CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DESALINATION LOSES MORE URGENCY IN HYPER-WET WINTER”
Desalination
began to lose its urgency among Californians and their public officials two
years ago, after the drought-busting winter of 2016-17, when heavy rain and
snow ended dry conditions in most of the state.
The idea
of drawing potable water from the sea became even less of a priority this year,
when an autumn of record-level fires gave way to one of the state’s wettest
winters on record.
Reservoirs
are brimming. Instead of desperately seeking new sources of water, Californians
were moaning about the billions of excess gallons that washed into the Pacific
Ocean and the San Francisco Bay. Depleted aquifers began their path to
replenishment, too, with snow levels in the water-producing Sierra Nevada
Mountains far above normal.
All this
helps explain why a new governor seemingly obsessed with infrastructure (he’s
spurred initiatives on housing, transport and utility bailouts) has said little
or nothing about desalination.
That’s a
stark contrast to the early years of this decade, when drought was persistent
and severe, with water rationing common around the state and xeriscaping
becoming commonplace, desert plants even getting subsidies from local
governments.
The
difference is nothing new. For the cold, wet California reality is that when
reservoirs are filled, there is not only less political pressure to build more,
but any urgency about building new ocean-water desalination plants disappears.
Desalination
is always tantalizing here because – like Samuel Coleridge’s ancient mariner,
who complained of “water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink” –
Californians can see billions of acre feet of salt water every day, in the
ocean and all its bays, coves and estuaries.
But that
water is briny, containing an array of minerals that make it almost as
inaccessible today as it was to Coleridge’s parched, fictitious sailor of 189
years ago.
It won’t
necessarily stay that way. Whenever the price of other water rises,
desalinating Pacific waters becomes enticing. It will become more so if the price
of filtering minerals out of salt water drops.
But when
water prices and supplies remain at reasonable levels, as they surely will this
year and next, desal takes a back seat. That’s how it is right now everywhere
except on the Monterey Peninsula, which last month approved a start to
construction on a new desal plant. Will more wet years quash that?
All this
may not sit so well in San Diego County, where Boston-based Poseidon Water
since late 2015 has run America’s largest desalination plant on the coast at
Carlsbad. This plant aims to supply almost 10 percent of the San Diego area’s
water needs, also giving San Diego a degree of independence from the
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (often called the Met),
through which the area gets supplies from the state Water Project and the
Colorado River Aqueduct. The desalinated water is ferociously expensive,
costing San Diego area residents more than double what they pay for other
supplies. But it does improve the San Diego Water Authority’s bargaining
position with the Met.
The San Diego
district buys at least 48,000 acre-feet of water from Poseidon yearly, but can
demand 56,000 in any year it feels the need. That won’t happen in 2019. An
acre-foot contains about 330,000 gallons, roughly the amount a typical family
uses in a year.
At the
depth of the drought, the Met paid some farmers in the Sacramento Valley an
average of $694 per acre-foot for parts of their supply, some of which was
shipped to San Diego. Even at that inflated price, this water cost less than
Poseidon’s product.
These
numbers establish that desalinated water is now the most expensive alternative
California water districts can pursue. That’s the main reason there are less
than 10 active proposals for seawater desalination along the California coast
today, down from 21 in 2012.
But if new
methods to purify sea water beyond the standard technique of reverse osmosis
ever become workable (and several ideas are percolating), all bets would be
off.
All of
which means that the more it rains, the more the prospects for new desalinated
water fall. But like crocuses in the spring, they will surely bloom again the
next time a serious drought arises.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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