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Water Supply Institutions

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Title: Water Supply Institutions


1
Water Supply Institutions
CALIFORNIA
GLOBAL
USA
2
Water Provision
  • Water is a classic public good a basic
    necessity for life, health and welfare.
  • Water service has been used as a tool for
    economic growth, and in some places as a tool
    against urban expansion.
  • Water has usually been managed and protected by
    public agencies, or very highly regulated private
    entities.
  • Some kind of public utilities commission or
    public ombudsman usually determines acceptable
    tariffs and overlooks service performance.

3
Municipal Water Systems
  • As populations have grown, they have generally
    turned away from individual water supplies to
    collective water systems.
  • Water supply institutions were historically
    concerned with the basic act of providing water
    moving it from A to B and then distributing it.
  • They were little concerned with what happened to
    it afterwards (wastewater) or what impacts
    resulted to the environment from the way they
    provided it.
  • They did little to promote conservation and
    efficiency of use.
  • This is no longer a paradigm that works in many
    regions (see histories of LADWP, Lincoln NE New
    York City in Cech p117-125).

4
Evolution
  • Water utilities frequently change drastically and
    grow over time with the expansion of their client
    base.
  • As communities spread out, then so do
    distribution systems, adding main lines and
    satellite distribution networks to serve distinct
    demand centers.
  • Due to differential development and growth of
    communities in a given area, very complex
    patterns of water provision can result.
  • Frequently, water systems will grow out from
    previously distant nuclei such that neighboring
    communities may end up with distinctly different
    sources and providers (e.g. Walnut Creek and
    Concord).
  • Similarly, distant smaller communities that grow
    up along the route of a larger, older communitys
    aqueduct system may be serviced by that system
    through connections to it.

5
Water Providers
  • The fundamental purpose of water supply
    institutions in the modern era is not just to
    bring water but is generally stated as being
  • to provide an adequate water (and wastewater)
    service to water users so that they can realize
    their economic, social and environmental goals in
    an efficient manner.

6
Types of Water Providers
  • There are many types of public and private water
    supply institutions municipal utilities, water
    districts, service districts, irrigation
    districts, service companies, etc.
  • For example, there are more than 40 different
    California statutes under which public water
    institutions may be legally incorporated and
    organized with the powers and authority to
    distribute water.
  • In some cases, water is provided by city
    governments or for-profit companies.

7
Service Territories and Responsibilities
  • Most water agencies, public and private
  • monopolistically serve a fixed service area
  • develop new infrastructure
  • own and operate physical assets
  • finance capital improvement
  • charge fees and levy taxes
  • provide customer service and education
  • comply with all regulations
  • participate in the broader planning process

8
The Commerce of Water Supply
  • Water supply institutions can be retailers,
    wholesalers or both.
  • Retailers sell water directly to the general
    public.
  • Wholesalers sell water to other providers who in
    turn sell it to their own customers.
  • e.g. The City and County of San Francisco is both
    retailer and wholesaler.

9
City and County of San Francisco and its
Wholesale Customers (Bay Area Water Users
Association)
10
Revenue Generation
  • In North America, most water providers are public
    agencies but in France England they are all
    private companies.
  • In both cases, providers are allowed to cover
    their costs with standing charges, one-off fees
    (hook-up fees, special assessments, etc.) and
    commodity tariffs.
  • Allowable expenses and profits are usually highly
    regulated by governments.
  • Domestic tariff structures for LADWP, Lincoln NE
    and New York City are summarized in Cech (p120,
    122, 129).
  • Most providers are moving to metered bills with
    inclining rates like LA and Lincoln.

11
Water Service Functions
  • Unlike many other industries (except perhaps gas
    and electric), water providers are often expected
    to try and limit the demand for their product
    through conservation and waste prevention.
  • Many must provide free or subsidized service to
    the poor and to certain public sector users
    so-called lifeline rates.
  • Many water providers also provide sewage
    collection and waste treatment services.
  • If they dont actually provide the services, they
    may bill on behalf of sewer operators (e.g.
    cities) and wastewater treatment operators (e.g.
    sanitary districts).

12
Water Supply Infrastructure
  • How does our water get to us from the source?
  • What steps and technologies are employed?
  • What are the key infrastructure elements in our
    system?

13
Water Supply Infrastructure
  • Water supply infrastructure must supply water to
    consumers reliably i.e. in sufficient quantity
    and at the correct times and locations to meet
    their needs.
  • It must also maintain key service characteristics
    which include water pressure, purity, taste,
    smell, color and temperature.
  • Reliability encompasses both constancy of service
    i.e. no outages due to pipe breakage or other
    problems (in California this would include due to
    droughts) and consistency in service quality
    (e.g. no abrupt variations in pressure).
  • Constancy of service must plan for and deal with
    extreme hazard contingencies such as earthquakes,
    fires and floods (and now even terrorism).

