YAK ASR AWWA Sustainable PDX March 2015

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Central Yakima ASR Programmatic Framework Dave Brown Chris Pitre City of Yakima Golder Associates

Transcript of YAK ASR AWWA Sustainable PDX March 2015

Page 1: YAK ASR AWWA Sustainable PDX March 2015

Central Yakima ASR Programmatic FrameworkDave Brown Chris PitreCity of Yakima Golder Associates

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City of Yakima –Location & Water Supply

Naches Water Treatment Plant(25 mgd / 40 cfs, ~15,000 afy)Main Supply

Groundwater Wells (~14 mgd)Backup (3-5 days at peak demand)

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PEAK DEMAND = SUPPLY (25 mgd)

EMERGENCY GROUNDWATER BACKUP

PLANNING – How to meet: Drought, climate change Possible curtailment of using water rights Interruption of supply (maintenance, contamination)

Growth

City of Yakima Water Supply Responsibilities

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Drought

Gordon King, Yakima Herald Republic

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Total Water Supply Available (TWSA)

1905 Reservoirs

Parker Gage

City of Yakima

All surface water is allocated, and managed @ Parker Gage

3 types of water rights:• Senior (golden)• 1905 (pro‐ratable in drought)• Junior (cut off in drought)

City has each type.

Reliance on groundwater during drought may be at risk in coming droughts.

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Drought/Pro-Rationing

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Apr. May Jun Jul Aug Sep

Pror

atio

n

1973197719791987198819921993199420012003200420052010

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0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1973 1981 1988 1996 2004 2012 2020

Minim

um M

onthly Pro‐Rationing

?

DROUGHT• 13 times/41 years• 73% this year?• Next year??

Drought/Pro-Rationing

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Additional Threats to Surface Water Supply

• Maintenance• High flow turbidity • Ice/debris jams of intake• Watershed forest fire• Chemical spill from HWY 12

Water Treatment Plant

Yakima

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Groundwater• Groundwater and surface water: 

• Were separate (1977; Aquavella adjudication).• Now connected (2011; USGS study)

• Most groundwater rights are post‐1905 (i.e., Junior)• Now groundwater may be @ risk to be cut off in drought year?

• City needs existing wells AND more for the 4 Rs(reliability, redundancy, resilience & robustness).

• No new groundwater rights available, unless:• Significant environmental benefit• Non‐consumptive (water budget neutral)

Aquifer Storage & Recovery (ASR) fills the bill 

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ASR System Components

Water Treatment PlantParker Gage

Wells

The Right Geology.• Big yield wells • Bowl‐shaped aquifer• Compatible chemistry

The Right Infrastructure.• Winter treated water supply• Big wells in bowl‐shaped basin• Gravity distribution system connecting it all together

Gardner

Kissel

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The Right Geology• Aquifer is Ellensburg Formation sandstone• Mineralogy is volcaniclastics (glass)• Aerobic environment (redox reactions are not a concern)• Surface water is a dilute from of groundwater.

~1,000 feet

Recharge Zone

Naches River

Groundwater

Ellensburg Fm.

Basalt

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The Right Infrastructure• All major components are in place:

• 12 MGD winter water recharge supply• Gravity transmission to 3,000 gpm wells• Kissel Well ASR retrofitted for $30k• Gardner Well installed with ASR capability

RechargeKissel Well  Production

• System scale clogging reduced Kissel Well efficiency 25% ‐ 100% restored by back‐flushing

• No clogging of Gardner Well (newer distribution system zone)

• Recharge pressure will be monitored to control clogging and conduct preventative flushing

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ASR Program Development• 1998: ASR potential recognized

• 2000: Kissel Well retrofitted for ASR & tested – all’s good

• 2002: Reservoir application submitted

• 2003: State ASR rule passed

• 2009: BoR/Ecology – modeling defines recoverable quantity

• 2010: Purpose-built ASR well installed

• 2014: Gardner Well ASR Test

• 2015: Temporary permit issued 2015-02-24.

Water starts going into the ground 2015-03-11!

17 years

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Why So Long?

