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United States Technology

Massachusetts Considering Desalination Plants 356

Iphtashu Fitz writes "Despite a reservoir system containing some 412 billion gallons of water for Boston and surrounding communities, some eastern Massachusetts towns are facing water shortages and are now considering water desalination plants as a new source of fresh drinking water. The city of Brockton, 20 miles south of Boston, has plans in the works to build a $40 million plant and could begin construction as soon as this September. Currently there are fewer than 100 desalination plants in the US and most of them are in smaller communities, but that seems to be changing. The largest desalination plant in the country is located in Tampa, FL, which expects it to provide 10% of the citys drinking water by 2008. California also has at least 10 large scale plants on the drawing board. Some environmental organizations like the Conservation Law Foundation dispute the need for desalination plants however. They argue that many water shortages could simply be solved by better conservation of existing supplies."
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Massachusetts Considering Desalination Plants

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:16PM (#8826631)
    Wouldn't it be just easier to buy bottled water than build a whole plant ??
    • by Kirill Lokshin ( 727524 ) * on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:22PM (#8826671)
      According to the SimCity model of economics, buying water is cheaper in the short run, but then your neighbors will start raising prices on you...
    • How much would it cost to shower with bottled water?

      I don't have an accurate estimate of how much water a typical showerhead uses per min. It takes me roughly 60 seconds to fill up a 5gal bucket when I wash my car. The nice vending machines i've seen in California and am now starting to see in Washington sell water at between 25 cents and 35cents per gallon.

      Assuming the rate of consumption of 5gal per min, a 15 min shower (75 gallons of water) would cost you $18.75 - $26.25 based on this cost.

      Bathtubs
      • Re:Waste of Money (Score:3, Informative)

        by bluGill ( 862 )

        I once in my life took a shower under a 5 gallon/minute showhead, and it was wonderful! They don't make them like they used to. It is illegal in the US for a shower to use that much water. IIRC the most you are allowed in 3 gallons/minute, and likely less.

      • Actually, water weighs 8 pounds per gallon. So your:

        15 min shower = 600 gallons
        60 gallon tub = 480 pounds

        :)

        So, how many bottles of Disante water would it take to fill a bathtub? :)

        Desalination sounds like a good idea to me. It's not like the Atlantic is going away any time soon and while expensive to start up and maintain, you'll provide proof against fresh water shortages and drought.

        This doesn't mean that it will be cool to water your lawn when they kick in the desal units to make up for a la

  • huh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by minus_273 ( 174041 ) <aaaaaNO@SPAMSPAM.yahoo.com> on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:17PM (#8826640) Journal
    what harm is there from desalinaiton plants? sea level dropping? why are environmental groups protesting it?
    • Re:huh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by grahamsz ( 150076 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:20PM (#8826651) Homepage Journal
      Desalination consumes a huge amount of power... that in turn creates greenhouse gases or nuclear waste.

      However, if you are smart you can use your desalination plant only at times when the demand on the power grid is below average, and i'll burn electricity which would have otherwise been wasted.
      • Re:huh (Score:2, Funny)

        by grahamsz ( 150076 )
        that should read "it'll burn electricity" - though i burn quite a lot personally :)
      • Re:huh (Score:2, Interesting)

        by WickywiK ( 232751 )
        What's the main by-product? Salt. And lots of it. Hopefully they have a use for it but if they don't, it can be just another source of pollution.
        • Re:huh (Score:4, Insightful)

          by flossie ( 135232 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @06:05PM (#8826943) Homepage
          I'm sure that they would be able to make use of the salt, but even if they can't this is one pollutant I wouldn't mind being dumped in the sea. The fresh water from the plant would eventually find its way to the sea via the city sewers, so there would be no nett environmental impact.
      • Re:huh (Score:3, Interesting)

        by eggstasy ( 458692 )
        Desalination doesn't necessarily need to consume any power at all. If you can use the sun to evaporate water from a container, and then let it condense and drip into another one, you can effectively produce both salt and water for "free".
        These solar desalination devices are present in many survival kits, and in fact I've seen people improvising them with mere plastic bags.
        I don't know if anyone's tried scaling it. I imagine that for densely populated places that demand very large amounts of drinkable water
        • Re:huh (Score:3, Informative)

          by stilwebm ( 129567 )
          I don't know if anyone's tried scaling it. I imagine that for densely populated places that demand very large amounts of drinkable water on a daily basis, it would require impossible amounts of evaporation surface.

