Even as Gov.
Jerry Brown grapples with California’s drought by mandating that water
districts curb their demands by 25 percent, the Orange County Grand Jury urges
them to expand supply by stepping up production of recycled water.
Dwindling
local water supplies could be conserved by tapping into the 147 million gallons
of treated wastewater currently discharged into the ocean daily, says a grand
jury report issued Friday, May 1.
The report
recommends that almost all of the county’s wastewater processing districts,
including South Orange County Wastewater Authority (SOCWA), which serves Laguna
Beach, identify and implement the most cost-effective method of increasing
production of recycled water, so as to reduce the county’s reliance on imported
water.
The affected
districts are required by law to respond to the report’s recommendations within
90 days.
Local water
supplies from the Santa Ana River groundwater basin or recycled wastewater meet
nearly half of Orange County’s total water demand. To meet the remaining
demand, the Municipal Water District of Orange County buys water from northern
California and the Colorado River through the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California. Its purchases are distributed to 28 agencies that pipe
water to homes and businesses.
The amount
of water available for extraction from the groundwater basin depends on annual
rainfall and shrinks during droughts. In order to replenish the basin, the
county will have to recycle more wastewater or buy more imported water,
according to the grand jury findings. They also found that in almost all cases
treating wastewater for irrigation (“purple pipe” water) or potable use is less
expensive and more dependable than purchasing imported water, given that
imported water sources are shrinking, while excess wastewater is simply being
pumped into the ocean.
South-county
water districts rely almost entirely on water delivered by the MWD, which will
cut deliveries by 15 percent beginning July 1.
Out of 262
million gallons of wastewater produced daily in the county, 147 million flows
into the ocean, 45 million fills purple irrigation pipes and 70 million gallons
becomes potable. The ratios differ by district, according to the report.
Of the 23
million gallons of wastewater processed daily by SOCWA, 8 million is recycled
and 15 million is discharged at sea a mile from Aliso Beach.
Irvine Ranch
Water District, which was excluded from the grand jury’s recommendations, has
the advantages of a planned community. Irvine recycles 87 percent of its 23
million gallons of daily wastewater for landscaping and industrial uses.
In its
findings, the grand jury noted that it costs the Orange County Water District,
which serves 20 northern and central county cities, $1,468 per million gallons
to treat wastewater for potable use, or $1,133 less than the current cost of
importing a comparable amount water.
At the same
time, it costs SOCWA, which serves two water districts in Laguna Beach and
other cities, $3,326 to treat 1 million gallons to purple pipe standards, or
$725 more than it costs to import water. But the jury believes that rising
costs of imported water will change that ratio.
May
11, 2015
The
Indy (Laguna Beach Independent Newspaper)
By
Jennifer Erickson
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