
Trade-off
looms for arid
US
regions: water or power?
Water
consumed by electric utilities could account for up to 60 percent of all
non-farm water used in the
US
by 2030.
By
Peter N. Spotts
Staff
writer of The Christian Science Monitor
April 17, 2007
Albuquerque
,
N.M.
The drive to build more power plants for a growing nation – as
well as the push to use biofuels – is running smack into the limits of
a fundamental resource: water.
Already, a power plant uses three times as much water to provide
electricity to the average household than the household itself uses
through showers, toilets, and the tap. The total water consumed by
electric utilities accounts for 20 percent of all the nonfarm water
consumed in the
United States
. By 2030, utilities could
account for up to 60 percent of the nonfarm water, because they use
water for cooling and to scrub pollutants.
This water-versus-energy challenge is likely to be most acute in
fast-growing regions of the
US
, such as the Southeast
and the arid Southwest. Assuming current climate conditions, continued
growth in these regions could eventually require tighter restrictions on
water use, on electricity use, or both during the hottest months, when
demand for both skyrockets, researchers say. Factor in climate change
and the projections look worse. This is prompting utilities to find ways
to alleviate the squeeze.
Here in
New Mexico
, scientists and water
managers are already wrestling with the issue. One of the state's main
sources of electricity is the
San Juan
generating station. Its main source of cooling water is
the Navajo Reservoir, which straddles the state's border with
Colorado
. Under today's climate
conditions, a three-year drought might require users of the reservoir to
cut their water consumption by 18 percent, according to preliminary
research at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. But a three-year drought
with an average temperature rise of 1 degree C (1.8 degrees F.) could
mean a 65 percent reduction by the end of the third year.
"This isn't just the
San Juan
River basin
we're talking
about," says Andrew Wolfsberg, a hydrologist at the lab. If the
US
decides to develop oil
shale deposits in southern
Colorado
, which is likely to be water-intensive, it will be
difficult to keep oil shale development going, he adds.
A large-scale move to biofuels would be even more
water-intensive, says Ronald Pate, a researcher at Sandia National
Laboratory in
Albuquerque
.
Over the past five years, water availability and quality have
become rallying points for opponents of new plants around the country,
according to a December 2006 Department of Energy report on the issue.
By some estimates, electric utilities plan to build 150 coal-fired
generating stations in the
US
over the next 30 years.
"Utilities are beginning to recognize that water is becoming
a greater permitting issue than air quality," says Thomas Feeley
III, a technology manager at the US Department of Energy's National
Energy Technology Laboratory in
Pittsburgh
.
The potential collision of water, energy, and climate is not
limited to the
US
. "This is a big
issue in other arid and semi-arid parts of the world," says
Christopher Flavin, president of the Worldwatch Institute, a nonprofit
environmental think tank in
Washington
. The challenge is
especially acute in
China
and
India
.
India
already faces serious
water shortages around the country, he says. And in
China
, he says, the central
government is losing control over energy planning as local governments
drive the push for more power plants. In the future, if climate
forecasts are correct, the demand for thermoelectric power could
continue to grow as mountain glaciers melt, reducing the amount of
electricity hydroelectric dams downstream can generate.
In the
US
, utilities are exploring
ways to cut water consumption at power plants or are looking for
alternative water sources.
In
West Virginia
, for example,
construction began in February on a 600-megawatt coal-fired plant that
will pull its water from pools in the same mine that it's tapping for
coal. Although the plant is a commercial facility, it also is a test bed
for approaches to tapping mine pools, which are found throughout the
region, notes Joseph Donovan, who heads the
Hydrological
Research
Center
at
West Virginia
University
in
Morgantown
.
And at the
San Juan
generating station
outside
Farmington
,
N.M.
, the Public Service
Company of
New Mexico
has been exploring a
range of approaches to reducing the plant's water consumption, notes
Timothy Jones, the utility's water resources manager. In June, the plant
will test a new design for cooling towers that attempts to capture and
recycle the cloud of condensation that towers give off. The plant
already recycles water from 20 to 50 times before it's evaporated off or
becomes so tainted that it needs to be hauled off for disposal. The
plant also has looked into using water produced as a byproduct of oil
and gas extraction in the region.
"It has a fabulous potential for power plants," he
says. But today's water-treatment technologies are too expensive and
don't have enough capacity to fit the need.
The plant also is using a hybrid cooling tower that uses water
only when air temperatures rise too high; otherwise the plant uses air
for cooling.
In the end, "there is no single silver bullet" for
coping with the projected effects of global warming, Mr. Jones says.
"Renewables will play an important role, but energy efficiency is
the only way you can deal with it without environmental impacts."
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Source:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0417/p01s02-wogi.html
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