Xylem Wins $6M Panama Canal Expansion Project Contract

Xylem dewatering pumps

by | Jul 30, 2015

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Xylem dewatering pumpsWater technology company Xylem has been awarded a $6 million contract to provide pumps in the Panama Canal expansion program.

Xylem is providing its heavy duty Godwin dewatering pumps to fill the third set of basin locks on the Pacific Ocean sector, with 1.7 billion gallons of water, as part of performance trials for the system prior to its commissioning.

The Panama Canal expansion program is scheduled for completion in the second quarter of 2016. It creates a new traffic lane and builds two new lock complexes, one on the Atlantic Ocean and the other on the Pacific, allowing for the passage of New Panamax ships, doubling the capacity of the Canal.

This is the second project that the ACP has awarded to Xylem under the Panama Canal expansion program. Earlier this year, Xylem supplied 64 Flygt mixers to prevent the formation of corrosive deposits on the rolling gates during installation.

To support the dewatering project, Xylem installed 15 Godwin diesel-driven pumps, deployed from the US. In June, these pumps transported up to 122 million gallons of water per day (MGD) from the Miraflores Lake to fill the third set of locks on the Pacific. Over a period of 22 days, the project consisted of pumping enough water to fill 90,000 average sized swimming pools.

Xylem is providing turnkey services and equipment for the project, with Xylem’s engineers designing and installing the system, which also includes 13,500 feet (more than 2.5 miles) of 18-inch high-density polyethylene pipeline (HDPE) to transfer the massive amounts of water. Xylem is also supervising the performance of the 15 Godwin pumps with its remote pump monitoring system called Field Smart Technology.

The third set of basin locks includes reuse basins that will save water and also improve the Panama Canal’s efficiency, using 7 percent less water compared with the amount currently used by the existing locks. In addition, in each transit operation, 60 percent of the water will be recycled.

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