Half Full Or Half Empty? Either Way it's Time to Plan
(June 2006, Perri Standish-Lee, et. al. for Journal AWWA)
MANAGING WATER QUALITY AND QUANTITY FOR SUSTAINABILITY ASSUMES SPECIAL SIGNIFICANCE
WHERE WATER RESOURCES ARE SCARCE.
William Shakespeare wrote in Henry VI, "smooth runs the water where the brook is
deep." Unfortunately, life is not so smooth where water supply is scarce, and utilities
that are responsible for sustaining water resources in arid and semi-arid regions
face turbulent times. Effective management of both water quality and quantity are
especially critical for communities furnished with the short end of the divining
rod.
WESTERN UNITED STATES FACES DROUGHT CONCERNS
Arid and semi-arid regions comprise approximately 40% of the earth's surface area
and sustain more than one billion people but experience only 2% of the global runoff
(UNEP, 2000). In the United States, several consecutive years of abnormally high
temperatures, below-average precipitation, and increased water demands left the
Colorado River at an all-time low in 2004 (USBR, 2004). Water surface levels in
reservoirs throughout the western United States, such as Lake Powell and Lake Mead,
are currently at near-record lows. Additional precipitation during 2005 led to hopes
of alleviating this drought; however, above-average temperatures and below-normal
precipitation in recent months have refuelled drought concerns.
Aggravating the situation is the decline in water quality that results from diminished
flows. In the Colorado River Basin and in much of the West, salinity concentrations
in rivers and streams are directly influenced by flow volume. Figure 1 illustrates
how salinity concentrations in the Colorado River dropped in the mid-1980s when
river flows were at historically high levels and, conversely, in the early 1990s
when flows were low and salinity concentrations were high (Colorado River Basin
Salinity Control Forum, 2005).
The Sierra Nevada are an important source of water supply for much of the western
United States. The snowpack from these mountains can be visualized as a thermal
storage reservoir, retaining snow that eventually melts and provides water during
the spring and summer months. However, even in Northern California where water resources
are relatively more abundant than in Southern California, climate changes could
have a profound effect on water availability. Although total annual precipitation
values are predicted to remain relatively stable, most climate change models predict
diminished snowpack levels in the Sierra Nevada (Cayan et al, 2001). Figure 2 compares
recent snowpack conditions with projected conditions for the year 2060.
With a reduced snowpack, meeting water supply demands during dry seasons would become
more difficult. Some models predict higher flows during the rainy season and lower
flows during the dry season. In the dry season, problems of reduced supply are likely
to be exacerbated by declining water quality resulting from diminished flows. In
the San Francisco Bay estuary, for example, such changes would yield much higher
dry-season salinities and elevated bromide concentrations (Figure 3).
STRATEGIES VITAL TO LONG-TERM WATER SUPPLY
Existing water resources must be sustained to meet water demands of the urban, industrial,
and agricultural sectors, which compete for limited supplies. Sustainability in
all three sectors requires effective utilization of water supplies, including implementation
of water-saving practices and development of emergency water shortage/drought plans.
It requires communities and water agencies to work together to optimize existing
water sources without affecting future generations' abilities to do the same. Examples
of some entities cooperating to achieve sustainability are:
- In the 1970s, the seven states of the Colorado River Basin implemented a salinity
control program that is believed to be an important factor in having reduced the
overall Colorado River salinity by as much as 100 mg/L (Colorado River Basin Salinity
Control Forum, 2005).
- The Contra Costa Water District's construction of Los Vaqueros Reservoir allows
high-quality water to be pumped into the reservoir in spring months when the Sierra
Nevada snowpack melts and flows into the delta. This water acts as a reserve for
late summer months when the salinity levels in the delta are high because of low
river flows.
Strategies for helping achieve water sustainability in arid regions include:
- technology transfer;
- public outreach;
- conservation and other activities that increase water use efficiency;
- quantification of effective as well as ineffective water management practices;
- assessment of potential future supplies; and
Identification of practical and acceptable water supply options has become a fundamental
element of water strategy development. Technological progress and regulatory changes
throughout the past decade have opened numerous water supply options that were once
considered infeasible because of exorbitant costs or health concerns. Supply options
that should be considered in the development of successful sustainability strategies
include:
- water conservation;
- reuse of treated wastewater and stormwater;
- desalination of ocean and brackish waters;
- stormwater detention;
- water transfers, water banking, or aquifer storage and recovery; and
- out-of-basin importation of water supplies to basins in need.
The ultimate choice of any supply option should be driven by the option's ability
to provide water of suitable quality and to function as a long-term source of supply.
UTILITIES PLAN FOR THE FUTURE
Emerging regulations are becoming more stringent. Water utilities with superior
water quality are able to meet the regulations with minimal changes to their treatment
systems. However, utilities that rely on degraded water sources are finding it necessary
to upgrade treatment systems and/or adopt new sources of supply, both of which can
be quite costly.
New policies and practices that encourage conservation offer hope for parched communities,
especially those in arid climates that are hardest hit by drought. Some water demand-management
measures-such as restricting the planting of high water-demand crops and encouraging
water friendly landscaping in both the public and private sectors-generate substantial
water savings. Incorporation of water-saving devices in households yields smaller
but equally important savings.