          According to this page [hohusa.com], the low end of the scale is about 11kWhr per 1,000 gallons (3,785L) for reverse osmosis. The Tampa plant produces up to 111,000,000 gallons per day. So that comes to 1,221,000 kWhr per day. We can skip the electrical conversion and use solar heat to evaporate and disti
      • Re:huh (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Zeinfeld ( 263942 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @08:09PM (#8827650) Homepage
        However, if you are smart you can use your desalination plant only at times when the demand on the power grid is below average, and i'll burn electricity which would have otherwise been wasted.

        Err when would that be?

        Power plants reduce their output to match forecast demand. There is never a point where there is surplus electricity.

        Certain types of power such as hydro are used to meet peak demand because they can be turned on and off very quickly with little or no wasted energy. This is one of the reasons why gas turbines have become popular, they cost more to run than coal powered plants but they have low capital costs and they can concentrate on meeting the high profit peak energy market.

        Just about the only type of power plant that is never turned down is nuclear. But very few countries have enough nuclear power to do more than meet the base load, they are capital intensive and it makes no sense to build them unless there is continuous demand.

        There are a few anomalous situations where a country does have an excess of power. The Canadians have more hydro power than they need to meet peak load and so they are in the fortunate position of running hydro for base power needs. Thats why they have aluminium smelters in Canada. Aluminium double glasing would be completely uneconomic if it wasn't for the cheap power. It takes thirty years for alumninium double glasing to save the amount of energy it took to make even in a relatively cold climate like the UK.

        The other country that has a bizare power situation is France where de Gaul decided that 80% of the power needs would be met by nuclear plants. The result is that the French export huge quantities of power to the rest of Europe at way below cost. But even then the power is being sold, it is not being 'thrown away'.

        The amount of renewable energy (including nuclear) available at a given time is fixed. So every unit of power used by the desalination plants will result in additional carbon emissions. It makes a lot more sense to save energy by making better use of existing water resources.

    • They say that sea levels will rise due to the greenhouse effect...perhaps keeping it up would be a good thing.
    • Re:huh (Score:5, Informative)

      by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:28PM (#8826711) Journal
      Probably the environmental impact of the plant itself - it will have to be sited near the coastline, away from already developed areas like harbors or bays, meaning that it will likely displace marshland or other undeveloped coastline. There will be waste discharge as a by-product of the desalianation process, which will increase local salinity. Desalination requires a pressure differential to overcome osmotic forces - the power for this will probably come from electricity. Electricity is in short supply in some places, which means that the water plant will require a coal, nuclear, gas-fired, or hydro plant to contribute part of its output to desalienate the water.

      From a tax perspective, these plants will need to be built by somebody, probably with bond issues, and will require taxes to pay off. I'd be more pissed about that than the environmental impact.
      • Re:huh (Score:5, Funny)

        by GKChesterton ( 462113 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:57PM (#8826893) Homepage
        The environmentalists are whining about it because it involves living people. Anything involving people who are actually alive is evil, don't you know that? This planet is a precious web of (non-human) life that is balanced on a knife's edge. If you sweat too much, or do anything that you might enjoy... well... the whole planet could explode.
    • Re:huh (Score:5, Informative)

      by SmackCrackandPot ( 641205 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:39PM (#8826787)
      The main objection to desalination plants is that they are highly energy intensive. Purifying water from mountain spring water requires seven stages, most of which are chemical/physical:

      Filtering of large solids (fish, leaves,twigs)
      Removal of unpleasant odors and tastes using carbon filters
      Chemical dosing with lime, ferrous sulfate and polymer to remove suspended particles.
      Application of chlorine to kill off bacteria.
      Application of fluoride to prevent tooth decay.
      Filtering through anthracite coal and and sand to remove the last remaining suspended particles.

      Desalination plants have the additional task of removing the salt from the water. There are two ways of achieving this. The first method is to boil the water until every last drop has been converted into steam and then recondensed again. Alternatively, membrane filtering can be used, which requires that the water is pumped at high pressure through a water but not salt permeable membrane. Both of these methods require large amounts of energy (Power stations are a good location for this).

      More importantly, the areas that require desalination plants, are the same areas which are pouring/or have poured unprocessed sewage and toxic waste into ground water supplies. It would be more energy efficient and environmentally friendly to implement waste water purification, than to run a desalination plant in the first place.
      • by John Jorsett ( 171560 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @06:03PM (#8826935)
        The main objection to desalination plants is that they are highly energy intensive.

        Big deal. Just build a nuclear power plant next to them. Problem solved. Oh, and the excess energy can be used to power the baby seal slaughterhouse and for rendering whale blubber.

      • by Latent Heat ( 558884 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @07:08PM (#8827325)
        Desalination requires energy, but it is not quite as energy intensive as you think.

        Boiling a pound of water at atmospheric pressure takes roughly 1000 BTU's, and there are 140,000 BTU's in a gallon of fuel oil. So a gallon of oil can boil 140 pounds of water or about 18 gallons. That is a lot of oil.

