Water

Long-term planning to secure our water future.

Water is essential to life, and this critical resource needs to be effectively managed to meet the needs of multiple stakeholders and the natural environment.

Significant threats to water security and competing demands include extreme weather events, population growth, ageing assets, increasing water recycling and tighter environmental standards. Water is also a resource that plays a role in the transition to a low carbon energy future.

That’s why long term planning is critical to address water scarcity issues proactively and provide resilience in the face of population growth and climate change. 

The response to these challenges increasingly forms part of a systems thinking approach, which can be delivered through careful blending of nature based and traditionally engineered solutions. And by further integrating digital technologies for prediction and optimised system operations, we can better understand river catchment behaviours and the impacts of droughts and flooding. 

What can we do for you?

We have more than a century of water management experience and have played leading roles in many of the world’s largest and most transformative water supply, wastewater, irrigation, drainage and flood protection projects.

We offer: 

Sustainable development

We help water utilities, local and national governments, regulators, industrial customers and community stakeholders to plan the sustainable management of water resources.

Futureproofing infrastructure and services

We are experts in strategic asset management and in extending the life of existing assets both above and below ground. Our teams are pioneers in reducing the cost and embodied and operational carbon of infrastructure, and in advancing resilience. Our solutions are augmented by leading-edge use of our digital technologies and tools, to maximise value for you, your customers and wider society.

Systems thinking

Our solutions consider interconnections and dependencies, causes and effects across the natural and built environments. We take a holistic multi-stakeholder approach to deliver social and environmental benefits at scale.

Environmental management and nature-based solutions

Management of the water environment offers major opportunities for nature-based solutions, particularly in upstream catchment adaptation for flood control and sustainable treatment of recycled wastewater.

Project excellence

Our multidisciplinary breadth enables us to identify and resolve potential challenges – and to realise opportunities – across asset lifecycles. We can help you set strategy, build business cases, secure investment, plan, design, apply transformative technologies and realise operational efficiencies – achieving excellent project outcomes. 

Services we provide

Water engineering solutions for a resilient future

Owners, regulators and operators need to ensure water infrastructure is adaptable to climate change, emerging contaminants of concern, and the demands of other stakeholders – with affordability in mind. 

Meanwhile, wastewater treatment and recycling, energy and resource recovery must be sustainable to meet stricter environmental standards and minimise climate change impacts. With deep technical expertise from across our global network, we understand these complex challenges.  

Our experience

  • Anglian Water Strategic Pipeline Alliance, East of England, UK
    In the face of declining rainfall and a growing population, we’re working to boost resilience in the supply of drinking water for millions of people by designing the UK’s largest water infrastructure project, consisting of some 500km of pipelines to transfer water from areas of surplus to those more vulnerable to drought.
  • Bangkok smart flood management decision support system, Thailand
    We created a predictive model that employs machine learning – the first of its kind – to forecast how storms will develop, where rainfall will be most intense, and how local rivers, drainage channels and sewers will respond. It updates every ten minutes, allowing city authorities and emergency responders to anticipate where flooding will occur, issue warnings and organise evacuations to keep citizens safe.
  • Camden Parkside PFAS treatment facility, New Jersey, USA
    Contamination from manufactured chemicals threatens water supplies in many areas, including Camden, just outside Philadelphia. We worked with construction partners to deliver a new water treatment facility that removes PFAS from water supplies destined for 20,000 residents.
  • Cohocksink storm flood relief, Philadelphia, USA
    Weaving new sewer capacity through the existing utilities and historic remnants of a 340-year-old city requires liaison with multiple asset owners and other stakeholders. The Cohocksink project doubles the previously existing sewer capacity and will prevent flooding after heavy rainfall. Greater system controls reduce sewage outflow into the Delaware River, improving the environment for both aquatic life and the local population.
  • Dhaka environmentally sustainable water supply, Bangladesh
    The water table falls by between 2m and 3m each year in rapidly urbanising Dhaka, resulting in wastewater contamination of fresh water supplies. The nearest usable supply for east Dhaka is the Meghna River, some 40km away. We’re helping to bring that supply to nearly 5M people by designing and managing construction of 100km of new pipeline – in some of the deepest tunnels in Bangladesh – and the country’s biggest treatment plant.
  • Rosedale wastewater treatment plant, Auckland, New Zealand
    We took digital twin technology to a new level by producing an accurate virtual model of the Rosedale plant in Auckland. It is continuously updated by live performance data and features visual dashboards providing instant readouts of operational cost data (which would otherwise be manually calculated monthly). Our client, Watercare, can now more tightly manage both energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Strategic water resource options planning, UK
    We are working with water companies throughout the UK to understand their water resource requirements for the next 25 years or more, as part of the statutory investment planning process. Our project management, technical expertise, environmental services and drinking water risk assessments are helping to shape the development of strategic options.
  • Tideway, London, UK
    We designed the permanent structures and tunnels for the eastern section of London’s super-sewer – a 25km interceptor constructed to prevent huge volumes of wastewater from flowing into the River Thames from old combined sewer overflows.
  • Water balance tool, Oman
    Our specialist team of experts in water resources, groundwater, agricultural and geographical information systems developed a bespoke water balance tool for Oman. This enabled authorities to accurately identify which regions of the country are in a state of water surplus or deficit. Planners can now allocate required investment to meet increasing water demand for domestic, industrial and agricultural consumption.
  • Witches Oak Water green recovery programme, Derbyshire, UK
    We designed 31 new floating wetlands to provide entirely biological primary treatment for water – in a reservoir originally considered too expensive to treat for drinking water supply. The wetlands remove sedimentary and algal contamination, enabling the reservoir to play a vital role in strengthening local water supply.

Mott MacDonald Bentley

JN Bentley, Mott MacDonald Bentley (MMB) and JBA Bentley provide services in the water sector and other UK engineering and construction markets. Working in close collaboration with our clients and supply chain, we deliver projects all the way from feasibility through to construction, commissioning, and handover - with a focus on providing great outcomes.