape irrigation by 2012.

  • Solar Energy – The sun provides more than 40 percent of the energy needed to power the 180,000-square-foot Fresno facility.

  • Rainwater Harvesting – A four-acre water bio collection system is planned to reclaim, treat and reuse rainwater to irrigate the entire Fresno campus – about the size of 21 football fields – without the use of any potable water.

  • Water Conserving Plumbing – Low-flow plumbing fixtures, including waterless urinals, high-efficiency toilets and faucets, are expected to save hundreds of thousands of gallons of potable water starting in 2011.

  • Reduced Water in Manufacturing – The Fresno facility is also working to reduce water usage in its production process, as well as cooling towers, washers and testing tanks.


GRUNDFOS – WORLDWIDE

  • CO2 Emission Reduction. As a global entity, Grundfos seeks to limit CO2 emissions to 2008 levels. Despite the company’s single greatest increase in production, the organization achieved a two percent reduction in CO2 emissions during 2010.

  • Corporate Energy Reduction. The company’s sustainable buildings program goals include:

    • By 2012, no domestic water may be used for irrigation.

    • By 2015, the consumption of fossil-based energy will be reduced by 30 percent.

    • By 2015, the reuse of grey wastewater and rainwater harvesting will contribute at least 30 percent of the water consumption at all existing Grundfos buildings.

This will include a replacement plan for "water-wise" trees, shrubs and plant species; a new "smart" irrigation system; and water harvesting systems and techniques to replace existing potable water.

"We want to demonstrate that conserving scarce resources is not a sacrifice; and can still yield a lush, flowering, enjoyable environment for our employees and the greater Fresno community," notes Mortensen, who is responsible for, among other things, the environmental work at Grundfos in Fresno. "As a company that specializes in the design and manufacture of energy-efficient products, it is incumbent upon us to demonstrate that sustainability reaches beyond pumps and profits; and has positive impacts to our community and environment."

The aggressive plan bolsters existing sustainability programs already in place at the 180,000 square-foot manufacturing facility, which has already achieved a 30 percent reduction in energy use per unit of output since 2000. Other energy-saving initiatives include the addition of a seven-acre solar array, use of energy-efficient lighting, air compressors, pumps, fans and low-flow plumbing fixtures. The effort is part of a corporate-wide sustainability initiative that seeks to reduce CO2 emissions, energy consumption and hazardous waste levels.

Water-Conscious Campus Design: The new campus landscape plan will leverage a water-wise design, which focuses on the use of plant material that consumes less water and that is more appropriate to the Valley's demanding climate.

"The beauty of the landscape does not have to be sacrificed to save water," asserts Mortensen. "We want to demonstrate that beautiful landscaping and water conservation can go hand-in-hand."

While aesthetically pleasing, the current landscape design – like so many corporate and institutional campuses – is not conducive to water conservation, explains landscape consultant Scott Mears, whose company is helping Grundfos create a water-conscious campus.

"The Grundfos Campus currently consumes nearly 6 million gallons of potable water annually," states Mears, president of Fresno-based Designlab 252. "In contrast, the new master plan proposes increasing the landscape area while reducing water demand by more than 83 percent through the selection of more regionally appropriate trees, shrubs and plants."

Efficient Irrigation: In addition to reworking the site’s planting design, plans call for the replacement of the existing irrigation system, because it does not meet the requirements for efficient water application. The latest generation of smart irrigation controllers utilizes prevailing weather conditions, current and historic rates of evaporation and plant transpiration, and other relevant factors to adapt the watering schedule to meet the plants' actual water needs.

"The old system applied water in zones to a variety of plant material in an indiscriminant manner," says Mears. "In many areas, the irrigation system was putting much more water on the ground than the plants could use."

Data to support the smart irrigation controllers are already used to coordinate the facility's seven acres of photovoltaic panels that follow the sun’s course throughout the day to maximize electricity production. Installed in 2008, the 1.1-megawatt PV system generates nearly 40 percent of the Grundfos plant's annual electrical consumption. The solar array reduces CO2 emissions generated at the site by almost 2.4 million pounds annually, which is the equivalent to removing close to 200 cars from California's highways each year.

Water Harvesting: The water conservation initiative will also include a bio collection system to reclaim, treat and reuse rainwater to irrigate the new water-wise landscape. A four-acre water detention basin is planned to collect enough recycled water to support the external water needs of the entire campus – about the size of 21 football fields – without the use of any potable water. A bio-swale system will help filter the water prior to its entering the detention basin.

“Using reclaimed water for landscape irrigation boosts the potable water supply for drinking, cooking, bathing, clothes washing, and other household and commercial purposes," concludes Mortensen.

ABOUT GRUNDFOS PUMPS:
Grundfos Pumps Corporation, part of the Grundfos Group, is a global pumps and pumping systems leader, serving the residential, commercial-building and process-industry markets, as well as being a major supplier to the ground water, irrigation, water-supply and water-treatment industries. Founded in 1945 in Bjerringbro, Denmark, The Grundfos Group is a worldwide enterprise that employs more than 17,000 people in 81 countries with North American headquarters in Olathe, Kan.

For more information, visit the website at www.grundfos.us or view the Grundfos Corporate Sustainability Report at http://www.grundfos.com/about-us/reports/sustainability-reports.html

For editorial assistance and interviews, contact Dan Prangsgaard, Director Public Affairs & Public Relations, Grundfos Pumps USA in Olathe, Kansas; at (913) 608-6046; e-mail: dprangsgaard@grundfos.com or John O'Reilly c/o O'Reilly/DePalma at (815) 469-9100; e-mail: john.oreilly@oreilly-depalma.com

# # #

 

Back to top

 

 

 

 

IMAGE GALLERY


To download a hi-res .jpg file,
click on the desired image and a zip archive automatically downloads to your computer. Due to how various browers handle downloads, you may have to expand the zip archive manually.

The zip archive expands into a .jpg file (300ppi; CMYK).


 

Grundfos Pumps Corporation will redesign its entire Fresno campus master plan, including landscaping, in order to meet its goal of eliminating the use of potable water for irrigation by the end of 2012.

File Name: Conserv1.jpg

Fresno Conservation  

Grass at the Grundfos Pumps Fresno plant has begun to turn brown as part of the company's commitment to reduce the amount of potable water used to irrigate its campus.

File Name: Conserv2.jpg

Fresno Conservation  

David Mortensen, senior vice president of finance and quality manager for Grundfos, discussing the seven acres of solar photovoltaic cells that provide roughly 40 percent of the energy needed for the Fresno facility.

File Name: Conserv3.jpg

Fresno Conservation  

Grass at the Grundfos Pumps Fresno plant has begun to turn brown as part of the company’s commitment to reduce the amount of potable water used to irrigate its campus.

File Name: Conserv4.jpg

Fresno Conservation  

Grass at the Grundfos Pumps Fresno plant has begun to turn brown as part of the company’s commitment to reduce the amount of potable water used to irrigate its campus.

File Name: Conserv5.jpg

Fresno Conservation  

Grass at the Grundfos Pumps Fresno plant has begun to turn brown as part of the company’s commitment to reduce the amount of potable water used to irrigate its campus.

File Name: Conserv6.jpg

Back to top