PFASuiki demonstrates the power of electrochemical oxidation by achieving high destruction rates in one of the harshest landfill environments in Italy.
The global regulatory landscape has changed since we first introduced PFASuiki’s electrochemical oxidation (EO) technology. For industrial operators, the focus is no longer just on removal, but on route stability. As landfill and industrial operators face increasingly stringent acceptance standards for secondary waste, the need to close PFAS mass balances on-site has become an operational necessity.
PFASuiki is now moving from laboratory innovation to real-world impact. By implementing our modular systems directly into complex industrial flows, we are proving that “forever chemicals” can be stopped at their source, even in the most demanding matrices.
Case Study: Destruction of PFAS in Landfill Leachate (Italy)
Background and issues
Landfill leachate is one of the most demanding PFAS treatment environments. In this particular location in Italy, the leachate contained a complex mixture of PFAS species, along with high organic loads, salts, and competing ions. These conditions typically limit the effectiveness of conventional treatment techniques.
Operators of such sites face fundamental challenges. Regulatory oversight has increased under the Landfill Directive and the Industrial Emissions Directive. The question is no longer just how to treat water, but how to do it without simply transferring the dangerous burden to secondary waste streams.
Why traditional approaches are inadequate
In a matrix as complex as Italian landfill leachate, traditional approaches are challenging.
Adsorption (GAC/IX): These transfer PFAS to solid waste, requiring frequent media changes and expensive hazardous waste disposal. Membrane systems (RO/NF): These concentrate the problem on highly contaminated waste streams that still require an endpoint. Incineration: Although effective for destruction, the logistical burden and rising costs of transporting hazardous waste make incineration an increasingly unsustainable option for many operators.

PFASuiki approach
PFASuiki applied electrochemical oxidation directly to the raw leachate. Our system is configured to take advantage of the high conductivity conditions in the field to simultaneously degrade multiple PFAS species. By adjusting key parameters such as current density, flow rate, and residence time, the process was tailored to cope with the variable and inhibiting composition of Italian leachate.
Result: Breaking the focus trap
The results confirm that electrochemical mineralization is not just a laboratory-scale promise, but a viable industrial route for complex leachates.
Key performance outcomes include:
Broad-spectrum degradation: The system achieved consistent degradation across multiple PFAS species, demonstrating that the technology targets carbon-fluorine bonds in general, rather than focusing only on specific compounds. Tunable dynamics: Performance scales predictably with energy input and residence time, allowing operators to balance treatment speed with energy efficiency. Energy efficiency: Despite high organic loads, energy demands remain in the range of approximately 20-60 kWh/m3/order (depending on the specific PFAS species), indicating a clear path to economic viability.
Overview and Impact: Future-ready solutions
This case study shows that on-site destruction of even the most restrained waste streams is possible. By eliminating PFAS at the source, operators can simplify processing steps, reduce dependence on third-party disposal companies, and take back sovereignty over their endpoints.
As the industry moves towards the 2026 regulatory milestone, the focus is shifting from simple containment to irreversible transformation. PFASuiki’s work in Italy provides a practical roadmap for landfill operators to stabilize operations, reduce long-term liability, and ultimately break the chain of everlasting chemicals.
Strategic conclusion: Secure an operating license
Regulatory changes in 2026 will turn leachate residue into a highly regulated waste. Relying on separately repositioned strategies is no longer sufficient to manage long-term PFAS liability.
This Italian case study proves that in situ mineralization is a practical and scalable reality. By integrating today’s disruption, operators can stabilize operating costs and ensure their facilities remain compliant in a changing legal landscape.
Partner with PFASuiki for a feasibility study
We are currently selecting a limited number of industrial and landfill partners for our 2026 pilot program. Are you ready to stop solving the PFAS problem and start solving it?
Contact our team today to discuss your site-specific data and schedule a technical consultation.
Please note: This is a commercial profile
This article will be published in an upcoming PFAS Special Focus Publication.
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