Southern California Seawater Research and Development Facility
will be
Constructed; Long Beach, Los Angeles and United States
Bureau of Reclamation
in Exclusive Partnership
LONG
BEACH, CA - Federal, State and local elected officials from the Southern
California region and water stakeholders from across the western United States,
gathered at Los Angeles Department of Water and Power's Haynes Generating Station,
located in southeast Long Beach, CA, Tuesday, November 11, as the Long Beach Water
Department, Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and the United States Bureau
of Reclamation kicked-off construction of the Long Beach Seawater Desalination
Research and Development Facility, the largest seawater desalination research
facility in the United States.
In an exclusive public sector partnership, Long Beach, Los Angeles and the Federal
government, will construct a 300,000 gallon-per-day prototype seawater desalination
facility at the Haynes Generating Station. Work at this temporary facility will be
at the forefront of all seawater desalination research, anywhere at this time.
Research will primarily be focused on further development of a breakthrough membrane
technology, known as the "Long Beach Method." Already, two different, and independent,
analyses of the method have shown it to be 20 to 30 percent more energy efficient
than more traditional desalination methods.
In addition to energy consumption, researchers will address many other technical,
economic and environmental factors associated with desalinating seawater.
"Long Beach is committed to developing seawater desalination in a cost-effective,
environmentally sensitive manner," stated Kevin L. Wattier, General Manger of the
Long Beach Water Department. "This project will provide us the information needed
to move forward with a full-scale desalination facility by the end of this decade.
We already have a diverse portfolio of water supplies in Long Beach, including
groundwater, imported water, recycled water and an aggressive conservation program.
We look forward to further diversifying that portfolio in the future with desalinated
seawater.
"The Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (LADWP) is pleased to join with the Long
Beach Water Department and the Bureau of Reclamation in this effort to explore new
and innovative methods for seawater desalination," said Gerald Gewe, LADWP chief
operating officer of the water system. "Seawater desalination is definitely in
our future water resources plan. We believe the partnership with the Long Beach
Water Department offers tremendous promise in further refining and lowering the cost
of desalting seawater to supplement traditional water supplies in an environmentally
responsible and cost-effective manner."
Congressional funding authority for the Long Beach Desalination Project was granted in
the Reclamation, Recycling and Conservation Act of 1996. Under this funding authorization,
the United States Bureau of Reclamation will pay 50 percent of the projects total cost.
The Long Beach Desalination Project represents the Federal government's investment in
desalination research and development. The projected cost of construction and operation
of the new research and development facility is over $5.4 million.
Commissioner John Keys III, of the United States Bureau of Reclamation, expressed the Bureau's
excitement about its partnership with the Long Beach Water Department and the Los Angeles
Department of Water and Power. He stated, "improving water treatment technologies such as
desalination is a key principle of the Water 2025 program unveiled by the Secretary of the Interior
Gale Norton this year. Among the objectives of Water 2025 is to set forth a framework under
which we can all focus on meeting future water supply challenges, and the Long Beach project
clearly represents the philosophy of Water 2025."
Construction of the project will commence in December, and be complete in September 2004.