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.
The 2026 PhD portfolio tells a compelling story about the future of sustainable technology. It begins with one of society’s most fundamental needs: safe and resilient water systems. Two projects focus on ensuring drinking water quality in an increasingly complex world, from understanding how temperature and water sources affect biological stability in distribution networks, to improving aquifer management by studying microbial diversity and the formation of transformation products. Together, these projects address the growing need to keep drinking water systems robust under changing environmental conditions.
A second cluster of three projects tackles some of the most urgent contamination challenges of our time. Emerging pollutants such as pharmaceutical residues, micropollutants, and PFAS continue to raise concerns worldwide. Our PhD researchers will explore advanced treatment concepts ranging from plasma based water purification to novel molecular capture systems capable of removing and destroying persistent PFAS compounds. Complementing this, another PhD student will work on a sustainable membrane cleaning strategies will help make advanced treatment technologies both more effective and more environmentally responsible.
Beyond cleaning water, the program increasingly focuses on rethinking waste as a resource. Five projects aim to unlock circular solutions within wastewater treatment itself: preventing mineral scaling in blackwater systems, recovering and reusing iron, engineering bio based flocculants from wastewater streams, and establishing the scientific and regulatory foundations for safe circular biopolymers derived from waste. Together, these projects illustrate a clear shift from end of pipe treatment toward resource recovery and circular material innovation.
That circular perspective naturally extends into agriculture and soil systems. Four PhD projects will investigate how microbial communities can improve crop and food quality, how engineered microbial consortia can support greenhouse cultivation, and how AI driven soil intelligence can enable more precise and sustainable agricultural management. These projects combine biotechnology, digital innovation, and ecological understanding to support the future of food production. Finally, as circular nutrient and waste reuse becomes more relevant, understanding the fate of pharmaceutical residues entering soils through human derived resource streams becomes essential.
We now look forward to welcoming the talented researchers who will turn these challenges into breakthroughs. Once again, we are both happy and grateful for the large number and diversity of applicants, and we are confident that we will be able to select excellent candidates for each of these exciting positions.