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Martha Davis Inland Empire Utilities Agency April 8, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Martha Davis Inland Empire Utilities Agency April 8, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Martha Davis Inland Empire Utilities Agency April 8, 2010

2 Inland Empire Utilities Agency 800,000 residents served Five regional wastewater treatment plants (current flow (60 mgd) Two non-reclaimable wastewater sewer pipeline systems Operates, with LACSD, largest enclosed composter in State for biosolids processing Produces recycled water, compost and renewable energy Is a Municipal Water District serving 242 square miles of the Chino Basin in the western portion of San Bernardino County Provides regional wastewater service and distributes wholesale water and recycled water

3 + Ongoing (increasing?) regulatory constraints on imported water diversions + Climate change impacts on water supplies + Variable weather/more intense droughts + Time needed to build delta improvements? + Increasing and competing water needs throughout California = Need for more flexibility throughout SWP system

4  Groundwater ◦ 5-7 Million Acre-feet of Storage – one of the largest groundwater basins in southern California ◦ 1 million acre-feet of unused storage capacity currently ◦ Safe Yield of 140,000+ Acre-feet per year with capacity to increase ◦ Over 800 Active Wells  High quality Recycled Water ◦ Over 90,000 Acre-feet of water available for reuse  Storm Water Capture ◦ Region now loses over 40,000 acre-feet per year on average of water that historically recharged the Chino Groundwater Basin  Opportunities for Water Efficiency ◦ Over 60% of water use within region is for outdoor irrigation  Regional Partnerships ◦ Outstanding collaboration and cooperation among local governments and agencies providing water services

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6 IEUA Recycled Water Usage Actual and Planned

7  Recharge Sites ◦ 19 Sites throughout Chino Basin  Sources of Water ◦ Stormwater & Local Runoff ◦ Imported Water (MWD) ◦ Recycled Water  Natural Soil Aquifer Treatment (SAT)  Confidence of Regulators  Recharge Basin Operations & Maintenance (O&M)

8  Without the Integrated Water Management Strategy, the need for expensive imported water is expected to increase from 60,000 acre-feet to over 150,000 acre-feet With the implemented of the planned water initiatives, the region will significantly reduce it need for imported water and during dry years almost completely roll off imported water supplies

9 ….Southern California Has the Greatest Opportunity for Water Projects that Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions

10 IEUA Renewable Energy Initiatives Goal: Go Gridless by 2020 ( esti. 20 MW) Goal: Go Gridless by 2020 ( esti. 20 MW) 3.5 MW Solar Installed – More being planned 3.5 MW Solar Installed – More being planned Anaerobic Digesters/Methane Gas Anaerobic Digesters/Methane Gas Fuel Cell Fuel Cell Wind Wind In Conduit In Conduit Hydro Hydro Energy Energyefficiency

11  By 2025, IEUA expects that its service area will be able to meet nearly 80% of water needs through local sources (currently at 70%)  Full service imported water supplies are expected to remain roughly at the same level as 2005 or to decline slightly ◦ Conservation – 33,000 acre-feet (10% of demand) ◦ Recycled water – 90,000 acre-feet ◦ Groundwater production – 200,000 acre-feet ◦ Desalted groundwater – 40,000 acre-feet Replacement of imported water with local sources is projected to save over 225,000 MWh/year by 2025. The greenhouse gas emission reductions attributed to local development and use of recycled water alone is roughly 100,000 tons of CO2 equivalents per year.

12 Questions?


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