| Desalination systems based on reverse osmosis technology
are increasing the availability and quality of clean drinking
water in Toas Island in Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela.
| Until recently, the thought of drawing
drinking water from the sea to serve the masses was considered
largely out of reach due to high costs. Ten years
ago, pulling 1000 U.S. gallons of water from the sea and
making it drinkable utilizing reverse osmosis (RO) would
cost a municipality close to $5.00. Thanks to advances
in technology, the cost has dropped dramatically to roughly
$2.00. For the first time, coastal communities are able
to draw and desalinate water from the sea for nearly the
same price they may used to pay to have clean water piped
in from inland freshwater sources. This spells hope for
a thirsty world, especially the six billion people who
reside in coastal areas. |
 |
Developments in RO membrane
desalination technology are making the option increasingly attractive
from a technical and financial viewpoint. In fact, current
estimations of the membrane desalination market show that it
will generate $3 billion per year in new business over the
next decade, largely due to the falling cost of water produced
by RO systems.
Desalination Brings Water, and Hope, to Venezuelan Community
WET recently implemented a reverse osmosis
solution to supply useable water to Toas Island in Venezuela.
Toas Island was one of the country's poorest sections in this
country. Today,
the island enjoys enough fresh water to consider starting a tourist
business.
Toas Island is located in the middle of
Lake Maracaibo, once one of the world's largest fresh water
lakes. For the
last 60 years, the lake has been channeled to the sea for freight
traffic that over time has allowed seawater intrusion – making
it unsuitable for drinking, cooking or other everyday needs.
Island residents were dependent on a corroded
water pipeline from the mainland that only ran twice a week
for four hours, and a rusted, undependable barge that would
make two trips a week for water. That is when it wasn't
broken down.
“To the people on the island, water was like gold,” says Mainor
Vega, Business Manager, Latin America, for ITT Industries – Sanitaire
Water Equipment Technologies (WET) unit.
This past year, ITT oversaw the complete
installation of a reverse osmosis desalinization system that
is pumping 1.5 million liters of water to Toas residents every
day. One of the
key design features is a system that is flexible in its operating
parameters. Depending on tide swings and seasonal shifts,
the salt levels in this area of Lake Macacaibo change drastically – ranging
from 8,000 parts-per-million (ppm) all the way up to sea water
levels of 32,000 ppm. The higher the salinity level, the
more pressure is needed to push water through the reverse osmosis
membranes. In addition, ITT's system is designed so operators
can take constant measurements and make the appropriate pressure
adjustments.
The system is also durable enough to handle
the mud, silt and suspended particles being pulled in from
the lake. ITT
Industries' pumps are used to transport the water from the lake
to the clarification tanks, the multimedia filtration system
and finally to the reverse osmosis systems.
After it was designed, the system had to
be transported by boat and truck to the remote island. The
water from the desalination plant is sent through more than
10 kilometers of piping to a 1.5 million liter storage tank
located at the highest point of the island. Gravity does the
rest, supplying fresh water to the 2,500 households on the
island.
ITT's WET system changed the island on a
very human level. “The
first day with water, children were outside my window at 2 a.m.,
playing in the mud because they couldn't believe there was enough
extra water to even create mud. The smiles were incredible
and very real,” he remembers. The water is transforming
the island on a larger scale, too. As a result, the island
is thinking of building a tourist business - something that
would never be possible without clean, potable water.
Municipalities and Commercial Entities See Promise in
Desalination
ITT Industries designed a seawater reverse
osmosis system capable of producing drinking water from the
Red Sea. The Red
Sea has an incredibly high salinity level, approximately 43,000
ppm. The high salinity level made it imperative for the
system designed to not only perform efficiently, but also to
be capable of withstanding the harsh conditions of the application. The
system is now producing 134,000 gallons per day of high-purity
drinking water at the same or better cost than trucked in well
water of much higher salinity. Today, almost all the resorts
in this area rely on seawater desalting for their water needs.
In the United States, California, Florida
and Virginia are among the many states using desalination.
With a pending shortage of drinking water, a municipal water
utility in Newport News, Virginia employed the technology of
a reverse osmosis system to tap a brackish groundwater supply. With
design, technical support and operator training from ITT Industries'
WET unit, the municipality was able to quickly augment its safe
drinking water supply and enhance the quality of its overall
water supply. The facility is capable of producing 5.7 million
gallons per day.
Beyond these examples, approximately 9,500
desalination plants worldwide have an aggregate capacity of
8.5 billion gallons per day (32 billion liters). And
forecasts from Global Water Intelligence suggest a greater
than 100 percent increase in installed global capacity from
2005 to 2015, creating a total market worth $95 billion over
the next decade.
Supporting these forecasts is the fact that
an RO desalination system marketplace is justifiably anywhere
that there is lack of adequate fresh water supplies and a good
source of available seawater or brackish water. Essentially
there is a candidate for desalination by RO anywhere that there
is growth and development and a shortage of clean drinking
water.
In California, Florida, Mid-Atlantic and Gulf
States, the Caribbean, Central and South America, the Mediterranean, Middle-East and Pacific Rim (i.e., anywhere there's an ocean
and a need), RO desalination is a viable resource for the world's
constantly increasing fresh water requirements.
Author:
Jorg
Menningmann
General
Manager
ITT
Industries - Sanitaire Water Equipment Technologies |