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Uploaded: Monday, March 4, 2013, 7:43 AM Updated: Wednesday, March 6, 2013, 7:24 AM
Water coalition planning 20 projects to boost recycled water use
Effort could significantly cut fresh water draw-downs from Delta reservoirs
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by Jeb Bing
Pleasanton Weekly Staff
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 | The Western Recycled Water Coalition (WRWC) has expanded its membership beyond Pleasanton and the Bay Area to include the Delta region and Central Valley and now represents 3.2 million people.
Coalition members are planning 20 new recycled water projects that would reduce the pumping of fresh water from the Delta and provide a sustainable, drought-resistant water supply for industrial, agricultural and municipal uses. When funded and built, the projects would annually produce 82,000 acre-feet of water that does not depend on the limited and variable surface and groundwater sources used for drinking water.
The cities of Brentwood, Ceres, Modesto, Fresno, and Turlock, and the Del Puerto Water District in Patterson, recently joined the coalition, which is comprised of cities, public water and wastewater treatment agencies and an investor-owned water utility. The coalition has grown from seven members in 2008 to 21 today and is in discussions with additional potential members in California's central coast and Sierra foothill communities, as well as in Oregon and Nevada.
Other coalition members, besides Pleasanton and the Dublin San Ramon Services District, include the cities of Hayward, Mountain View, Palo Alto, Redwood City, San Jose, and Sunnyvale; the Town of Yountville; and the Central Contra Costa Sanitary District, Delta Diablo Sanitation District, Ironhouse Sanitary District, San Jose Water Company, Santa Clara Valley Water District, and Zone 7 Water Agency.
"California's water supply crisis is an issue without boundaries," said Gary Darling, general manager of Delta Diablo Sanitation District, the lead agency for the coalition. "The more agencies can work together on regional solutions, the more effective we can be."
"Coalition projects will have a significant impact on water reliability, protecting our Bay and Delta and creating a sustainable water supply for the entire region," he added. "Every drop of recycled water we produce reduces the amount of fresh water we have to withdraw from the Delta, our rivers and our groundwater."
With one acre-foot of water equal to 325,851 gallons, the new WRWC projects represent a volume of water equivalent to the annual water needs of up to 245,000 households, a supply equivalent to the amount of water used by the cities of Fresno and Modesto, combined. The projects will use the latest in water resource recovery and recycling technology, treating wastewater to high standards that allow it to be reused for many purposes.
WRWC projects will supply clean water for irrigation of parks, school grounds, and government facilities; for cooling processes for power plants, data centers in Silicon Valley, and other manufacturing facilities; for growing crops in the fertile Central Valley and grapes in the Napa Valley; and for environmental restoration.
"Clean water is an increasingly limited resource, and recycled water is the one new supply that we can rely on even in the face of decreased precipitation, dwindling snow pack, and restrictions on Delta withdrawals," Darling said. "Water is critical for California's economy, and construction of the WRWC projects will provide necessary water supplies and support more than 10,000 jobs."
WRWC was previously known as the Bay Area Recycled Water Coalition. More information is available at www.westernrwc.org.Are you receiving Express, our free daily e-mail edition? See a sample and sign-up for Express.
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