Title: Water Issues and what Finance Professionals should know
1Water Issues and what Finance Professionals
should know
- Presented to
- Government Finance Organization of Arizona
Bradley M. Hill, R.G. City of Flagstaff August 7,
2008
2Agenda
- Water Management Laws Nexus Water Energy
- Overview - Energy use / gallon
- SB 1575 and HB 2272 - Carbon Cap Trade
- HB 2211 - Carbon Tax
- Urban Rural Issues
3 BackgroundWater Adequacy Rules - 1973
- Response to Ned Warren land sales near
- Grand Canyon
- Consumer advisory program
- 100-year planning horizon one time
- Permissive
- City of Flagstaff Designated
- May 17, 1973
4 Water Adequacy Rules 1973
- 5 Criteria
- Continuously available delivery, storage
treatment - Legal availability legal right to the source
water - Physical availability hydrologic study, prove
100-years of groundwater lt 1,200 ft depth below
land surface for all current, committed and
projected water demands - Financial Capability to construct water
delivery, treatment storage facilities - Water Quality adequate treatment works, etc.
5 Assured Water Supply Rules 1995
-
- 1980 - only in Active Management Areas
- 100-year rolling planning horizon
- Physical availability prove 100-year supply of
groundwater lt 1,000 ft depth below land surface
for all current, committed and projected water
demands - Financial Capability 100s millions already
spent - Water Rights, Infrastructure (water treatment
plants), etc
6Water Adequacy Rules2007
- Update
- Purpose Provide rural Arizona communities tools
to effectively managed their water supplies - -
(since Active Management Area Assured Water
Supply Rules only apply to Prescott Phoenix -
Tucson) - Provide a linkage between existing future water
demand, infrastructure and hydrology by looking
100-years into future
7 Water ManagementSenate Bill 1575
- Countys may adopt with unanimous vote
- decision not reversible (Cochise County)
- City Councils may adopt with majority vote or
simply - re-apply for their Designation
- may reverse decision (Town of Patagonia)
- City of Flagstaff has been notified (January 08)
that ADWR will be requiring proof of Water
Adequacy to - all water providers Designated in 1970s
8 Water Management
- Should Communities seek Designation?
- Must ensure you can comply with Rules first
- Pros Cons of adopting Rules?
- PRO 1. Community commitment to long-term
sustainability - 2. Funding from HB 2672 Water Development
Fund - CON 1. Regulated by ADWR
- 2. Costs (always cheaper to mine
groundwater)
9 Water ManagementHouse Bill 2672
- Water Development Fund
- Urban cites required adoption of Water Adequacy
Rules first - WIFA style funding source for water development
projects - ADWR exploring ways to create seed
- Opposition from urban cities (Phoenix Tucson)
on methods to fund - HB 2211 - maximum 10 million/year from Lottery
in FY2010
10Water Energy
- Water / Wastewater Utilities are typically the
largest user of electricity in a municipality - Consortium for Energy Efficiency
- 34 of O M costs water
- 28 of O M costs - wastewater
- Why should you know what you
- should be asking?
11Greenhouse Gas Reduction Initiatives
- International Kyoto Protocol
- Federal various Legislation
- McCain-Lieberman / Bingaman-Spector /
Lieberman-Warner - Regional Western Climate Initiative
- State Arizona Climate Action Plan
- Governor Executive Order - 2005
12- 2006
- Flagstaff Mayor signed
- Meet Kyoto Protocol targets
Cities that have signed
Sustainability Environmental Management
Division GHG Emission inventory Develop plan to
meet targets
13- February 2007 Governors of Arizona,
California, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington,
Montana Utah agreed to - join The Climate Registry
- develop a regional greenhouse gas reduction
goal - design a multi-sector market-based Cap Trade
by August 2008 to help meet the greenhouse gas
reduction goal. - The States of Alaska, Colorado, Idaho,
Kansas, Nevada, Wyoming northern States of
Mexico participate as observers
14Climate Registry
- Started May 2007
- Members gt70 of USA population
- Voluntary Reporting
- C02, CH4, N20, PFC, HFC, SF6
- Used for Carbon Reduction Initiatives
- Standardized method of
reporting calculating GHG
15Arizona Climate Change Action Plan
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Carbon Tax Or Cap Trade
Reduction Goals
16Electrical Generation
- U.S.G.S. - Coal produces gt51 of electricity
- APS derives 67 of electricity from coal power
- SRP produced 1,545 lbs of C02e / MW-H in 2006
- City of Flagstaff energy
- 41 from coal
17Carbon Tax (CO2e)
- Federal Legislation potential 11/ton to
80/ton - 40 MGD Water Treatment Plant in Phoenix
- Uses 12,000 KW-H / year
- Carbon Tax exposure? 230,000 to 930,000
- SRP passes to customer entire cost
- Not include increase costs in energy production
18City of Flagstaff
2007 Use
Surface Water 0.23/ 1,000 gallons
(3) Water Supply Wells 0.82/ 1,000 gallons
(93)
San Francisco Peaks
Lake Mary
19Carbon Tax (CO2e)
- City of Flagstaff Utilities used 17,252 MW-H in
2005 - 23 wells, Lake Mary WTP, Rio de Flag WRF and
Wildcat Hill WWTP - Carbon Tax exposure? - 102,000 to 680,000?
- possible 3.50 / month
- customer increase
- FY09 400,000
- rate increase
20SUMMARY
- Water Adequacy Rules for rural Arizona
- Rural Arizona water infrastructure upfront
funding with repayment agreements - SB 1575, HB 2722 and HB 2211
- Water Supply Energy nexus
- Carbon CO2e Tax or Cap Trade
- Not IF, but WHEN?
21Questions?