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California Proposes Turning Toilet Wastewater into Drinking Water
Daily Fetched ^ | July 12, 2023 | Jason Walsh

Posted on 07/12/2023 6:42:26 AM PDT by Red Badger

California’s State Water Resources Control Board has proposed new regulations allowing toilet wastewater to be turned into drinking water.

The new “toilet-to-tap” program aims to tackle the state’s water shortages.

In a statement, the board said:

[T]he State Water Resources Control Board announced today proposed regulations that would allow for water systems to add wastewater that has been treated to levels meeting or exceeding all drinking water standards to their potable supplies. The process, known as direct potable reuse, will enable systems to generate a climate-resilient water source while reducing the amount of wastewater they release to rivers and the ocean.

Direct potable reuse relies entirely on immediate, multi-barrier treatment that can recycle wastewater to drinking water standards in a matter of hours.

This contrasts to the method currently being deployed in major projects launched throughout the state, called indirect potable reuse, which further improves treated wastewater over time through groundwater recharge or dilution with surface water.

While no formal direct potable reuse projects can be initiated in California until the regulations are adopted, water agencies in Santa Clara, San Diego, and the city of Los Angeles have launched pilot projects in recent years.

As Breitbart reported:

The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California has partnered with the Sanitation Districts in a new project to test the feasibility of treating and reusing a large percentage of the county’s water currently discharged to sea.

I was the first reporter to be allowed a look at a new demonstration project called the Advanced Purification Center, which, when operational, could result in a full-scale recycled water plant that would purify up to 150 million of the 250 million gallons per day that flow through the [Joint Water Pollution Control Plant in Los Angeles, or JWPCP].

The test facility, where construction began in 2017, will be completed later in 2019. It will purify about half a million gallons of water from JWPCP per day, using a special process that first uses microorganisms to remove ammonia and other nitrogen compounds from the water; then uses advanced filters to remove microorganisms and solids; and finally uses [reverse osmosis] membranes to purify the water, just as in a desalination plant.

The process is less expensive and less energy-intensive than desalination because the treated water, while too salty for immediate use, is only about a tenth as salty as seawater.

Once proven, the plant could be expanded — and, officials told me, could be operational in 11 years if all went as planned and the state approved all of the necessary permits.

The new regulations could be approved by the end of the year.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; US: California
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To: Red Badger

Well, if it’s for the governor, his appointees, state level
office holders and the state legislature, I might be able to
back the plan.

For the rest of us, no.


101 posted on 07/12/2023 12:50:36 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (I pledge allegiance to the flag of the USofA & to the Constitutional REPUBLIC for which it stands.)
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To: KTM rider

Sounds like a truth of fiction tic tok story?.


102 posted on 07/12/2023 1:55:20 PM PDT by Vaduz (....)
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