        But if you boil a pound of water to remove the salt, condense it, you are throwing away all of that heat released when it condenses, almost as much as required to boil it. How can you recover that heat since you are going to boil at a slightly higher temp and condense at a lower temp and heat cannot move uphill?

        One technique is multi-effect distillation. You boil and then condense at atmospheric pressure. The condensing at atmospheric pressure is hot enough to boil at some pressure below atmospheric. You condense and then use that heat to boil at an even lower pressure. You keep going until you are what ever vacuum pressure boils water at room temperature. The same 1000 BTU's to boil a pound of water is used several times to boil several pounds of water in several "effects" (stages of the still).

        The other method is mechanical vapor compression. If you take the vapor from boiling and compress it in an centrifugal compressor, it can condense at a somewhat higher temperature, and you use that heat to boil the water feeding the compressor. While it seems like pulling yourself up from your bootstraps and violating a thermodynamic law, it is not that much different than a heat pump.

        There is some minimum energy required to desalinate water, it is much less than 1000 BTU per pound, and if you know the osmotic pressure for that salt concentration, you take that pressure and the volume of water you want and use work = pressure times volume. That energy is not without consequence, and that is why you probably want to desalinate brackish (slightly salty -- often available from wells when pure water is not available) than going for sea water.

        Also, there is some effort in approaching the thermodynamic "reversible" minimum energy of desalination. The multi-effect stills and the vapor compression still have to move large amounts of heat through heat exchangers at small temperature differentials. With reverse osmosis, you probably are pumping harder than the bare minimum to oppose the osmotic pressure so you get enough fluid through the membrane to make it worthwhile.

        Multi-effect distillation is probably the way to go for big plants, vapor compression for mid-sized, and reverse osmosis is really probably only effective for small-scale stuff because the membranes are expensive and need replacement. Even with what I said, the energy needs are not trivial -- perhaps you want some kind of cogeneration where you run a multi-effect still from the waste heat stream of a gas turbine.

      • Re:huh (Score:5, Informative)

        by ID_Roamer ( 725238 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @07:44PM (#8827538)
        Having operated desalination plants for 6 years while in the US Navy (we could produce 200,000 gallons of fresh water daily, so small scale), the idea that you boil of every drop of water is a little misleading.

        Actually we would remove only about 10% of the water from the saltwater we pumped through the system. Any higher extraction than that increased scaling problems creating a maintenance nightmare. One poster asked what the communities planned to do with all the "extra" salt. It is pumped back into the ocean with the rest of the brine.

        Also, to reduce energy costs and heat loss, all the production is done at partial vacuums to reduce the boiling point. If memory serves, the we reduced the boiling point to 165F, but it was 14 years ago, so my memory is a little fuzzy.
    • I'd protest it because it probably isn't necessary, and yes, it has an environmental impact on the area where the plant is built. I bet MA has some sort of ridiculous, government-mandated price cap on water prices. Consumption problems? Let the water company charge what they want.
    • Re:huh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:53PM (#8826874) Journal
      why are environmental groups protesting it?
      Technical solution = one less issue for the greens to lobby against, hence less power for them.

      Solution in the form of rationing = greens telling us how to live, meaning more power to them

      Call me cynical, but all too often I see the greens (or the Green Khmer as my friend calls them) protesting against good solutions... it seems that they always favour rationing.
  • by mrpuffypants ( 444598 ) * <mrpuffypants@gmailTIGER.com minus cat> on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:18PM (#8826642)
    The city of Brockton, 20 miles south of Boston,

    I hear [snpp.com] that Ogdenville and North Haverbrook have also installed desalinazation plants and look....it put them on the map!
  • by Grant29 ( 701796 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:18PM (#8826646) Homepage
    Conservation only works when people contribute to the effort. These days people use water for household uses, lawns, washing cars, etc. Once we are used to having it on demand, it's kinda hard to think about conserving. Ususally it's too late when a shortage occurs. Might as well start building the plants now, by the time they are finished being built, they will be needed.

    --
    Retail Retreat
    • > Once we are used to having it on demand, it's kinda hard to think about conserving.

      Some examples I recall, but since they are from my memory, take them with a grain of salt. I can have messed it up.

      Berlin, Germany: The people there were so economical with their use of water, the sewers had not enough water to function properly.

      In a quarter of Toyko a person built a tank to collect rain-water, to water his garden and WC. He ran into several problems with the administration, which (somewhere in summer
    • Domestic water usage is a fraction of industrial and agricultural usage. According to this [un.org] study, in North America domestic water consumption is 167 m^3/year per capita. Industrial is 782 and agricultural is a whopping 912. Conservation programs are important for all sectors, but agricultural and industrial more so.