• State policy not clear.  Permitting uncertainty:• Recoverable quantity (how much you get back)• Water quality (AKART and 5‐year variance)

• Other ASR projects working through the permitting process (state‐wide)

• Some project proponents are sitting back to let others lead

• Broad focused support for Yakima arrived through the Yakima Basin Integrated Plan

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Key Permitting Point1.  Water Quantity(WAC 173‐157 – ASR Rule)

Recoverable Quantity:• Should be based on water balance analysis.  Could be by: 

• Water level data (empirical; e.g., tank level)• Computer models (needs good calibration)

• Water levels in the Ahtanum Valley are very noisy (seasonal fluctuations, other groundwater users)

• Therefore a groundwater model is used.• Aquifer system is leaky – 90% of the water is there one year after recharge… less in later years.

• A loss of 10%/year was proposed for permit.

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Key Permitting Point2.  Water Quality

• Chlorinated drinking water is recharged.

• Contains chlorination disinfection byproducts (DBPs; e.g., 10‐40 ppb trichloromethane – SDWA allows 80 ppb).

• Conflicts with WA Groundwater Antidegradation Rule (WAC 173‐200 allows 7 ppb trichloromethane ).

• Variance allowed by Director of Ecology based on AKART analysis.• Variance must be reviewed every 5 years.

AKART Analysis of Different Treatment Technologies

Existing GAC RO

Cost ($M; 30‐yr NPV @ 5%) $0.6 $2.9 $23

Implementability In place. Significant engineering/construction needed.

Effectiveness THMs remain @ safe drinking water levels Removes DBPs; waste stream produced.

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DBP Formation During Groundwater Storage

• Kissel well recharged in Dec.• Lower TOC = lower max DBP, Lower T      = slow time to peak

• Gardner Well recharged in June.• Higher TOC = higher max DBP Higher T      = quick time to peak

Gardner WellKissel Well

Plot to be inserted

0

20

40

60

80

100

11/15 11/30 12/15 12/30 1/14 1/29 2/13 2/28 3/15

Tri

chlo

rom

eth

ane

(ug

/L)

STORAGERECHARGE RECOVERY

Kissel Well

80 ug/L (SDWA)

• DBPs form as a function of contact time.• Rate of formation is dependent on temperature.• Chlorine dissipates in ~2‐3 weeks

7 ug/L (WAC 173‐200)

Residual Chlorine – Max @~0.6 mg/L (conceptual)

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Yakima Basin Integrated PlanSince 2009, and on‐going:• Led by USBR & Ecology• Includes:

• Yakama Nation• Irrigation Districts• Fed, state, counties, municipalities• Enviros, citizens

Covers:• Surface Storage • Groundwater Storage • Fish Passage & Habitat• Modifying Existing Structures, Operations 

• Water markets• Conservation

http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wr/cwp/ybip.htmlhttp://www.usbr.gov/pn/programs/yrbwep/2011integratedplan/

Meet needs of:• Farms• Fish• People

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Benefits Beyond Municipal SupplyPassive Recovery:• Water leaks from storage to stream.  Water will be recharged every year – but only recovered when needed.

• Leaked water could be accounted against rural development impacts • Unrecovered water returns to the Yakima River, above Parker Gage, and increases TWSA (e.g., 3 cfs modelled) 

Active Recovery:• With 100% groundwater redundancy:

• Surface water diversion by the City could be temporarily suspended• Making 40 cfs available to others

• Could pump directly to river

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Where We Stand Today• A temporary permit has been issued:

• Recharge at 2 wells (Kissel & Gardner)• Recovery at any of the City’s 4 wells• Allows full beneficial use of ASR• Allows recharge of DBPs up to 50% of drinking water levels

• A full permit is expected after addressing final AKART comments

• A new ASR well in 2016• Recharge is happening now. N

Recharge PointsRecovery Points

~3 miles

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Thank You!

Dave BrownCity of Yakima

[email protected]

Chris PitreGolder [email protected]

Supported byWashington Department of Ecology  United States Bureau of Reclamation