Title: ASR Activities In The Western United States
1ASR Activities In The Western United States
Presented by
Terry L. Foreman, R.G., CHG
Presented at the Aquifer Storage and Recovery
IV Conference Tampa, FL April 15, 2004
2Ventura County Star March 28, 2004
Since 1999, the Southwest, the central Rockies
and western Great Plains have been parched. The
year 2002 was the driest of the past 100 years in
Arizona and second driest for Arizona, New
Mexico, Colorado and Utah.
Scientists say this present crisis may reflect
the true character of the West -- an arid land
that Americans have not inhabited long enough to
fully understand.
3Presentation Topics
- Recharge Techniques
- Definition of ASR
- Drivers
- Distribution of ASR Projects
- Selected Case Studies
- The Future
4Recharge Techniques
- Surface Recharge
- channel recharge and offstream basins
- relatively low cost, where feasible
5Recharge Techniques
- In-lieu Recharge
- groundwater users take excess surface water when
available, reducing the amount of water pumped
and indirectly replenishing the basin
6Recharge Techniques
- Well Recharge
- injection wells and dry wells
- aquifer storage recovery (ASR) wells
- feasible, higher cost, requires pretreatment
7Well Recharge Techniques
- Injection wells
- Salinity barriers (Orange, Los Angeles counties)
- Las Vegas, other locations
- Dry wells
- Scottsdale, AZ
- Chino basin, CA
- Aquifer storage recovery (ASR) wells
8Aquifer Storage Recovery ASR
The Use of Dual-Purpose Wells for the Injection
and Extraction of Water
9Definition of ASR
10Drivers For Innovative Water Management Solutions
- Population growth
- Variability of hydrologeology
- Water supply characteristics
- Need to restore and protect the environment
- Need for efficient use of treatment and
conveyance facilities - Publics demand for low-cost water
11Potential Water Supply Crisis By 2025
12California
- Conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater
supplies - Storage and recovery of recycled water
- Water quality improvement
- Environmental mitigation
- Land use
- Cost savings, efficient use of infrastructure
- Reliability!!!!!!!!!!
Operational Study / Demonstration
13Population Growth Will Drive Increased Water
Demand
California is expected to add 15 million people
by 2020 - the equivalent of eight neighboring
states!
Source DWR 1998
14Water Supplies are Not Evenly Distributed in the
State
Source DWR 1998
15Water Supplies Vary Considerably Year to Year -
SWP
Bank Water For Later Use!
16Competing Demands For Water
Require A Delicate Balancing Act
Water supply for Environmental demands
Water supply for MI and Ag demands
17Existing Infrastructure Is Near Capacity
Source DWR 1998
18Application of ASR Can Provide A Piece of the
Water Management Puzzle
Water Recycling
Conservation
ASR
BMPs
Regulation
Surface Water Storage
Water Development
Groundwater Recovery
Seawater Desalination
19ASR ApplicationsCalifornia Coastal Regions
- ASR Applies Where,
- Areas highly urbanized, so land is expensive
- Confined aquifers
- Poor quality groundwater zones
- Extensive infrastructure
- Available storage from historical overdraft
20Location of Calleguas Las Posas Basin ASR Projects
Los Angeles
San Diego
21Need For The Calleguas Las Posas Basin ASR
ProjectReliability For 500,000 People
- Calleguas Has One Source of Water Supply
- Calleguas Has Only 10,000 Acre-feet of Surface
Storage - Seismically Active Area
- Import Water Supply Is Uncertain
Perliter Tunnel
22Location of the Las Posas Basin ASR Project
23Las Posas Basin ASR Project
- 30 New ASR Wells
- 80 cfs of injection capacity (52 mgd)
- 100 cfs of extraction capacity (65 mgd)
- 100,000 acre-feet of storage to meet peaking,
emergency, and drought conditions (33 billion
gallons)
24Las Posas Basin ASR Project
25The Bayside Groundwater ProjectEBMUDs
Fast-Track Conjunctive Use Project
26The Problem Drought Supply
Pardee Reservoir 1977
27What is the Bayside Groundwater Project?
- Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR)
- Drought Supply
- 10,000 - 15,000 Acre feet per year capacity (3.3
to 5 billion gallons)
28Clean Water Revival ProjectLivermore Valley,
California
- Project Objectives
- Wastewater disposal
- 2.5 mgd (2,800 AFY)
- Related benefits
- Improve groundwater quality
- recycled/RO water 100 mg/l TDS
- groundwater 400-600 mg/l TDS
- Increase local water supplies
- 2,800 AFY
29 DSRSD CWR Project Timeline
- Project concept developed Oct-94
- Preliminary feasibility study 6 months
- Well siting EIR 18 months
- Design 6 months
- Groundbreaking Sep-97
- Construction complete Nov-98
- Project stopped Sep-98
- wells not yet constructed
30Nevada
- Las Vegas Valley Water District
- Explosive growth
- Lowest priority to Colorado River Water
- Stored about 250,000 acre-feet since 1987 (81.5
billion gallons)
31Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado
- Water banking (e.g. Las Vegas has banked 117,000
acre feet, 38 billion gallons, in Arizona) - Storage and recovery of recycled water
- Conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater
supplies
32Texas
- Conjunctive use of surface and groundwater
supplies to meet seasonal peak demands - Storage and recovery of recycled water
- Cost savings, more efficient use of
infrastructure, especially for peak day - Environmental mitigation
El Paso
Leander
Pflugerville
Kerrville
Austin
San Antonio
Laredo
Brownsville
Operational Reclaimed Water Injection Well
System Operational Potable System Feasibility
Investigation
33San Antonio Two factors affect current and
future water supplies
34San Antonio Situation
- Relies on Edwards aquifer for supply
- Pumpage limits set by Edwards Aquifer Authority,
only permitted aquifer in State - Strategies include
- Expanding conservation and reuse
- Surface water development
- Alternative groundwater supply
35San Antonio Water System (SAWS)
- Phase I under construction
- 17 ASR wells and 4 additional monitor wells have
been constructed - Pumps and pipelines are being installed
- 30 mgd total production capacity
- Treatment plant for removal of Fe Mn under
construction - Production will begin Spring 2004
36San Antonio Water System
- Phase II to begin Summer 2004
- 10 to 12 additional wells
- Increase capacity from 30 mgd to 64 mgd
- Full conversion to ASR
- Construction planned for 2004
- 3rd Largest in US
37Pacific Northwest
- Address declining groundwater levels
- Conjunctive use of surface and groundwater
supplies - Environmental Issues - flow and quality (i.e,
temperature)
Includes ASR projects in fractured basalt
38The Future
- Increased management of surface water and
groundwater supplies to increase yields - more
water banking projects - Increased use of recycled water to augment water
demands - regulatory framework is developing - Increase use of ASR (and other storage schemes)
to address environmental issues - Timing of capture of stream flows to minimize
impacts - Maintain water quality in streams
- Maintain groundwater discharge to streams
- Increased use of ASR (and other storage schemes)
to minimize cost of other infrastructure
(treatment, conveyance, etc.)