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Desalination: Solving water problems or creating a new one?

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Published 23 May 2012, updated 25 May 2012

Faced with water shortages in its sunny south, Spain has become a European trendsetter in harnessing seawater for human use and is an industrial leader in desalination.

In other increasingly dry regions of southern Europe, desalination offers promise for farmers and households that compete for freshwater, say advocates who also see the technology as both economically vital to the European Union and an answer to its long-term water security.

“Without it, you’re lost,” said Miriam Balaban, secretary-general of the European Desalination Society in Rome. “There’s only one other source of water and that is the reuse of water [from manufacturing], but some people don’t want to drink that.”

The European Commission is due to issue its blueprint for safeguarding water supplies later this year, a document that is expected to examine the drought and scarcity risks and alternatives to tapping rivers and aquifers to meet competing demands.

Water providers in Spain – as well as Italy, Greece and Malta – are increasingly turning to desalination to address freshwater needs in dry periods and as rivers and reservoirs become more stressed due to climate change along with farm and household demand.

Cyprus gets more than 60% of its drinking water from desalination plants, government figures show, while rainy places like London and Amsterdam treat brackish water for municipal consumption.

Europe accounts for 10% of the world’s desalination capacity – the Middle East is the global leader, with 70% of capacity – and Spain’s production doubled in the last decade. Balaban’s group lists some 180 European companies involved in the manufacture and supply of plants and technology.

Spanish companies including Aqualia, Acciona and Bifesa along with multinationals like Dow Chemical, Siemens, Veolia and General Electric are among the global leaders in managing and building desalination operations.

A curse or a blessing?

With mounting concerns about water scarcity in parts of Europe, desalination may be one answer.

But desalination also raises environmental concerns - making seawater drinkable is an expensive and energy-intensive process depending on the salinity levels in the water.

Treating seawater requires thermal technology using heat and pressure to extract salt and costs some three times as much as treating water with a reverse-osmosis system that uses membranes to remove impurities.

Environmental groups including WWF and the European Environmental Bureau have for years raised concerns over the expansion of desalination plants and their potential harm to coastal habitats and generate far higher levels of greenhouse gas than conventional water plants.

A recent report by the European Environment Agency (EEA) adds weight to such concerns. The EU agency warns that the desalination process also produces chemical waste and brine – a byproduct that is heavier than seawater and can damage bottom-dwelling sea life when the discharged brine settles.

The energy needed to purify water is another concern, the report says, noting that plans to use desalination to address water challenges “could jeopardise the reductions in energy use planned under the EU's climate and energy package.”

Cleaner water – and air

The desalination industry says it is working to reduce its environmental impact. Manufacturers of the membranes used in purification are taking steps to cut energy consumption in the production process, and new technologies will make purification more efficient, said Santi Talo, the Barcelona-based sales director in Europe, Africa and the Middle East for Hydranautics, a membrane producer.

“Energy consumption is critical, and [desalination] companies are working to reduce energy and make production more efficient,” Talo said in a telephone interview.

Balaban, of the European Desalination Society, dismisses criticism about the environmental impact and says EU policymakers are doing little to promote a technology that could help address growing water scarcity. For example, the European Innovation Partnership on Water, announced on 14 May, does not list desalination amongst its proposals to address future needs.

Renewable energy could address concerns about carbon emissions, said Balaban, with renewables making water purification cheaper over the long term.

And she says that the cost of purifying water from the sea is reaching price parity because the price of treating river and groundwater will grow because of pollution and contamination.

“Conventional water is rapidly becoming more expensive and desalination is becoming less expensive,” Balaban said, “so it’s almost crossing over.”

Next steps: 
  • 22-25 May: 'Every Drop Counts', European Green Week events in Brussels
Timothy Spence

COMMENTS

  • 1] Total Water Lost is 52% of the supply.

    One of the fundamentals missed in all of these deabates about water usage and alleged scarcity is the wastage issues.

    Across Spain and Italy and France the whole countries waste 40% and more of their total water supplies even before they provide water in to the reticulation systems.

    Yes 40+% of the raw ater is wasted even before any treatment.

    Or to put it another way for every 2500 cubic metres supplied to the reticulation system 1000 cubic metres is lost in wastage.

    Then and only then do the water companies and suppliers admit that they lose a further 20% (or 300 cubic metres) in reticulation wastage and other misuses.

    When you add all of this up the Total of Water Lost to the Public is a staggering 52% --- more than half.

    So whenever anyone says there is a water scarcity they should thing again.

    2] What then could be done to address this issue?

    You have cited three countries which have issues upon which water shortages have been a major issue. Spain Malta and Greece. Two of these countries are attached to the general mass of the Main European Land Mass (excepting the Islands) and Malta is wholly separated.

    The policy in Spain to go for desalination is in part historical in that the developments of other systems was not that advanced. Then with Spain becomin the leader in the field it was a natural development to export. Greece has benefited from this.

    Malta as an independent visionary has developed its own desalination expertise and is now classed as a leader in the field. This in part was due to becessity and also to some very enterprising directions given to the Water Services Corporation by the Government over the past 15 years. Retaining this organisation has benefitted Malta as it has minimised the Country's expenditure in importing such equipment. Thus in the field of leadership of the processing expertise although Spain is recognised as the leader in exports for technology and innovation it is Malta that gains the credence. Now when developments occur these are generally bprrowed from Malta and incorporated into proprietary technological companies.

    Moving to membrane technologies as discussed here is an obvious move - if in particular it is cheaper to operate and maintain. We are all for this but here-again the reluctance of a staid industry to go the step further is one of "reluctance" and "we know desalination" so "let's stay with what we know!" Remember that it took 40 years for the water industry to accept plastic pipes instead of ductile iron! So there is a clue.

    By :
    Karel
    - Posted on :
    23/05/2012
  • truw, RO are very energy intensive methods and hence very expensive, besides being not 100% effictive in separating all unwanted compounds from water. I can point you to a new method of desalination, using solarpanels, electrolysis and hydrogenfuelcells which overcome these problems, just patented. you can read more about it at www.atakama.org or http://www.facebook.com/atakamacommunity

    By :
    Lex Moen
    - Posted on :
    26/05/2012
Background: 

Spain has been a global leader in desalination since the installation of its first plant in the Canary Islands in the 1960s. Driven by the breathtaking resort and housing growth in some of its most water-challenged coastal area, the country has some 700 desalination plants capable of providing water to 8 million people – or one in six Spaniards.

Spanish companies have also been leaders in the technology, spreading well beyond Europe to fast-growing markets in the Middle East, North Africa and the Americas.

EU funding has helped drive the growth. Regional funds have helped fund desalination plants across Spain - including €177.5 million provided for two project in Barcelona last year, €16.6 million for a plant in Valencia, and a €55 million investment in the Torrevieja plant in southeast Spain that sat idle for months after completion in 2010 because of construction problems.

Globally, there are more than 12,500 desalination plants in 120 countries, according to the US Geological Survey, producing about 1% of total world consumption. 

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