      Note the disparity in industrial and agricultural water consumption between NA and even other developed parts of the world like Europe.
    • Once we are used to having it on demand, it's kinda hard to think about conserving.

      There is a two-pronged approach to dealing situation.

      1. Raise water rates drastically over a certain basic usage level. (In effect, taxing excessive lawn watering, car washing , etc.)
      2. Heavily promote conservation techniques such as rainwater harvesting and low-water washers. Offer tax credits, free workshops, whatever.

      I think you'd find that conservation would get a bit more attention then.

  • by odano ( 735445 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:20PM (#8826652)
    They should do what I saw in family guy. They just had a machine combined an oxygen molecule with 2 hydrogen. The water it made was really good.
  • by rahulnair ( 666914 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:20PM (#8826656) Homepage
    They should try talking to the arab states which produce 60% of the worlds desalinated water [ipsnews.net]. They are even considering injecting the desalinated water into the ground to raise the groundwater level.
  • Raise efficiency. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:22PM (#8826667) Homepage
    I don't know if anyone does this, but they could raise efficiency by putting their plant right next to a power station and run incoming water through heat exchangers in the top of the stack (smokestack)

    Powerplants have done this for years with thier incoming and cycled water, but there is plenty of room in the stack and obviously plenty of heat left. Most of the "smoke" you see is water vapor. You don't get water vapor unless there is a big heat and/or humidity difference.

  • by VirexEye ( 572399 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:24PM (#8826683) Homepage
    Massachusetts Considering Desolating Planets

    When did Massachusetts get so evilly ambitious?

    • Evil? I mean, yes, it's large-scale, but it's not like anyone would die.

      At least not right away. :)

      The best way to desolate the planets would be to construct a large reflective ring just sunward of the innermost planet, like a mini-ringworld. The kicker would be, of course, that we'd lose all sunlight on earth 8 minutes later.

      And that'd pretty much be it.

  • by flamingchicken ( 151414 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:25PM (#8826690)
    At the moment the biggest problem with desalination plants is not just their high build cost, but their high operational cost.

    When using technologies such as reverse osmosis the energy costs for pushing high volumes of water at high pressures through the membranes is prohibitive, not to mention the wear on the equipment it's self. In a traditional water treatment plant most of the filtering is done with gravity.

    • I've thought about this some, as a way to purify water entirly, use electrolysis. Put the energy in, electrolysis is an extremly efficient process, recombine the H and the O (burning or a fuel cell) reclaim some of the energy from that, and your left with pure water.
    • by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:38PM (#8826786) Homepage
      When using technologies such as reverse osmosis the energy costs for pushing high volumes of water at high pressures through the membranes is prohibitive, not to mention the wear on the equipment it's self. In a traditional water treatment plant most of the filtering is done with gravity.

      The only people who acutally use reverse osmosis for desalinization is steam power plants. Yes, this includes most any plant that uses boiling water to generate electricity: Nuclear, coal, Combined cycle gas turbine, oil, etc. They need super squeaky clean water so their turbines don't corrode.

      Most desalinization plants, on the other hand, just boil water very efficiently and then cool it down again, using the cooling water to heat up the incoming water. If I remember right there are usually 3 heat exchangers in one unit. One to preheat using the water being cooled, one to boil using an external hot water source, and one to cool to room temp using an external water source. The whole process takes place in a vacuum so the water boils at much less than 212 F. In a ship desalinating plant you would use the diesel jacket water cooling water, normally at 150F or so. This is more than sufficient to boil the water at the lower pressure. Shoreside, you would use a low-temperature boiler I would imagine.

      You would not use reverse osmosis because quite simply nobody needs to drink water that clean. The heating process doesn't kill bacteria (not hot enough) but UV filtering is done after desalinization to wipe out most anything left. Thats basically the whole process.

      • This article calculates the energy required for reverse osmosis. It uses 0.66 Calories to desalinate one liter of water. Converting that amount of water to steam requires 610 Calories. A lot of the heat from boiling can be recovered, but the efficiency would have to be over 99.892% to compare with reverse osmosis.

        It's still expensive though. However, it uses far fewer chemicals than regular treatment plants: after desalination, not much else needs to be done.
        • Converting that amount of water to steam requires 610 Calories.

          I'm sure it does at 1ATM. However, it becomes easier and easier to boil water when the pressure is lowered. Lower the pressure enough, and the water boils all by itself! However, by the nature of the self-sustaining nature of the distillation plant, the partial vacuum never gets really really low. This is because the vaccum is maintained not by a pump, but by the difference in volume between a litre of water and a litre of vapor. The wate

      • by dagnabit ( 89294 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @07:47PM (#8827552)
        The only people who acutally use reverse osmosis for desalinization is steam power plants.

