Desalination
Roadmap Seeks Solutions to Increase Nation's Water Supply
June 7, 2006
Source: Clean Edge News
After one last
meeting in San Antonio in April, Sandia National Laboratories
researchers Pat Brady and Tom Hinkebein are putting the final touches on
the updated Desalination and Water Purification Roadmap -- "Roadmap 2"
-- that should result in more fresh water in parts of the world where
potable water is scarce.
The updated roadmap is the result of three previous meetings -- two in
San Diego and one in Tampa -- and the last held in April where many
government agency, national laboratory, university and private partners
gathered to map out the future of desalination in the U.S. The first
roadmap identified overall goals and areas of desalination research and
was submitted to Congress in 2003.
Brady expects the second roadmap to be completed shortly, and the Joint
Water Reuse and Desalination Task Force will then submit it to Sen. Pete
Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Subcommittee, Congress and eventually the water user and
research communities. The task force consists of the Bureau of
Reclamation, the WaterReuse Foundation, the American Water Works
Association Research Foundation and Sandia.
The roadmap will recommend specific areas of potential water
desalination research and development that may lead to technological
solutions to water shortage problems.
"Population growth in the U.S. is expected to increase 13.6 percent per
decade [over the next two decades]," says Hinkebein, manager of Sandia's
Geochemistry Department and head of Sandia's Advanced Concepts
Desalination Group. "There will be 29 percent more of us in 20 years.
Put that together with an unequal distribution of people -- more moving
to Texas, California, Arizona and New Mexico where fresh water is
limited -- and it is easy to see we are facing a challenging water
future."
Sandia is a National Nuclear Security Administration laboratory.
Only 0.5 percent of Earth's water is directly suitable for human
consumption. The rest is composed of saltwater or locked up in glaciers
and icecaps. As the world's population grows, the increased water demand
will have to come from someplace. Brackish water seems to be a natural
source, Hinkebein says.
Roadmap 2 will outline the specific research needed in high-impact areas
to create more fresh water from currently undrinkable brackish water,
from seawater, and from wastewater. It will ensure that different
organizations are not duplicating research.
Water desalination is not a new concept. In the U.S., the largest plants
are in El Paso and Tampa. It is also commonplace in other parts of the
world. Except for the Middle East, most desalination is done through
reverse osmosis.
Brady says 43 research areas have been tentatively identified and some
projects are already under way, jump started with $2 million made
available for the preliminary research through a matching grant from the
California Department of Water Resources. California provided $1 million
and members of the Joint Water Reuse and Desalination Task Force each
contributed $250,000.
Another $4 million in fiscal years 2004, 2005 and 2006 through federal
Energy and Water Development Appropriations bills secured by Domenici
has also funded desalination research at Sandia.
"The task force will decide which of the 43 projects get to the top of
the research pile," Brady says. "As more money is made available,
universities, research groups, national laboratories and private
companies will bid on projects."
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