Laboratories today face a complex balancing act. Regulatory and environmental requirements are increasing, budgets are under pressure, and expectations around data reliability remain uncompromising. At the same time, laboratories are expected to reduce their environmental footprint and manage resources more efficiently.
One area where these challenges converge is ultrapure water production. Essential for sensitive analytical and life science applications, ultrapure water systems have traditionally been associated with high energy consumption, water rejection, and the use of hazardous materials.
For laboratory managers, the key question is no longer whether to act, but how to improve sustainability without introducing risk to analytical performance or compliance.
Sustainability in laboratories must deliver measurable, operational benefits. Poorly designed systems can lead to: unnecessary water and energy consumption, frequent consumable replacement, increased downtime and maintenance, and higher long-term operating costs.
A sustainable purification strategy should therefore support efficiency, reliability and future readiness, not just environmental targets.
With decades of experience supporting laboratories worldwide, Veolia, through its Elga™ LabWater solutions, focuses on helping laboratories use resources more intelligently, extend system lifecycles and reduce exposure to regulated substances.
Laboratory needs are rarely static. New analytical techniques, additional instruments and changing regulatory expectations require systems that can adapt without excessive waste or reinvestment.
The Purelab™ flex range has been developed to meet these challenges through a modular, all-in-one purification platform. It supports a wide range of applications, from reagent preparation and glassware washing to highly sensitive analyses, such as PCR, HPLC, and LC-MS, using either pre-treated water or potable feed water.
From an analytical perspective, Purelab™ flex delivers:
From a sustainability standpoint, the system is engineered to reduce resource use across its lifecycle:
For laboratories, this means lower operational costs, reduced environmental impact and greater flexibility. These benefits align with evolving requirements, particularly in response to tighter regulatory scrutiny, increased expectations for data integrity and traceability, and more demanding water quality specifications.
Another critical sustainability challenge in laboratory water purification is the continued reliance on mercury-based UV lamps. While historically effective, mercury is now recognised as a persistent and hazardous substance subject to increasing regulatory scrutiny.
International agreements such as the UN Minamata Convention aim to progressively restrict and eliminate mercury use, which will create long-term compliance, disposal and safety challenges for laboratories. The Purelab™ Chorus Mercury Free addresses these concerns by replacing traditional mercury lamps with xenon excimer UV technology. This mercury-free approach provides:
By removing mercury entirely, laboratories reduce regulatory exposure while maintaining the water quality required for sensitive applications. They also contribute to a healthier environment by eliminating the risk of mercury contamination.
Transitioning to more sustainable purification technologies must be carefully managed. Mercury-based and mercury-free systems are not directly interchangeable, and laboratories must consider:
Veolia supports laboratories through application-specific assessments, helping determine the most appropriate timing and configuration for system upgrades. This ensures sustainability improvements are aligned with real operational needs rather than imposed as one-size-fits-all solutions.
From academic research and industrial R&D to pharmaceutical quality control, laboratories rely on ultrapure water every day. The challenge is to deliver this water consistently, efficiently and responsibly.
By combining modular system design, reduced energy and water consumption, and the elimination of hazardous substances, Purelab™ flex and Purelab™ Chorus Mercury Free demonstrate that sustainability can be a driver of performance, not a limitation.
Our specialists can help you evaluate your current setup and define a purification strategy aligned with your applications, compliance requirements and sustainability objectives.
👉 Contact our laboratory water experts