        Actually the opposite is more likely. If you're generating/using steam, evaps make the most sense as you've already got a heat source that can be used "directly" to flash more water into steam. Reverse osmosis makes sense if you have a non-heat producing source of power - e.g., you're bringing in electricity off the grid to run pumps that push water through the membranes.

        I spent six years as a Gas Turbine technician in the Navy. The majority of them, and all the older steam-powered ships, use evaporators to generate fresh water. I'm not sure about the nukes, but since they produce a crapload of steam to drive the turbines to make electricity, I'm betting they use evaps too.

        The main source of heat for the evaps on the turbine ships are the "waste heat boilers" powered by the exhaust of the electric generators (3 Allison 501-K17s on the Ticonderoga cruisers for example). The ultra-pure boiler feedwater used to make more steam for the heat exchangers is produced through evaporation. In other parts of the system, bromine is added to the distilled water, making it into potable water for drinking, etc.

        I think there are some ships (the new Arleigh Burke destroyers, and maybe the nuke carriers) that use reverse osmosis - far fewer maintenance headaches than you have tinkering with boiler water chemistry, heat exchangers, etc. Just replace the membranes as needed, and have a good "dirty side" flushing system - if the feed pump is a high enough capacity, a good chunk of the "clean side" water can be used to flush the crud...

        Also, ships at have relatively clean water they are starting with - a desal plant close to shore would have a lot nastier stuff to have to filter out, which would require more frequent membrane changes, more $$...

        I would hope that nobody is going to build a standalone desal plant. Having desal as a byproduct of electricity generation, especially a multi-fuel (diesel, LNG, methane, even powdered coal is possible now) cogeneration (thus the "co" in cogeneration - use the 'waste heat' to do something besides heat the atmosphere) plant, makes the most sense...

        Increasing treatment plants makes the most sense to me, though. You're already starting with "fresh" water... Although at least here in San Diego, the people who don't understand the technology keep getting initiatives to build more treatment plants shot down by using a negative "toilet to tap" campaign...
        • Increasing treatment plants makes the most sense to me, though. You're already starting with "fresh" water... Although at least here in San Diego, the people who don't understand the technology keep getting initiatives to build more treatment plants shot down by using a negative "toilet to tap" campaign...

          And what a lot of those bozo's don't realize is that unless you're getting the river water from near the source, you're drinking recycled sewage.

          Damn shame about the Miramar plant - that water could be

  • by moehoward ( 668736 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:25PM (#8826692)

    I seem to recall a story from the western U.S. where the city instituted rigid conservation controls. The result was that they were successful.

    Well, sort of. The subsequent drop in water usage also resulted in a drop in water revenue and sewer revenue (water usage was metered). The city ended up losing so much money due to not keeping up with fixed costs, that they tossed the measures out the window. They needed the money more than the conservation.

    Desalination on a large scale is absolutely necessary for humanity's survival over the next 100 years.
  • by Doppler00 ( 534739 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:27PM (#8826703) Homepage Journal
    I've always wondered if it was feasible to create clean desalinated water as a by-product of a nuclear power plant. Since turbines need to be powered by steam anyway, why can't they find a way to recycle this water? I guess too many people would be waay to paranoid about such an idea though.

    Most desalination is done with reverse osmosis anyway. It's much more energy efficient than distillation.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:30PM (#8826723)
    I'll wager that millions of dollars are spent cleaning and transporting water in that area (and all over the US), where half of it will be used to water the lawns of suburbia. I would like to see more effort to reduce usage before plants are built for desalination.
    • Far more wasteful a consumer of water is agriculture with "grandfather rights" to water supplies. Large areas of agriculture, particularly in the south west, are using vast quantities of water for high water consumption, relatively low added value crops such as alfalfa and rice. Tis water is delivered at prices set in the 1930s and guaranteed for ever. Those same water supplies would be fare better spent for the food of the community on providing for urban inhabitants, including - if they will - watering th
      • Watch out Arizona? Woo Hoo! Five years of drought and counting.

        Without a doubt, we here in Phoenix may already be living on borrowed time. Water here is pulled from 3 sources. Groundwater, as you mentioned, reservoirs on the Salt and Verde Rivers, and from the Colorado River via the Central Arizona Project.

        For goundwater, the aquifer is dropping. As a result, we are banking water from the Colorado River from the States allotment by pumping it back into the aquifer. Actually holding water for other S
  • Great Idea! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by brain_not_ticking ( 722737 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:31PM (#8826727)
    I used to live in the area (south of Boston, but not in Brokton, thank goodness)..as long as I can remember, we've had water bans during the warmer spring/summer months. It was almost frightening watching the local resevoirs literally dry up.

