New Water Gold Rush for Prehistoric, Salty “Brackish Water” in New Mexico (ArizonaGeology)
(March 7, 2009, Arizona Geology)
There have been 550,000 applications to appropriate deep, “non-potable” water in New Mexico in recent months according to story in the Alamagordo Daily News.
The New Mexico legislature and the state engineer are seeking to take state control of water deeper than 2,500 feet in anticipation of efforts to desalinate brackish water this is in some cases twice as salty as seawater.
In 2007, Sen. Pete Domenici got funding to create the Brackish Groundwater National Desalination Research Facility in Alamogordo [right, photo credit Bur. of Reclamation]. The goals of the Facility are to “to bring down the combined energy costs of pumping brackish water, cleaning it of salt compounds left by prehistoric ocean waters, treating and distributing the groundwater, along with handling the concentrated salt wastes.” The cost of new wells is put at $1-2 million each, plus desalination uses lots of energy.
The anticipation that new, cost-effective techniques to desalinate brackish groundwater may be forthcoming may be a major reason so many applications are being filed to appropriate water now. The research facility however is still in start-up mode and no private companies have proposed using the facility so far.
Related posts:
- Water Development & The Age of the Water Rush: Metros Seeking Water, Particularly Deep Aquifers; Cost of Desalination Goes from $2 to $1 Per 1000 Gallons Over Last 10-15 Years! (AssociatedPress) (Feb. 11, 2009, Associated Press) It’s been called a modern-day...
- Water Desalinating Technology Boom Challenge to Dethrone Reverse Osmosis: Three Markets — Seawater Desalination, Inland Brackish Water, and Water Recycling (MSNBC) (March 17, 2009, MSNBC) The global desalinated water supply will...
RED ALERT: Water Rationing to 5.5M to Begin in Mexico City: Population has Increased 600% in Last 60 Yrs.; Main Reservoir Below 60% Capacity; 10M in Mexico Sans Access to Potable Water (LosAngelesTimes) (Jan. 30, 2009, The Los Angeles Times) Reporting from Mexico...- Gulf Water Drinkability: Texas’ Drought-Proof Water Source Quest Unfeasible for Now (HoustonChronicle) (Jan. 7, 2009, Houston Chronicle) The state’s first attempt at...
- Arizona Wetland Needs Colorado River Water to Survive, Too; and What about Yuma Water Desalting Plant Just West, Slated for Trial Run? (ChristianScienceMonitor) (Feb. 19, 2009, Christian Science Monitor) On the Colorado River...








March 8th, 2009 at 11:15 am
[...] water escalates across the United State (hydrologists, water conservation systems, water lawyers, new sources of water, et cet.), the drought environment, such as regions in Georgia, Florida, Nevada and California, has [...]