Baji Gobburi (1), William Dean (1), Matthew Silver (1); (1) Cambrian Innovation, Boston, MA, U.S.A.
Sustainability
Supplier Poster
The global craft beer sector is growing at a breakneck pace. As beer
production increases, so do the volumes of water required and wastewater
produced. Meanwhile, population growth, aging infrastructure, and
climate change are driving new water supply restrictions and stringent
regulations for wastewater disposal. Shifting from a centralized water
and energy infrastructure to distributed solutions can cut costs,
increase production, and boost sustainability for breweries. Cambrian
Innovation’s flagship product, the EcoVolt, is a transformational system
that extracts clean water and clean energy from brewery wastewater.
Modular, onsite systems that maximize the use of resources and minimize
waste, like EcoVolt, empower breweries to gain resource security by
transitioning to a distributed utility model. Water scarcity is pushing
up prices for fresh water. For Northern California craft brewery Bear
Republic Brewing Company (~76,000 bbl/year), dependence on a centralized
municipal system for freshwater and wastewater treatment trapped growth
by limiting discharge volumes and capping fresh water supply. With an
EcoVolt onsite, Bear can both expand production and expect wastewater
and energy savings of up to $200,000 annually. Inclined to focus on
their core business, breweries are quick to discharge their wastewater
to local municipal treatment plants. When their local municipality
refused to accept the waste, Lagunitas Brewing Company (~600,000
bbl/year) in Petaluma, CA, was forced to load it into tanker trucks for
hauling to a larger, regional treatment facility over 60 miles away.
With an EcoVolt Solution treating wastewater onsite, Lagunitas is
targeting a record low water/beer ratio of 2.5. The treatment system
will produce enough recycled water to cut the facility’s water
consumption in half, while producing enough energy from the wastewater
to cover 20% of onsite energy demand. Central Michigan brewery Northern
United Brewing Company (~11,000 bbl/year) was unable to increase
production and meet market demand because the local town of Dexter
couldn’t accommodate more wastewater. An EcoVolt MINI will treat all of
the brewery’s wastewater, in a 53 ft container, minimizing the impact to
the city and allowing the brewery to grow. Outdated and overworked
municipal facilities are costly alternatives to new, distributed
solutions. By leveraging EcoVolt’s breakthrough technology, craft
brewers can ensure independent resource security, lower costs, and
increased production capacity. The EcoVolt Solution provides onsite,
distributed utility services: wastewater treatment, clean energy
generation, and clean water production. Many see the transition away
from centralized systems to a distributed network as costly, but
creative financing techniques developed by Cambrian Innovation lay these
fears to rest. Performance-based leasing options allow brewers to only
pay for the utility services they receive, eliminating risk. This model
provides an opportunity for small businesses to invest in a distributed
wastewater, energy, and water system at no upfront cost or ownership
risk. Businesses pay monthly for clean water and energy generated by the
system, transforming the EcoVolt solution into a personal
micro-utility
.
Baji Gobburi is an industrial water executive with over twenty
years of water and environmental expertise. As vice president of Sales
& Marketing, Baji is responsible for Cambrian Innovation’s sales
strategy, building customer pipeline and global business development
across multiple verticals. Prior to joining the Cambrian Innovation
team, Baji served as director of business and product development at
Energy Recovery Inc. (NASDAQ: ERII) and held various global management
positions at General Electric (NYSE: GE) Water & Process
Technologies. His roles at GE included North American services leader
and general manager of the Caribbean desalination business unit, where
he led the financial and operational turnaround of multiple water plants
across nine Caribbean countries. He also held environmental consulting
positions at Integrated Environmental Solutions, Inc. and TRC Companies,
Inc. Baji earned an MBA degree from The University of Chicago’s Booth
School of Business, as well as an M.S. degree in hazardous waste
management from Wayne State University. He received his bachelor’s
degree in civil engineering from Osmania University in India.