Skip to content
EuroCover Water Systems

Floating Covers in Sweden — EuroCover

Patented hexagonal floating covers for Swedish water utilities, mining, biogas, and pulp mills. Svenskt Vatten aligned.

Published Last updated

Climate: Sub-boreal — low evaporation, freeze-thaw cycling, mining and pulp industrial concentrations · Evaporation: 400–600 mm/year (typical Sweden) · Water stress: low

Swedish mining operators, biogas plants, water utilities, and pulp & paper mills deploy hexagonal floating covers for evaporation control on tailings (northern mining), heat retention on digesters, algae control on potable reservoirs, and odor management at wastewater plants.

Swedish water context

Sweden’s sub-boreal climate produces low evaporation pressure but distinct cold-weather operating considerations. Northern mining operations (Kiruna, Boliden) face freeze-thaw cycling on tailings storage; biogas operators in the agricultural south face heat-retention budgets similar to Danish operations.

Swedish regulatory landscape

  • Miljöbalken — Swedish Environmental Code.
  • Svenskt Vatten — Swedish water utility association.
  • Naturvårdsverket — Swedish Environmental Protection Agency.

Common Swedish applications

  • Northern mining tailings (Kiruna iron, Boliden copper/zinc/lead)
  • Biogas digesters in southern agricultural belt
  • Wastewater plant odor control
  • Pulp and paper mill effluent ponds (Sweden’s significant pulp sector)

Regulatory context

  • Miljöbalken — Swedish Environmental Code
  • Svenskt Vatten — Swedish Water and Wastewater Association
  • Naturvårdsverket — Swedish Environmental Protection Agency

Frequently asked questions

Are floating covers compatible with Swedish winter conditions? #
Yes — HDPE elements tolerate full freeze-thaw cycling. Modular hexagonal covers are deployed in northern Sweden and equivalent climates without specific cold-weather modifications. Installation scheduling avoids deepest-winter weeks for crew welfare.