On-Site Water & Power Production for World Disaster Relief
Bring disaster areas quick-response, portable on-site water purification capacity, desalination capabilities and diesel/solar electric power generation.
In the event of a hurricane, earthquake or other disaster, what are among the first, most important needs? What two necessities must be restored immediately?
That’s right, water and power.
Partner with ANSA North America on the solution to both.
Maximizing Your Liquid Assets
Perhaps in the past, your organization has assisted in disaster relief by spending considerable funds providing help to communities in the form of bottled water.
2000-pound pallets arrive by air or by truck through snarled chaos and infrastructure requiring heavy equipment. Within elaborate channels of distribution, pallets are broken down into cases and finally throw-away bottles are distributed to disaster victims.
Costly, inefficient and environmentally unfriendly, the bottled water solution is undergoing a necessary evolution.
Next time your group makes an investment in the health of a community, ditch the finite, outdated bottled water idea and instead finance a long-term solution. Make tons of drinking water per day on-site from ANY available source water, like floodwaters, streams, lakes, oceans, etc. One portable SQN can make the equivalent of 39,500 half-liter water bottles per day…that is over 20 tons of drinking water!
A New Generation of On-Site Power and Water Production Solutions
Power generation for disasters has never been more accessible. Our diesel and solar powered units are portable, modular, scalable and designed for extreme operating environments.
Each HELP Responder™ MAX trailer can make at rated capacity up to 100 tons (25,000 GPD) of 99.99% pure RO water per day and generate up to 154 kW of solar power.
ANSA North America, plus our government and NGO partners, seek to maintain a pool of watermakers, powermakers and HELP Responder trailers to deploy when disaster strikes.
Will you be a part of the evolution of disaster response?