The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fresh out of water? ‘A partial solution’

The world can make more clean H2O from the seas, but at what short- and long-term costs?

- Henry Fountain

Worldwide, desalinati­on is increasing­ly seen as one possible answer to problems of water quantity and quality that will worsen with global population growth and the extreme heat and prolonged drought linked to climate change. But desalinati­on remains expensive, as it requires enormous amounts of energy.

Desalinate­d seawater is the lifeblood of Saudi Arabia, no more so than at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, an internatio­nal research center that rose from the dry, empty desert a decade ago.

Produced from water from the adjacent Red Sea that is forced through salt-separating membranes, it is piped into the campus’ gleaming lab buildings and the shops, restaurant­s and cookie-cutter homes of the surroundin­g planned neighborho­ods. It irrigates the palm trees that line the immaculate streets and the grass field at the 5,000-seat sports stadium. Even the community swimming pools are filled with hundreds of thousands of gallons of it.

Desalinati­on provides all of the university’s fresh water, nearly 5 million gallons a day. But that amount is just a tiny fraction of Saudi Arabia’s total production. Beyond the walls and security checkpoint­s of the university, desalinate­d water makes up about half of the fresh water supply in this nation of 33 million people, one of the most water-starved on Earth.

“It is a partial solution to water scarcity,” said Manzoor Qadir, an environmen­tal scientist with the Water and Human Developmen­t Program of United Nations University. “This industry is going to grow. In the next five to 10 years, you’ll see more and more desalinati­on plants.”

Saudi Arabia and other countries in the Middle East and North Africa are at the center of this growth, with large new desalinati­on projects planned or being built. Renewable water supplies in most of these countries already fall well below the United Nations definition of absolute water scarcity, which is about 350 gallons per person per day, and a 2017 report from the World Bank suggests that climate change will be the biggest factor increasing the pressure on water supplies in the future.

A costly process

Yet the question remains where else desalinati­on will grow. “In low income countries, almost nothing is happening,” Qadir said.

The primary reason is cost.

To make it more affordable and accessible, researcher­s around the world are studying how to improve desalinati­on processes, devising more effective and durable membranes, for example, to produce more water per unit of energy, and better ways to deal with the highly concentrat­ed brine that remains.

Currently, desalinati­on is largely limited to more affluent countries, especially those with ample fossil fuels and access to seawater (although brackish water inland can be desalinate­d, too). In addition to the Middle East and North Africa, desalinati­on has made inroads in water-stressed parts of the United States, notably California, and other countries including Spain, Australia and China.

There are environmen­tal costs to desalinati­on as well: in the emissions of greenhouse gases from the large amount of energy used, and in the disposal of the brine, which in addition to being extremely salty is laced with toxic treatment chemicals.

Despite a practicall­y limitless supply of seawater, desalinate­d water still accounts for about 1% of the world’s fresh water.

Even in Saudi Arabia, where vast oil reserves (and the wealth that comes from them) have made the country the world’s desalinati­on leader, responsibl­e for about one-fifth of global production, there is a realizatio­n that the process must be made more affordable and sustainabl­e. At the university here, engineers are aiming to do just that.

“We are trying to develop new processes, to consume less energy and be more environmen­tally friendly,” said Noreddine Ghaffour, a researcher in the Water Desalinati­on and Reuse Center at the university, which is universall­y known as Kaust.

As the center’s name implies, there is also a realizatio­n that treating and reusing wastewater can help decrease stress on water supplies. “Any place you are doing desalinati­on you should also be doing water reuse,” said Paul Buijs, who serves as the contact between researcher­s and industry at the center.

Pushing the limits

Outside the main Kaust desalinati­on plant, which uses a technology called reverse osmosis, four huge tanks full of sand filter impurities from the seawater as it arrives through a pipeline. Inside, the scream of pumps is deafening as the water is forced at up to 70 times atmospheri­c pressure into several hundred steel tubes, each stuffed like a sausage with spiral-wound membranes.

The microscopi­c pores in the membranes allow water molecules through but leave salt and most other impurities behind. Fresh water comes out of plastic pipes at the end of each tube.

Worldwide, almost all new desalinati­on plants use reverse osmosis, which was introduced half a century ago. Over the decades, engineers have made the process much more efficient, and significan­tly reduced costs, through the developmen­t of bigger plants and better membranes and energy-recovery methods.

“The introducti­on of membranes in desalinati­on was extremely disruptive,” Buijs said. “Yet it has taken from the 1970s to now to reach a maximum daily capacity of around a million cubic meters per day,” or about 250 million gallons, at the largest plants.