    Where do they plan on getting this sea water though? I sure hope it's far far far away from Boston Harbor...It's green from all the polution and I'm afraid desalination is only a small part of the process of preparing it for consumption.
  • The long view... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by eidechse ( 472174 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:31PM (#8826736)
    "City officials dismiss worries about water privatization, saying that a 20-year contract ensures affordable water rates and that the desalinated water will only supplement more traditional supplies."

    Is twenty years really all that long when talking about public utilities? Also, what's the projected growth rate for this place over the next twenty years? Is the supplementary nature of the desalinated water the plan for the long term or just initially?

    Water is a hell of a commodity to control; even if you have to wait twenty years to actually control it.
  • by bobwoodard ( 92257 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:32PM (#8826741)
    The problem with the plant here in Tampa is that while it may be the largest, it isn't doing anything except sitting there. The filters have turned out to be too expensive and need replacement too often to make it worthwhile to turn on.
  • by DMCBOSTON ( 714393 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:32PM (#8826743)
    The Quabbin Reservoir is big(412 billion gallons) and supplies Boston and some neighboring towns. The MWRA (Mass Water Resources Authority) also was responsible for building the outfall systems required to handle the use of this water. The problem isn't the existence of the water but the pipes and connections. Some towns see the MWRA as costly and are exploring other means. I doubt that 16 mile pipes and the costs of desalination are cheaper for Brockton than an MWRA hookup, but that doesn't figure sewer costs in. GIGO.....
  • by superid ( 46543 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:34PM (#8826755) Homepage
    Swansea MA [swanseamass.org] is a relatively small Massachusetts community of about 19,000 people. Our town has historically had outstanding water quality from deep artesian wells but we have faced summertime drought conditions most of the past 8 years and once, part of the town water reserves were pumped completely dry.

    Add to that the fact that we are experiencing a building boom due to high house prices (think 900 square foot house for $250k) and we anticipate extensive demands on town water services.

    That is why our water commissioner formally proposed a desalination plant [swanseamass.org] for our town.

    Despite the fact that the state has cut funding for just about everything, our kids are asked to bring paper, tissues and other basic supplies to school, and we had to shut off the town street lights and close a library to save money the town focus seems to be upon building our way out of this hole :(

    At least elections are next tues.

    Oh and on a related note, I took a vacation recently to the Carribean and the place we stayed had desalinated water....it tastes awful.

    • How do high house prices cause a boom? Shouldn't it be the other way around?
      • The cost of constructing has not risen nearly as fast as the sale prices of the houses. So the general contractors can make more per house and they are lining up to apply for building permits.

      • High house prices are caused by a shortage of housing on the market. This can be caused by a sudden influx of staff (companies recruiting), or high demand (people trading up). High salaries are caused by a demand for staff. And sometimes city government doesn't want to attract families and because they would require new schools to be built, so they build small apartment units instead of family homes. Go to wordspy.com and read about "vasectomy housing".
    • by N8F8 ( 4562 )
      Maybe is your state were'nt so hostile to businesses the economy would be better.

      From the CATO Institute: [cato.org]

      For example, according to the Economic Policy Institute, the five states losing the most jobs between 1993 and 2000 were, in order, California, New York, Michigan, Texas and Ohio. According to figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Massachusetts also rank near the bottom, particularly when you take jobs as a percentage of population. The left-leaning EPI bla

  • Cheapest method? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Xeo 024 ( 755161 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:40PM (#8826797)
    Here is an excerpt about cost from a paper I found:

    Which method is cheapest overall?

    Reverse osmosis has been shown to be the most economical in many cases due to its lower energy consumption, leading to lower unit water costs. However, the process has higher up-front investment costs compared to thermal processes. Its unit water costs are primarily determined by membrane life and energy cost (Ericsson et al., 1987; Wade, 1987). Reverse osmosis plants have flexibility of operation in the face of fluctuating water demand and benefit a little from economies of size.

    Several economic trends for multistage flash distillation plants are apparent: a relatively low investment cost, benefits from economies of size (relative to other processes), site specific costs (for example pretreatment requirements, energy costs) have a direct affect on the unit water costs, and low flexibility in response to variable water demand (meaning that freshwater production cannot be adapted to fluctuating demand ) (d'Orival, 1967; California Coastal Commission, 1993). The main economic drivers for multistage flash distillation are costs of materials and energy, and increasing plant capacity to take advantage of economies of size (Water Corporation, 2000).

