Page added on April 17, 2007
Water consumed by electric utilities could account for up to 60 percent of all nonfarm water used in the US by 2030.
Albuquerque, N.M. – The drive to build more power plants for a growing nation
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.
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