We are deeply saddened to inform you that our dear colleague, Prof.dr.ir. Karel Keesman, passed away on May 5.
Professor Keesman will be greatly missed by the entire Wetsus community: scientists, staff, PhD researchers, students, and the many partners from companies and universities with whom we collaborate. We will miss his encouraging personality, his warmth, and his exceptional modelling expertise. He played a key role within our scientific staff.
Karel was associated with Wetsus almost from the very beginning—first as a university supervisor and later, from 2009 onward, as Senior Advisor and member of the Wetsus staff. He supervised many PhD researchers and was a highly respected lecturer in the Master Water Technology program.
He will be remembered as an inspiring scientist and a leading expert in mathematical modelling applied to water technology. Karel was always driven by meaningful innovation and collaboration. His contributions include work on sulfur-oxidizing bioreactors, intelligent sensors for drinking water quality, and AI applications for water infrastructure management.He deeply valued the interdisciplinary environment at Wetsus, where he could work closely with both industry and fellow scientists. His efforts have been crucial to the successful development of Wetsus. Karel’s colleagues will continue to remember his enthusiasm and warmth, with which he made everyone feel welcome. Many PhD researchers grew both as scientists and as individuals through his guidance and dedication. He was always generous with his time, ideas, and curiosity, and he was open to every exchange of thought.
We have lost a great colleague and friend. We will miss Karel dearly and are deeply grateful for all he has given us. Through the example he set and the people he inspired, his legacy will live on.
On 20 May 2026, Wetsus hosted a meeting at the Permanent Representation of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to the European Union on innovation ecosystems.
During this session, Cees Buisman shared Wetsus’ experience in orchestrating breakthrough innovation in water technology, highlighting key achievements and lessons learned. The event brought together representatives from the European Commission, Water4All CEO Benjamin Lopez, and ERRIN Director Pirita Lindholm.
Lindholm described the Wetsus model as a leading example of #PlaceBasedInnovation and emphasized its relevance for future EU investment priorities and the Multiannual Financial Framework (#MFF). From the European Commission side, the importance of missions, partnerships, and breakthrough innovation was also highlighted. Participants were highly impressed by the effectiveness and strong trust-based collaboration within the Wetsus ecosystem. The model was widely regarded as a unique example in Europe, with strong potential for replication in other regions. As a follow-up, a special mission during the European Water Technology Week in October is being considered.
This March, Wetsus opened 14 PhD positions across a remarkably diverse range of research topics, reflecting the breadth of innovation needed to tackle today’s water, circular economy, and sustainable agriculture challenges. In the last week of May and the first week of June, we are entering the final selection phase, welcoming shortlisted candidates to Wetsus for our Recruitment Challenge. During this intensive selection process, candidates present their MSc research, complete a proposal writing exercise, and participate in live interviews with university supervisors and Wetsus staff. Read more
In Agro2Circular, with its 40 partners in 9 countries, ranging from companies to policy stakeholders, research was aimed at developing a systemic solution for upcycling agri-food residues and multilayer packaging into high-value products through advanced recycling technologies and digital circularity tools.
In it, the Wetsus Biopolymers from Water theme showed the great opportunities ahead for the biopolymer PHA. It can be extracted from various sources and used in a real industrial supply chain, in a scalable yet flexible manner. Other partners in the project made significant advances in biopolymer production and recycling.
Now, two new EU-funded projects have recently been granted to build upon this research and make steps towards ‘End of Waste’ - clean circular materials made from waste. In PHACTUS, Wetsus will develop novel processing and recycling approaches to engineer PHA-materials properties and model the fate of unwanted chemicals. In the flagship project SOWISE+, Wetsus will process waste-derived cellulose and PHAs into advanced composites, controlling quality of material properties and controlling the content of unwanted substances in the recycled material.
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