    Comparing multistage flash distillation and reverse osmosis, the distillation process has been the preferred method due to its reputation as a mature and reliable process. However, reverse osmosis plants are replacing the older multistage flash distillation plants of the Middle East and being the first choice for desalination implementation in Australia. This is due to their simpler operation, reductions in energy consumption and ultimately, cheaper unit costs of fresh water (Anon, 1999a; Glueckstern, 1999). The overall cost of fresh water from a reverse osmosis plant is often less than half of that produced by means of distillation (Water Corporation, 2000). As technical advancements of membrane processes improve their costs and efficiency, they will continue to be the preferred choice for countries moving into desalination.

    Presently, the reported costs of desalinating water using current technologies fall within the range A$0.80/kL to A$2.10/kL, depending upon the process, location and the potential for blending with marginal quality groundwater (Water Corporation, 2000). These costs do not include disposal or distribution costs.

    Read more here [uwa.edu.au].

  • by Mattster P. ( 646458 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:44PM (#8826825) Homepage
    I support the use of desalinization as a source for water, it is better ecologically and economically, than taking your water in from other places, just look at Mono Lake [livinglakes.org]. I'm suprised that our technology in desalinization isn't better considering the largest Desalination plant in the country hopes to provide only 10% of it's city's water supply by 2008!
  • am i the only one here who read this abstract and thought they were playing SimCity 2000? god, the flashbacks...
  • Many techniques! (Score:3, Informative)

    by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:50PM (#8826854) Homepage
    Many people seem to be completely unfamiliar with all the techniques of water desalination. Saltwater Desalination: Chapter 1 [ca.gov] will educate them. There are many techniques including Distillation and reverse osmosis Hopefully the flaming back and forth will cease. Of particular interest is this chart [ca.gov] which shows that distillation consumes much less power than reverse osmosis.
  • by mustardayonnaise ( 685416 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:50PM (#8826855)
    I grew in Santa Barbara. In the early 90's we had a killer drought- our water supply (Lake Cachuma) went down to about 3% capacity. Low-flow toilets and showerheads were distributed freely and it was a ticketable offense to water your lawn between 11am and 4pm. So the taxpayers sank like 32 million bucks into a desal plant. I believe it was ON THE VERY DAY the plant was to go into operation that IT POURED, and the thing has rarely, if ever, been actually used. Guess it'll do as a backup...
  • They argue that many water shortages could simply be solved by better conservation of existing supplies.

    Well DUH. The people aren't trying to solve a 'water shortage' problem. They are trying to solve a "demand exceeds supply" problem. They don't have a reason to deny people the water they want to use if the people are willing to pay a higher cost. Eventually they hit a price point where people will naturally conserve water.

    Water is a reusable natural resource. It's not easy to come up with a reason to conserve it, since they are already conserving it with water treatment plants.

    Think of the water system as a closed system. The only unaccounted for openings are evaporation, and letting it go into the water table (ground, streams, ocean, etc). Otherwise the water is contained entirely in storage, pipes, and treatment plants. To offset evaporation and adding to the water table a system must have a certian amount of intake from wells or another water source. A water shortage doesn't necessarily mean that not enough water is being produced, it means that the system has reached its capacity --> the treatement plants are supplying less water per day than people are consuming, and they are draining (slowly) their reserves of treated water. Alternately more and more water is being stored in additional piping added by new neighborhoods/buildings or evaporated/drained into the environment by new lawns and pools and not enough used water is getting back to the treatment plants. The wells and other 'new water' sources are too stressed.

    There are two ways of combating this - either take in more water from the environment, or increase the efficiency of the treatment system (more plants, better plants, etc) Obviously the second problem can only be solved by getting more 'new water' into the system. In many cities it makes more sense to place a new well than to upgrade the treatement plant, especially if the treatement plant isn't at capacity. In many cases a well cannot be placed because it puts too much strain on the water table, so a desalination plant makes very good sense.

    The environmental people are not complaining so much because they feel we are destroying the planet as they are complaining because it's a symptom of our consumerism which they fundamentally oppose on principle. If they can get everyone else to 'think green' in general then they hope that other problems which do directly affect the environment will also abate.

    Oh, and yes, desalination does stress the water source. If they do not process the salt into other forms then the source many become too salty near the plant. If they do not replace the salt then it may not be salty enough. Either way, a desalination plant affects the water source. Whether that's bad or good is subjective.

    -Adam
    • Oh, and yes, desalination does stress the water source. If they do not process the salt into other forms then the source many become too salty near the plant. If they do not replace the salt then it may not be salty enough. Either way, a desalination plant affects the water source. Whether that's bad or good is subjective.

      I haven't done any research on this, but it seems a bit tough to believe. Even if desal. were supplying all of Boston's water, the volume of pure water taken out should be miniscule comp

  • Do you all realize just how much power it takes to de-salinate seawater on this scale? You practically need a dedicated power source. What would make sense here would be something renewable like wind power.

