Water, water everywhere nor any drop to drink.
— Samuel Taylor Coleridge
While the Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner tells of the misfortunes of a seaman and suggests that despite being surrounded by something, you cannot benefit from it, the tale of ocean desalination suggests the same. The South Coast Water District’s proposed Doheny Ocean Desalination Plant in South Orange County is an excellent example of this conundrum.
Every day in the district that South Coast Water District services (Dana Point, South Laguna, and areas of San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano), there are millions of gallons of potable water, aka gold, flowing down the gutters into storm drains or puddling at intersections. One will also see the water district’s service vehicles splashing through these large puddles in the intersections, but interestingly enough, they never slow down to look at where the water is flowing from or do any type of investigation into this chronic runoff that occurs 24/7/365 in their district. Furthermore, little is done to truly educate customers on water conservation because after all, it’s their right to use and/or waste as much water as they wish since they are paying for it.
Here is a small example of total potable water waste
However, even with all of this highly visible potable water surrounding these communities on one green lawn after another, South Coast Water District advises its customer base that there isn’t going to be a “drop to drink” unless they pursue building, at great cost, a very expensive ocean desalination plant. The scarcity of water cannot be argued, but what can be argued is why, with all the potable water that is allowed to run down the district’s streets and into the storm drains, we need an ocean desalination plant. Apparently, the concept of conservation has completely escaped South Coast Water District and its board of directors, and has escaped them for several decades. We know this because we have been watching and have been begging for solutions for decades. We have sought assistance from the cities’ water quality departments, the Regional Board and the EPA, but simply put, South Coast Water District doesn’t accept responsibility for monitoring their customers’ waste of potable water.
South Coast Water District repeatedly advises in their presentations and board meetings that they have made substantial investments in conservation, recycled water, and groundwater recovery. However, they currently rely on 85 to 100 percent of their water supply from imported sources. Numerous studies conclude that as much as 50% of water demand can be met with local recycled water which would decrease the reliance on imported sources. Combine that with conservation and wouldn’t the problem be solved? Why are the simple solutions ignored? Could it be that the simple solutions just aren’t profitable enough?
As proposed, the project will increase the salinity of discharge and wastewater volumes on regulated coastal receiving waters frequented by migrating whales as well as dolphins and other marine life. Increased discharges from the San Juan Ocean Outfall (SJOO) will expand the wastefield plume to degrade larger areas and represent “back-sliding” as it relates to the NPDES Permit. This begs the question: Will the proposed Doheny project create toxic offshore brine pools where whales migrate? These deadly brine pools exist elsewhere in our oceans and because this salty “brine” is much denser than regular seawater, it doesn’t mix with the rest of the ocean but rather pools on the seafloor in lakes and sometimes even rivers.
This cetacean mapping graphic depicts the project’s relation to the brine water discharges and federally protected marine life as well as potential migration of the Doheny Project’s wastefield plume into South Laguna coastal waters.