14
Water Supply Hydraulics
  • Distribution systems are usually designed to use
    the force of gravity to a maximum, as it has
    since the earliest of times (e.g. the Roman
    aqueducts).
  • Water treatment plants are usually located close
    to the highest elevation in a service district.
  • Wastewater treatment plants are usually located
    close to the lowest elevation in a service
    district.
  • Where significant topographic variation exists in
    a service district, separate water and wastewater
    treatment plants may have to be built to serve
    different demand-centers.
  • Wastewater systems, which are mostly
    unpressurized, are more influenced by topographic
    variation.

15
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16
The Headworks
  • The headworks are all the facilities that link
    the watershed and source to the distribution
    system.
  • They may include various dams, reservoirs,
    intakes, canals, pumps, boreholes, aqueducts, and
    treatment plants.
  • Each system has unique characteristics but uses
    standard technologies and may be added
    incrementally.
  • LA has multiple headwork systems developed over a
    century and associated with different sources
    the LA Aqueduct system from the Owens Valley, a
    share of the Colorado River Aqueduct system, and
    a connection to the State Water Project.
  • New York also has many headworks developed over
    a prolonged period the Croton system in
    Westchester Co., the distant upstate Catskills
    systems, finally back closer from the Delaware
    Basin.
  • Lincoln NE, on the other hand, has a single
    headworks system a field of wells on the Platte
    River alluvium and 25 mile pipeline this
    replaced an inferior source.

17
The Headworks of the City and County of San
Francisco
18
Distribution Systems
  • Distribution systems are generally complex
    networks with many cross-connections and valves
    that allow different segments to be individually
    isolated for repairs, etc.
  • Distribution networks look like the road networks
    under which they run, with few dead-ends and lots
    of junctions.
  • Distribution lines, if not underlying public
    right of ways, are granted easements and
    providers have access rights across private
    property.
  • A customers responsibility for the water pipes
    normally begins at his/her side of the water
    meter.

19
The Distribution Network
  • Aqueducts (canals and pipes) can be huge e.g.
    EBMUD has 3 parallel 7ft diameter pipes from the
    Sierra, NY City Tunnel No. 3 is 24ft in diameter,
    Londons ring main is 20ft across.
  • They may lie on the surface or pass deep
    undeground (e.g. City Tunnel No. 3 is over 400
    feet below ground in places)
  • Within-city distribution pipes usually vary in
    size from two feet in diameter to 1/2 inch, and
    are a variety of materials, increasingly plastic.
  • GIS systems are frequently used to manage
    distribution networks, with each section of pipe
    recorded in the database as to its character and
    location.

20
Distribution Storage
  • Few distribution systems can work on gravity
    alone and water will need to be lifted to storage
    reservoirs to provide local pressure.
  • Each distribution network will require a
    particular configuration of storage reservoirs
    and lift pumps.
  • Storage reservoirs are sized to meet peak demand
    and fire needs, provide back-up supply and
    maintain pressure and seldom contain more than 3
    days worth of water.
  • In hilly terrain, water pressure can vary between
    20 psi and 200 psi depending on where one sits
    compared to the storage elevation - optimum
    pressure is 60-80 psi.
  • Some providers charge a pressure differential
    if you live at a higher elevation, you pay a
    higher price (e.g. EBMUD).

21
Distribution Losses
  • Water losses occur in every network a good
    system will lose less than 5, bad ones, perhaps
    as much as 50 or more.
  • They comprise physical losses (cracked or
    ruptured pipes, leaking pipe-joints, dripping or
    gushing taps and hydrants, broken valves and so
    forth).
  • There are also non-physical losses (illegal
    connections, under-registering/broken meters,
    meter reading errors, and clerical billing
    errors).
  • Deterioration of old fashioned materials unable
    to withstand high pressures or ground stresses
    leads to frequent breaks in old systems,
    necessitating large-scale rehabilitation projects.

22
Wastewater System
  • The distribution network is generally mirrored by
    a wastewater collection system connecting each
    users sewer pipe to a wastewater treatment
    plant.
  • Most sewers use gravity flow and require larger
    diameter pipes so as to accommodate and conduct
    the more viscous fluid.
  • Where sewers are absent, septic tanks and
    leachfield systems will be installed.
  • In many developing nations, sewers, wastewater
    treatment and/or septic systems are absent.

23
Wastewater Networks
  • There is much less interconnectivity in a sewer
    network than a supply network.
  • Many sewers are very large, particularly if they
    are combined stormwater and sewer pipes (you can
    walk down them).
  • Agencies with combined sewers are being forced by
    legislation such as the US CWA to separate them
    and/or build wet weather retention and treatment
    systems to prevent plant overload and bypass
    during storms, when runoff rushes into sewers.

24
Wastewater Reuse Systems
  • There are increasing demands to use wastewater
    plant effluent for useful purposes instead of
    releasing it to a receiving body.
  • Wastewater reuse depends on whether
    infrastructure is available to get it to
    potential users.
  • Some nations/regions/municipalities have dual
    carriers (e.g. Israel, Irvine CA).
  • Increasingly, new developments are being fitted
    with dual systems and selective pipelines are
    being installed to large users near wastewater
    plants.
  • In America, such non-potable water carriers are
    color-coded purple.
  • Retrofitting existing communities for widespread
    wastewater reuse will be very, perhaps
    prohibitively expensive.
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