2008 program
AlwaysOn GoingGreen 2008
2007 archives
AlwaysOn GoingGreen 2007
Programs by EcoWorld
Send an
Electronic
Postcard
by stephen on 10/10/08
i would like to get contacts
of pople , organisation who
have castor seeds...
by Mohd Ali on 10/10/08
very valuable information i
also like to know the number
of centralized a...
by O Nwankwo on 10/10/08
If started now, new offshore
drilling would only make up
about 1% of our oil needs...
by S JAlali on 10/09/08
Hi, The Magarpatta City
Housing society in Pune has
installed Solar Panels...
by Mohanraj on 10/09/08
I would like to install
solar energy system in my
house. My house is in ne...
by Mohanraj on 10/09/08
I would like to install
solar energy system in my
house. My house is in ne...
by Bhavin on 10/09/08
Thank you for this article
EcoWorld Commentary
Ed Ring,
Editor-in-Chief
Daniela Muhawi,
Editor-at-Large
Contributing Editors
(comments are welcome)

Maps & Information




Today is Saturday October 11, 2008
Editor's Commentary

Affordable Desalination

Posted on: January 3rd, 2008 by Ed Ring

For years the conventional wisdom among environmentalists and policymakers has been the following:  Desalination is too expensive, too energy intensive, too environmentally dangerous, and not scaleable.  We disagree emphatically with all of these notions.

A small desal system on the California coast.
(Photo: NOAA)

The environmental impact of desalination is negligible if the brine is released into a major ocean current.  Certainly on North America’s west coast, where the California current moves some 20-30 sverdrups per year past any outfall point, the impact of brine is a non-issue (ref. Sverdrups & Brine). 

As for the impact of pipelines on the seabed to move brine 10-20 kilometers offshore, or the impact of sea wells and other intake technologies - we have been doing this for years for power plants and for pipelines to offshore terminals.  The technology is safe.  And any environmentalist or policymaker who thinks we should install marine current turbines on the seabed - at a paltry yield of maybe 5.0 megawatts per turbine - has no business concerning themselves with the seabed impact of a desalination complex that can deliver fresh water to millions of people.

Whether or not desalination is scaleable is arguable, of course, but current events seem to suggest it is.  Worldwide, over 30 cubic kilometers of fresh water are already desalinated each year.  In Ashkelon, Israel, the largest desalination plant to-date delivers .12 cubic kilometers of fresh water per year, and it was built at a cost of only $250 million (ref. Photovoltaic Desalination).  So what are the costs to build and power a desalination plant, and what is the cost per household?

The online interactive spreadsheet “Desalination Costs” examines each of these questions in some detail.  If you view the spreadsheet, you will note we have used very conservative assumptions.  Water use per person per day, for example, is set at 200 gallons, which is about twice what a residential user on average consumes in any major U.S. city, Los Angeles in particular.  The cost of the plant construction, assuming 1.0 cubic kilometer of fresh water output per year, is not set at $2.0 billion, which is what one would extrapolate from the cost of the Ashkelon plant, but at $5.0 billion, in order to make certain we stay conservative in our calculations.  We then assume the project is financed on a 50 year bond at a rate of 10%  -  there is probably cheaper financing out there for a public/private project of this magnitude.  Financed construction cost:  $624 per acre foot.

The next section of the online calculator looks at the cost for energy.  The productivity based on 2.0 kilowatt-hours per cubic meter of fresh water is well documented, and when paired with the very conservative price of $.20 per kilowatt-hour, yields a cost per acre-foot of $495.  Double that amount for operations - in spite of the fact desal plants generally expend 70% of their variable costs just for energy, and the variable costs per acre foot are $990.

This equates to a total cost per acre foot using desalination of $1,613.  For a family of four consuming 200 gallons per day per person, that is a monthly household water bill of $120.  This price should represent the upper bound of what anyone should have to pay for water.  It is well within the affordable range for any residential consumer in Los Angeles, for example, and could replace water they import from the north.

The potential of desalination, along with other green technologies that can deliver abundance, should be central to policy discussions, instead of controversial diversions.

This entry was posted on Thursday, January 3rd, 2008 at 3:45 pm and is filed under Water. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. Tags: , ,

One Response to “Affordable Desalination”

  1. Dennis Anderton Says:

    It’s good that cheaper systems for desalination are starting to arise. Problem of scarcity of potable drinking water will surely worsen in a few years to come.

Leave a Comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word

AUTO SHIPPING
New Hybrid Cars
Toyota Prius
Cheap Gas Prices
Latest Hybrid Cars
GreenBuzz Newsletter

Archives

October 2008 (2)
September 2008 (11)
August 2008 (6)
July 2008 (10)
June 2008 (7)
May 2008 (12)
April 2008 (10)
March 2008 (23)
February 2008 (11)
January 2008 (12)
December 2007 (17)
November 2007 (12)
2008 (104)
2007 (127)
2006 (102)

Links

Affordable Housing Design
Alternative Energy Blog
Alternative Energy Stocks
Alternative Energy Today
AlwaysOn - High Tech & Green Tech
American Dream Coalition
American Institute of Architects
AutoblogGreen
Big Biofuels Blog
BIOconversion Blog
Biofuel Review
BlueVoice.org
Camino Energy
Cato Institute
Clean Edge
Cleantech Blog
Climate Science
CNET Greentech
Congress for the New Urbanism
earth2tech
Edmunds Green Car Advisor
Electric Power Research Institute
Environmental Republican
ESRI Conservation Program
EV World
Evangelical Ecologist
Green Business
Green Car Congress
Green Car Guide
GreenBiz
Greencar.com
Greenpeace Blog
Gristmill
Hybrid Car Blog
ICIS Biofuels Blog
International Atomic Energy Agency
International Energy Agency
International Solar Energy Society
Living Lands & Waters
Money Morning
Mongabay.com
National Biodiesel Board
National Hydropower Association
National Renewable Energy Lab
New Urban News
Oilgae.com
Pension Tsunami
Rainforest Action Network
RealClimate.org
Renewable Energy Stocks
Rocky Mountain Institute
SeaWatch.org
SeaWeb.org
Sierra Club Compass Blog
Society for Ecological Restoration
Solar Energy Industries Association
SolarBuzz.com
The Antiplanner
The Energy Blog
The Green Car Website
The Reason Foundation
The Wildlands Project
Treehugger
Trees Water People
U.S. Green Building Council
UN Food & Agricultural Organization
Urban Land Institute
Urban Planning Blog
US Dept. of Energy
US Environmental Protection Agency
WildAid
World Coal Institute
World Nuclear Association
World Resources Institute
World Wildlife Fund