A water evaporator emits a plume of water in a rural area for waste management near a body of leachate water, with green grass and power lines against a clear blue sky.

LATEST SUCCESS STORIES

Explore our most recent water management case studies.

Power Generation Monique MacPhail Power Generation Monique MacPhail

Montana power station - case study

Montana’s harsh winters leave the power station with only a narrow window to control rising brine wastewater, and storage levels were already approaching critical thresholds as freezing conditions neared. Without timely reduction, the site faced overtopping risk, regulatory exposure, increased safety hazards for onsite teams and a winter-long loss of operational flexibility.

Read More
Power Generation Monique MacPhail Power Generation Monique MacPhail

Texas power plant - case study

Rising water levels in the coal ash ponds placed pressure on safe operations and environmental compliance, driving the installation of a targeted XPEL evaporation system that strengthened water balance control throughout its seasonal operating conditions.

Read More
Power Generation Monique MacPhail Power Generation Monique MacPhail

Arizona power station - case study

A power station in Arizona required an immediate water management solution to support continuous operation. A tight seven-week delivery window and shifting site demands drove the need for a fast, flexible evaporation system that XPEL supplied as a complete, integrated package.

Read More
Power Generation Monique MacPhail Power Generation Monique MacPhail

QLD hydro water power plant - case study

A former gold mine pit in Queensland, Australia held excess water that prevented a renewable energy provider from safely progressing its pumped-hydro development. The project relied on clear access to underground workings, yet rising pit levels restricted entry, constrained construction sequencing and delayed the transition of the site into a functional energy-storage asset

Read More
Power Generation Monique MacPhail Power Generation Monique MacPhail

QLD coal-fired power plant - case study.

Coal ash ponds at a Queensland power generation facility were accumulating water faster than the site could safely manage, driven by runoff, process water and limited storage flexibility. As levels continued to rise, the ponds approached thresholds that threatened embankment integrity, regulatory compliance and day-to-day operational reliability.

Read More