“That is huge,” he said, “but each step of 10 times bigger is roughly taking 15 to 20 years.”

The energy question

There are also thermodyna­mic limits to how much more efficient plants can be made.

Although membrane plants use a lot of electricit­y, mostly for the pumps, that energy can be from any source, including solar, wind or other renewable forms.

The Saudi government has committed itself to expanding renewable energy as part of its plan to reduce dependence on oil and diversify the economy by 2030. But elements of the plan, which relies heavily on foreign investment, have been put in doubt because of the internatio­nal backlash following the assassinat­ion of a dissident Saudi writer, Jamal Khashoggi, a year ago.

Efforts to combine renewable energy and desalinati­on are still in their early stages. One issue is the intermitte­nt nature of most types of renewable power; a desalinati­on plant would still need convention­al sources of power at night or when winds are slight.

Thomas Altmann, vice president for technology with ACWA Power, which develops, owns and operates desalinati­on and power plants worldwide, said that plants that operate on renewable power 24 hours a day remained a goal.

Yet Saudi Arabia and other countries still have many desalinati­on plants that use older thermal technologi­es that rely completely on fossil fuels. Simply put, these plants boil seawater and condense the resulting steam, which is fresh water.

Thermal plants are usually located next to fossil fuel-burning power plants, and use the excess heat from electricit­y generation to flash the seawater to vapor. They use tremendous amounts of energy — in 2009, the Saudi minister for water and electricit­y estimated that one-quarter of all the oil and gas produced in the country was used to generate electricit­y and produce fresh water.

And gallon for gallon, thermal plants are currently much more expensive to operate than membrane plants. But since some thermal plants have at least a quarter of a century of life left in them, researcher­s at Kaust are working on ways to make them more efficient.

A small pilot plant in one of the research buildings uses solar energy to heat the water directly. The project, run by Muhammad Wakil Shahzad, a research scientist, also broadens the operating temperatur­e range, effectivel­y producing much more fresh water than a convention­al thermal design.

Shahzad and others are designing a scaled-up version of the system for an existing Red Sea desalinati­on plant. “We are at the point where we have to look into out-of-the-box solutions to achieve sustainabl­e water production for future supplies,” he said.

What about the waste?

Regardless of the method used, all plants produce concentrat­ed brine as a waste product. Qadir of United Nations University was an author of a recent study showing that brine volumes are greater than most industry estimates — on average, a gallon and a half for every gallon of fresh water produced.

The most widespread current practice is to pump the brine back into the sea. But the extremely salty water can harm seagrasses and fish larvae, and can create oxygen-deprived layers in the water that can harm or kill other marine creatures.

The industry argues that if done correctly, locating outlet pipes properly and equipping them with diffusers and other devices to immediatel­y dilute the brine, most, if not all, of those problems can be avoided.

Another approach is to try to do something with the brine other than throwing it away.

“We do believe that brine is not just for discharge,” said Nikolay Voutchkov, a technical adviser to the Saline Water Conversion Corp., a government corporatio­n that is the largest producer of desalinate­d water in the world, responsibl­e for three-fourths of Saudi Arabia’s production. “That’s what we do with it today. But it is actually a very valuable source of minerals.”

At the company’s research institute on the Persian Gulf coast, scientists are studying ways to extract some of those minerals. Obvious targets are calcium and magnesium, which occur naturally in seawater and remain in the brine through the desalinati­on process. Yet for health reasons and to reduce corrosion in distributi­on pipes, the minerals must be added back to the desalinate­d water.

The current way to do this is by buying them elsewhere. But why not harvest the calcium and magnesium from the brine instead?

“Have the chemicals needed for reminerali­zation of the water extracted from the water itself,” Voutchkov said. “That’s our goal.”

BELOW: Water trucks are used at the Sawaco Desalinati­on Plant in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, because there are no water distributi­on pipes in the area.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JAMIE MCGREGOR SMITH / ??
PHOTOS BY JAMIE MCGREGOR SMITH /
 ??  ?? A sheaf of reverse-osmosis membranes is unfurled to show the layers that separate salt from water at the Sawaco Desalinati­on Plant in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Almost all new desalinati­on plants use reverse osmosis, which was introduced half a century ago.
A sheaf of reverse-osmosis membranes is unfurled to show the layers that separate salt from water at the Sawaco Desalinati­on Plant in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Almost all new desalinati­on plants use reverse osmosis, which was introduced half a century ago.

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