The introduction of measures intended to reduce water demand often arises from ad
hoc analysis and decisions by governments at times of extreme water shortage. Water
utilities in the West and Southwest are beginning to develop water strategies and
master plans that effectively and proactively incorporate water demand-management
measures, as well as technologies and practices to address water quality issues.
The Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) in Las Vegas, Nev., and the Zone 7 Water
Agency in Livermore, Calif., offer two examples.
SNWA. The SNWA implemented plans to manage, protect, and augment the local water
supply, which primarily depends on Colorado River water delivered from Lake Mead.
First, in 1996, the SNWA implemented a comprehensive water resource plan that outlined
a portfolio of existing and future resource options to help meet future demands
(SNWA, 2005). The original plan, which has been reviewed annually, emphasized water
conservation, environmental protection, and the need for flexibility in the timing
and implementation of additional resources and associated treatment and delivery
infrastructure. That plan launched a series of regional water conservation programs
to achieve 25% regional conservation by the year 2010.
When surface water levels in Lake Mead began to drop in early 2000 as a result of
the severe drought in the Colorado River Basin (Figure 4), the SNWA also adopted
a comprehensive regional drought plan to accelerate local water conservation and
mitigate potential water shortages. Through conservation initiatives and subsequent
drought plan measures, Southern Nevada's annual water consumption has decreased
during the past three years by approximately 20 bil gal, despite the addition of
nearly 250,000 new residents and 38 million annual visitors.
Additionally, in 2004 the SNWA implemented two plans to accelerate the development
of three water resource projects to provide additional groundwater and surface water
resources to Southern Nevada. This work included the initiation of an integrated
water planning process-involving all relevant parties-to assess funding and develop
alternatives for proposed projects (SNWA, 2005).
To augment its existing surface water rights to Lake Mead, the SNWA has begun to
develop two other smaller, local surface water sources. In addition, the utility
is expanding its water rights in other areas, establishing water banking programs
within the Las Vegas Valley and in Arizona and California, reusing water supplies
for non-potable purposes, and returning highly treated wastewater flows to the Colorado
River for return-flow credits. Throughout these planning efforts, the SNWA has worked
closely with local and regional stakeholders to identify solutions that maximize
the benefits to all stakeholders.
Zone 7 Water Agency. The Zone 7 Water Agency, which is developing strategies to
address water quality issues associated with reduced freshwater flows in the San
Francisco Bay estuary, serves as another example of a major utility planning for
the future of its water supply. Zone 7's salt-management strategy, developed to
address increasing levels of total dissolved solids in the groundwater basin, supports
increased conjunctive use with shallow groundwater demineralization to offset current
and future salt-loading to the main groundwater basin. In addition, Zone 7 is adding
a new surface water treatment plant to address long-term water quality concerns
and respond to short-term concerns such as taste and odor, total organic carbon,
and high bromide concentrations from the South Delta that occur during droughts.
The Altamont Water Treatment Plant will incorporate coagulation, membrane filtration,
ozonation, and biologically activated contact to reduce activated organic carbon.
During periods of high bromide concentrations, an application of acid, ammonia,
or chlorine will be used before ozonation to reduce bromate formation.
COLLABORATION AND COMMITMENT ARE KEY
As population growth, climate change, and water quality degradation further affect
the limited water resources of the western United States, local governments, water
utilities, and the public must continue their efforts to sustain supplies. The human
population can contend with water scarcity only through responsible development,
effective water resource management, and the realization that the world shares the
same finite water supply.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Perri Standish-Lee (to whom correspondence should be addressed) is the director
of integrated watershed planning with Black & Veatch Corp., 8950 Cal Center
Dr., Ste. 238, Sacramento, CA 95826; (916) 361-1282; standish-leepp@bv.com. She
is also the specialist group chairman for the International Water Association's
River Basin and Watershed Management Specialist Group. Standish-Lee has more than
30 years of experience in the evaluation of source water quality, including surface
water and groundwater supplies, water treatment processes, and watershed management.
She has a BS degree in chemistry/biochemistry from the Israel Institute of Technology
in Haifa, Israel, and an MS degree in environmental engineering from Arizona State
University in Tempe. Erik Loboschefsky is a graduate student at the University of
California-Davis and a junior engineer for Black & Veatch. Kristina Lecina is
a water resources engineer with Black & Veatch.
REFERENCES
Cayan, D. M. et al, 2001. Investigation of Climate Change Impacts on Water Resources
in the California Region: Department of Energy Accelerated Climate Prediction Initiative
(ACPI) Progress Report. Scripps Institution of Oceanography, San Diego.
Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum, 2005. 2005 Review: Water Quality Standards
for Salinity, Colorado River System. Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum,
Bountiful, Utah.
SNWA (Southern Nevada Water Authority), 2005. SNWA Resource Plan. www.snwa.com/html/wr_resource_
plan.html (accessed April 2006).
UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme), 2000. The Watershed: Water From the
Mountains Into the Sea. www.unep.or.jp/ietc/Publications/Short_Series/LakeReservoirs-2/index.asp
(accessed April 2006).
USBR (US Bureau of Reclamation), 2004. USBR Lower Colorado Region. www.usbr.gov/lc
(accessed April 2006).
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