    Nothing pisses me off more than when I heard of that offshore wind farm near Nantucket and how the locals (headed by the Kennedy folks in their compound) are NIMBYing it.

    Oh well... I guess we can always generate more power with coal or nukes, eh?

  • "They argue that many water shortages could simply be solved by better conservation of existing supplies."

    As long as population continues to increase, conservation and other increases in efficiency are only short-term solutions. Sooner or later you MUST increase the supply, or you run out.

    Look at California's electricity problems for a good example of where this leaves you.

  • Given the enormous amount of power involved, large-scale desalinization really only makes sense with nuclear power.

    Most nuclear plants work by boiling purified water, using the steam to turn a turbine.

    What if, instead of running it as a closed loop, with the enormous cooling towers, we combined the two together, so that you have water desalinization and nuclear power in one?

    This could be, in essence, "free" water!

    The main consideration is dealing with the large amount of mineral deposits...
  • this is ridiculous (Score:3, Informative)

    by Jim Morash ( 20750 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @05:59PM (#8826914)
    Isn't New England is among the most water-rich areas of the country? I agree that conservation before increasing supply makes a lot of sense.
  • They argue that many water shortages could simply be solved by better conservation of existing supplies.
    ...Showing their real aim is not conserving resources, but controling people.
    • They argue that many water shortages could simply be solved by better conservation of existing supplies.

      ...Showing their real aim is not conserving resources, but controling people.

      I would like to know how this is modded insightful. Nowhere in that sentence is any mention of controlling people. It seems like common sense to me. The fact is, people waste water. Not out of malice, but as a result of ignorance. Watering your lawn in the middle of a summer day does little for the grass; it mostly evaporates.

  • Cadillac Desert (Score:2, Insightful)

    by JChris ( 29377 )
    Unfortunately, the majority of water policy in the U.S. (and elsewhere) has more to do with politics and business than with science or common sense. For an excellent intro to the history of water-related politics in the U.S., you should read the book Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water [amazon.com]. Can't recommend it highly enough.

  • Purifying water requires vast quantities of energy, which if done using our existing energy sources is a long term recipie for ecological disaster.


    Nature purifies water by a combination of wind and solar power, is there no way this can be mimicked on a large scale?

  • Sim City!? (Score:4, Funny)

    by nzgeek ( 232346 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @06:19PM (#8827013) Homepage Journal
    Is it just me, or does this sound like a headline from the newspaper in the original Sim City? :)

    Right up there with "Metroville Builds Airport".
  • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @07:03PM (#8827305)
    We can thank Ted Kennedy for pushing for this initiative. He is tired of salt water ruining his clothes when he goes driving.
  • 2-tier water system. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @07:37PM (#8827487) Journal
    I actually started thinking about the problem about 5 years ago when the tap water in the area went from perfect, to tasting like bleach. Bottled water is expensive, and what are we paying the government and the water company for anyhow?

    Basically, the way we need to do it is to have a second set of water lines. The set we have right now can be used to carry low-grade water. It will be the kind of water you use for your toilet, washing your hands, watering your plants, etc. That should not be unhealthy to drink, but it can have all sorts of additives, and generally taste awful.

    The second set of pipes will be high-grade water. Like it used to be, through them the water company will pump pure, clean, quality water. That will be what you drink/cook with. People would save a fortune on buying bottled water, or water filters.

    What's more, there's really little change from what we have now. Except, the fresh water won't be mixed with the recycled water, and the water company can be even more aggressive in recycling water, since they know that it's not for human consumption. No more need to spend a lot on making recycled water taste slightly less repulsive, they can just keep a tiny quantity of water clean. Your water bill will certainly be a lot less too, since the water you are spraying on your lawn doesn't have to be good enough to drink.

    The improvements in water fountains boggle the mind.

    After all, providing clean drinkable water is perhaps the #1 task of any government, anywhere, and they've really dropped the ball lately. This is their primary job. Babies are getting serious medical problems because pregnant women drank tap water. This is really serious stuff.
  • by danharan ( 714822 ) on Saturday April 10, 2004 @09:21PM (#8827994) Journal
    Aqueous Solutions [natcap.org] (pdf [natcap.org]) is a chapter from Natural Capital. It explores various options for using water efficiently.

    Did you know that agriculture uses four fifths of the water in the US? That a short visit by a conservation specialist can cost-effectively save 10 to 20% of the farmer's water use? (i.e. they start saving money right away!).

    In urban settings, much of the peak demand for water is used in landscaping. Education and better pricing structures can also dramatically reduce the need for water.

    Conservation is so incredibly cost effective that desalination plants should really only be a very last resort. Please read the above linked chapter, and tell your elected officials to do the same thing before they go on wasting millions of dollars.

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