Baisheng recommends |2024 VODEXPO in Moscow, Russia
Exhibition in English: vodexpo
Exhibition time: June 18-20, 2024.
Number of exhibitions: 8th (once a year).
Venue: Moscow Exhibition Center.
Organizer: Russian Association of Water Supply and Sanitation.
Organizer: Guangzhou Baisheng Exhibition Service***
The seventh country, the Moscow Water Treatment Exhibition in Russia, was held in June 2023.
More than 4,000 people from 70 Russian entities visited the exhibition. Exhibitors at the fair include visitors from Russia, Belarus, China, Turkey and Iran. The largest market players showcased a full range of equipment, products, technology, organizational, and IT solutions for the water industry. The business agenda of the congress consisted of 30 thematic sessions, panel discussions, discussions and plenary sessions with nearly 200 speakers taking the floor, including representatives of all responsible federal legislatures and agencies, executive powers, accounting offices, gl**gosexpertiza, development**, territorial, commercial, scientific and expert communities.
The hottest topics at the conference were:
National projects, including a new federal environmental project, improvement of large water bodies;
Selection of water treatment technologies and solution of design problems, through national and environmental reviews, operation of construction projects;
A range of environmental issues, including regulatory processes and water classifications;
Participation in technical and regulatory organization solutions to transform sewage sludge into an economic cycle;
Comprehensively solve the problem of stormwater.
The Organizing Committee of the All-Russian Water Congress invites the participation of ** as an information partner of the event and reports on the business program and the work of the exhibition expo with the participation of relevant federal ministries, departments, competent authorities of the Russian Federation, internationally renowned experts, as well as representatives of state-owned enterprises and business circles.
On the site of the exhibition center "Expocentre", the most comfortable conditions for the work of the exhibition center were created, a modern multi-media center with all the necessary equipment was created.
In 2002, the average daily net water volume of Russian sewage treatment plants reached 56.1 million 0000 m, similar to that of 1995. The total length of the national sewage pipe network is 118,000 kilometers. 86% of the wastewater is treated at the sewage treatment plant and discharged to the corresponding water receiving body. Of these, only 28% is completely treated, and the rest is only partially treated and discharged directly into surrounding rivers, lakes or oceans. In Russia, 60% of wastewater treatment plants are overloaded, and 38% have been operating for 25-30 years and are in dire need of reconstruction. At the same time, due to the aging of the facilities, there is an average of one operation accident every 5 kilometers of sewer pipes in a year.
Changes include increases and decreases in surface water cover, correspond to floods and droughts, and are often associated with climate change. The spatial extent of lakes, rivers, estuaries, and artificial water bodies.
Baseline period (2001-2005): 544,793 kmĀ².
Last five-year period (2011-2015): 546992 square kilometers.
Change in range compared to baseline period: 22% increase
The Russian economy inherited most of the Soviet socialist economy, but experienced a period of recession in the early 1990s.
The executive and legislative bodies of the Russian Federation are also aware of the serious problems faced by the country's industrial base, as well as its further reforms, and the economy of the Russian Federation declined for five consecutive years after the collapse of the USSR during the Yeltsin administration. Despite this, Russia's economy has been relatively rapidly transitioning from the world's largest planned economy to a market economy. In 1997, the economy of the Russian Federation recovered. The fiscal crisis of 1998 led to the depreciation of the ruble in August of that year, the growth of debts and a serious decline in the living standards of the population. However, between 1999 and 2001, the economy of the Russian Federation recovered again, with an average annual growth rate of 6 per cent, thanks to high oil** and a weak ruble. At the end of 2006, Russia had completed eight years of growth, averaging 6 per year since the 1998 financial crisis7% growth rate, despite a high negative population growth during this period.
This recovery, coupled with the reforms of the country's economy carried out by the new **, has boosted investor confidence in the Russian Federation. On the other hand, the Russian Federation remains heavily dependent on the export of natural resources, in particular oil, gas, metals and timber, which account for 80 per cent of total exports. At present, Russia has become the world's largest exporter of natural gas and the largest exporter outside OPEC.
At the end of 2005, Russia's GDP recovered from $157 billion in 1999 to about $750 billion, and in 2012 it reached 2.2$1 trillion,** foreign exchange reserves increased from less than $10 billion at the end of 1998 to $182.2 billion. By the end of 2006, it had exceeded the $280 billion savings mark, making it one of the countries with the largest foreign exchange savings in the world.
In 2014, the Crimean crisis broke out, the United States and the European Union imposed severe financial sanctions on Russia, and the United States and Saudi Arabia also joined forces to suppress international oil prices, resulting in negative growth in the Russian economy in 2015, although the Russian economy resumed growth in 2016, but the growth was sluggish, and Russia's unemployment and inflation rates have remained high.