CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 2023, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DROUGHTS, TECHNOLOGY THRUST DESAL
TO THE FORE”
“Water,
water everywhere, nor any drop to drink.”
--Samuel Coleridge, 1798, in “Rime of the Ancient
Mariner”
It has taken an unprecedented series of multi-year
droughts, conversion of thousands of California lawns to water-sparing cacti
and other plants and stricter than ever water rationing in many parts of the
state, but at last it’s beginning to look like Samuel Coleridge’s sailor may
have been premature.
For
there’s plenty of Pacific Ocean water being drunk in California today, with
every indication suggesting there will be much more to come.
No,
California will likely never be like Israel, drawing 90 percent of its drinking
water from desalinized sea water. But eventually, it’s now probable that such
purified brine will eventually make up something more than 10 percent of the
state’s supply.
This
looks like a simple necessity. For as the state insists on more and more dense
residential construction and as snowpacks in the Sierra Nevada become thinner
over the decades, this state will have to brace for spending big money to
provide water for its populace of about 40 million.
Yes, that population was down
a little over the last two years, as some folks migrated to other states and
fewer of the foreign born came here during the worst COVID-19 pandemic years.
But these look like minor and probably temporary phenomena compared with the
full scope of urban California.
No one
has seen any notable declines in either traffic jams or crowds in
pedestrian-only areas in spite of the state’s loss this year of one seat in
Congress.
Plus, the
rest of California has seen that San Diego County, with the Poseidon Water
desalination facility at Carlsbad producing all-out during the drought, was
better off water-wise than many parts of the state.
That came
at a price, of course. The Poseidon plant, making about 48,000 acre feet of purified
water yearly, more than 1.5 billion gallons, accounted for almost 10 percent of
San Diego County’s water at a price of about $2,750 per acre foot.
At one
time, the price tag seemed to make the cost of desalination prohibitive
elsewhere in the state. At the time the Carlsbad plant was finished, supplies
from the state Water Project were being sold to some agencies for about $700
per acre foot. Desalinated water thus cost about four times as much as aqueduct
supplies.
But the
state’s aqueducts and the reservoirs they once filled have run at depleted
levels the last two years. And the cost differences of various types of water
are beginning to narrow. Drought has caused the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California, the state’s largest water wholesaler, to sell treated
supplies for about $1,200 per acre foot over the last year, still not close to
the cost of desalinated water, but much closer than it was only about six years
ago.
Plus,
much desalinated water from the state’s other purifying plants now sells for
less than Poseidon’s supplies – more in the neighborhood of $2,000 per acre
foot.
That’s
one reason the state Coastal Commission last year approved building a new
desalination plant near Doheny State Beach, close to Orange County’s Dana
Point. This facility would produce about 5 million gallons daily, significantly
less than the Carlsbad plant, but still a boost for local supplies and a kind
of insurance policy.
As
technology improves, allowing desalination to kill fewer marine animals and
organisms, while also producing less brine, more plants will be approved.
Especially if drought persists and provides political pressure for
greenlighting projects.
New
technology also includes experiments with widely-spaced desalination buoys to
decentralize the process so no ocean areas are overloaded with either organic
demises or thick brine.
As usual,
necessity has become the mother of invention: To survive, California must have
more desalination plants if both drought and population levels persist.
For sure,
the political imperative is there: A July survey by the Public Policy Institute
of California found three-quarters of likely voters believe drought is a big
problem.
Expensive
as it may be, that cannot help but thrust desalination to the fore as a big
part of the solution.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now
available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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