Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ducey’s desalinati­on plan nowhere near reality

Funding for it not in Arizona’s water plans

- By Bob Christie

PHOENIX — Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s announceme­nt last week that he would work with the Legislatur­e to provide $1 billion to “secure Arizona’s water future for the next 100 years” focused entirely on a new desalinati­on plant in Mexico.

But a funding plan for the plant that was a key part of Ducey’s final state of the state address isn’t on the table right now. In fact there’s no clear plan for when such a plant might come to be, two key advisers to the Republican governor said Wednesday.

“What we’re looking at is an investment in a structure that could leverage, in the long-term, big augmentati­on projects like a desal plant,” said Katie Ratlief, one of Ducey’s senior advisers. “There are shorter, quicker wins. And so really, the vision is diversifyi­ng the state’s water portfolio by a massive investment … that has the capacity to do big, long-term projects and smaller but significan­t short-term projects.”

Those shorter-term projects could include items already discussed by Republican legislativ­e leaders, such as using technology like drip irrigation to grow crops more efficientl­y.

The pivot from the governor’s focus on desaliniza­tion plants comes amid talks with House Speaker Rusty Bowers and Senate President Karen Fann on a water package that could be a legacy-maker for the governor, who is in his last year in office due to term limits.

And it shows that the technology he touted as a game changer is just one part of the solution for Arizona’s major water woes.

That’s just math: the amount of new water Arizona could get from the two desaliniza­tion plants needed to put out 200,000 acre feet a year would not even make up for cuts in Colorado River deliveries already in force because of a long-term drought that has greatly diminished available river supplies. Reports circulated by state agencies show that even a $1 billion state investment would only cover about 20 percent of the cost of building a new plant on the Sea of Cortez.

It’s also expected to be hugely expensive water, compared to other supplies. The state estimates costs above $2,000 per acre foot, compared to the $155 per acre foot charged for municipal and most farm users by the state’s largest water delivery agency, the Central Arizona Project.

Arizona is already taking a 512,000 acre foot cut in yearly Colorado

River deliveries due to drought and another 223,000 acre feet are expected in voluntary cuts. An acre-foot of water is enough to serve two-three households annually.

What desalinati­on will do is provide a relative small but new assured supply to prop up an overtaxed water system — if the funding pool lawmakers envision can be leveraged to come up with the needed $5 billion to pay for it.

“We’re trying to get us to a point where we can look to the future, and go beyond just a gap of 100,000 acre feet or 400,000 acre feet,” said Buchanan Davis, the governor’s natural resources policy advisor. “It really sets us up for long term augmentati­on projects.”

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