Veolia group is the global leader in optimized resource management.
With nearly 169 000 employees worldwide, the Group designs and provides water, waste and energy management solutions that contribute to the sustainable development of communities and industries. Through its three complementary business activities, Veolia helps to develop access to resources, preserve available resources, and to replenish them.
In 2017, the Veolia group supplied 96 million people with drinking water and 62 million people with wastewater service, produced nearly 55 million megawatt hours of energy and converted 47 million metric tons of waste into new materials and energy. Veolia Environnement (listed on Paris Euronext: VIE) recorded consolidated revenue of €25.12 billion in 2017(USD 30.1 billion).
€24.39 billion in revenue
3 core businesses:
Water, Waste Management
& Energy Services
163,000 employees
around the world
• 100 million people supplied with water
• 63 million people connected to wastewater systems
• 4,245 water production plants managed
• 3,303 wastewater treatment plants managed
• 779 heating and cooling networks managed
• 53 million MWh produced
• 3.4 million collective housing units managed
• 2,027 industrial facilities managed
• 779 heating and cooling networks managed
• 53 million MWh produced
• 3.4 million collective housing units managed
• 2,027 industrial facilities managed
• 39 million people provided with collection services on behalf of municipalities
• 553,500 business customers (excl. industrial maintenance)
• 42.9 million metric tons of treated waste
• 601 waste processing facilities operated
SEVEN GROWTH MARKETS
Veolia has identified seven key growth markets, representing sectors with significant potential to generate revenue, in which resource strain drives growing demand for narrowly specialized expertise. These sectors are opening up new opportunities for environmental services in which Veolia already provides benchmark solutions:
- Circular economy, to tackle the problem of dwindling raw materials, water and energy resources
- Innovative solutions to improve life in cities and related services
- Treating the most challenging types of pollution, such as toxic waste, treatment sludge and contaminated wastewater
- Decommissioning services for oil rigs, ships, aircraft and nuclear plants
- Food & beverage industry, ensuring compliance with stringent standards on health, safety and quality
- Mining, which requires extensive resources
- Oil & Gas industry, governed by increasingly demanding environmental standards