State
Grants Long Beach Water $3 Million Vote of Confidence
for Innovative, Environmentally Responsive Seawater
Desalination Effort
LONG BEACH,
CA State of California,
Department of Water Resources (DWR) officials today
announced their
Proposition 50 desalination
grant funding recommendations
at a special public workshop held in Sacramento.
The Long Beach Water Department has been selected to
receive $3 million for its seawater desalination
research and development project, which includes
design, construction and subsequent research of its
Under Ocean Floor Intake and Discharge Demonstration
System, the first of its kind in the world, focused
on demonstrating an alternative to traditional open
ocean intake and discharge practices. Local
agencies, academic and research institutions, and
water agencies are able to use these funds for
construction, pilot and demonstration projects,
research and development, and feasibility studies to
increase new water supplies utilizing desalination.
Funding for desalination projects is
available through Proposition 50, the Water Quality,
Supply and Safe Drinking Water Projects, Coastal
Wetlands Purchase and Protection Act passed by
California voters in 2002. Proposition 50
authorized the sale of $3.4 billion in general
obligation bonds for a variety of water projects
including coastal protection, the CALFED Bay Delta
Program and integrated regional water management,
among others. In January 2005, DWR received 42
eligible applications requesting $71.3 million in
desalination funding. The DWR is recommending that
the available $25 million under the current
desalination grant cycle be used to fund 25
projects. Approximately $11.5 million of the
available funds will support seawater desalination
related projects and $13.5 million will support
brackish water desalination projects. Brackish
water is a mixture of fresh and salt water, found in
estuaries and some groundwater supplies.
"In Long Beach we see desalination as
part of a very diverse water supply portfolio, made
up of reclaimed water, conservation and conjunctive
use projects. A diverse water supply portfolio
keeps water supply reliability strong, water quality
high and water rates low," stated
Helen Z. Hansen,
President of the Long Beach Board of Water
Commissioners
and City of Long Beach representative to the
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Board of Directors.
"I believe these funding
recommendations not only validate the real potential
for seawater desalination along coast of California,
but also the need for a meticulous approach to
seawater desalination research and development,"
stated
Kevin L. Wattier,
General Manager of the Long Beach Water Department.
"This money will be spent on optimizing both the
energy efficiency and environmental issues currently
hindering implementation of full-scale seawater
desalination.
High operating costs, due primarily
to high rates of power consumption, and
environmental issues related to open-ocean intake
and discharge have rendered seawater desalination
cost/environmentally prohibitive. Although
significant advancements in technology have extended
membrane life while lowering energy requirements,
overall energy consumption remains extremely high
due to the very high-pressure requirements of
reverse osmosis membranes.
Using a small 9,000 gallon-per-day
pilot-scale desalter, the Long Beach Water
Department has reduced the overall energy
requirement (by 20 to 30 percent) of seawater
desalination using a relatively low-pressure two
staged nano-filtration process, developed by Long
Beach Water engineers, known as the
"Long Beach Method."
This unique process is now being
tested on a larger scale. With funding assistance
from the
United State Bureau
of Reclamation
and the
Los Angeles
Department of Water & Power,
Long Beach Water will conduct research at a 300,000
gallon-per-day prototype-scale desalter
incorporating the two-stage nano-filtration process.
Construction of this facility will be completed in August 2005.
This larger facility is needed to verify the energy
savings when employing full-scale membranes and
energy recovery units, among other things. The goal
is to verify energy savings of the two-stage nano-filtration
process and to optimize the process so that it can
be duplicated.
Together with its funding partners,
Long Beach Water is also undertaking design and
construction of an
Under Ocean Floor
Intake and Discharge Demonstration System,
the first of its kind in the world, that will seek
to demonstrate that viable, environmentally
responsive intake and discharge systems can be
developed along the coast of California.
The Long Beach Seawater Desalination
Research and Development Project is consistent with
the findings and recommendations for seawater
desalination of the United States Bureau of
Reclamation, California Resources Agency, California
Coastal Commission,
California
Desalination Task Force
and the National Marine Sanctuaries at Monterey
Bay. The Long Beach Water Department's pursuit of
seawater desalination is also an integral component
of the Southern California region's long-term water
supply plan, included in the Integrated Resource
Plan (IRP) of the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California.
The Long Beach Water Department is an
urban, Southern California water supply agency. For
more information visit
www.lbwater.org.
View Seawater Desalination Research and Development
Facility Groundbreaking.