Orange County tries new pathways for water resilience; model for other water-stressed regions

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The impact of drought in California since 2014:
Lake Oroville State Recreation Area's dramatically receding water line
Photo: Ray Bouknight via Flickr

In the face of the Southern California’s semi-arid Mediterranean climate, compounded by several years of drought throughout the state, the region has developed local resilience through state-of-the-art groundwater management. 

The State has long faced water security challenges, marked by physical water scarcity, increasing economic expansion, and reliance on imported water. Traditionally water-strapped regions such as Orange County are faced with the difficult task of delivering safe and sustainable water to more than 3 million inhabitants. Situated on the coast of Southern California, Orange County includes many economically successful cities and draws the majority of its water resources from the large groundwater basin that underlies Northern and Central Orange County.

 
Now, Orange County authorities must venture beyond conventional water management solutions towards integrated and long-term water strategies to resolve their water insecurity.

Paving the way for a more resilient water system, authorities in northern and central Orange County have partnered to develop imaginative approaches to reducing dependence on imported water. The main goal is to protect the groundwater. To this end, the Orange County Water District (OCWD) was created as a collaborative effort to manage the aquifer on behalf of their client agencies, and now focuses on adapting local water systems to meet future projected needs. There are two key features of OCWD’s multifaceted strategy to efficiently use every drop: wastewater reuse and groundwater basin governance.  
 
Wastewater reuse
 
Boasting the largest planned indirect potable reuse system in the world, OCWD’s Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS) captures and reuses recycled water that has been treated to exceed federal and state drinking water standards. The System was implemented after carefully weighing the tradeoffs between collaboration and avoiding the costly construction of a second pipeline that disposes treated wastewater into the ocean several hundred feet below the water surface. The Orange Country Sanitation District (OCSD) served as a key partner in helping Orange County fund the System instead of building a second ocean disposal pipeline. To overcome the hurdle of the negative perception of reusing wastewater, a community education campaign was developed to help rethink the concept of recycled water. OCWD also enhances water resilience with an integrated approach that includes: monitoring and regulation of groundwater levels; investing in regional stormwater capture projects; preventing seawater intrusion by injecting water[1] along the coast to build a water barrier between freshwater and seawater, to protect water quality, and to maximize the ability to capture as much stormwater as possible during large storm events, to prevent storm water from flowing into the Santa Ana River; and offering financial incentives to encourage groundwater producers to reduce pumping.
 
Groundwater basin governance
 
The creative case of pursuing water sustainability in Orange County may serve as an example of an integrated water paradigm that presents tools and guidance to other urban centers, particularly including cities in developing countries. OCWD’s focus on groundwater basin governance through a diversified recharge strategy not only protects the quality of water in the aquifer from seawater intrusion, but also increases the storage capacity of the basin over time. The Orange County case is an example of alternative water management approaches through an innovative blend of technology , local source development projects, policy, and enhanced stakeholder coordination driven by two critical factors:
 

  • Collaboration among regional stakeholders through a unifying authority devoted to groundwater basin management, as well as cooperation between regional water and sanitation districts, to yield fruitful water management results.
  • Diversification and development of local water resources to reduce demands on water import, improve the water portfolio, and decrease the financial and energetic cost of water delivery.
 
The World Bank’s Water Scarce Cities (WSC) Initiative is designed to build on successful case studies of water resilient urban spaces to move technical and institutional solutions forward to client countries. Recognizing the common global challenge of increasing urban water stress, this initiative generates knowledge on urban water management approaches to facilitate knowledge cooperation between diverse global voices and provide technical assistance through World Bank engagement with water scarce cities.
 
Orange County is sharing successful strategies, technologies, and approaches to water resilience  with developing countries through the Water Scarce Cities Initiative. WSC is enabling North-South knowledge exchange and innovation to maintain the momentum toward a water secure world. WSC is documenting cases, such as that of Orange County, and sharing the successes and challenges of with cities in water scarce regions in the global South.
 
The WSC initiative invites cities and interdisciplinary teams to join together to push the boundaries of urban water innovation to create a more secure and resilient global water future.
 
[1] Refers to projects that will use reclaimed wastewater and inject it, through wells drilled along the coastline, to create an underground barrier against seawater intrusion into the fresh groundwater aquifer. The reclaimed water injection wells are placed at point (onshore) to create a "transition zone" between the sea and freshwater.  

Authors

Stephane Dahan

Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist, Water Global Practice, The World Bank

Lauren Nicole Core

Special Projects, Water Global Practice, The World Bank

Ed Bourque
May 17, 2017

Hi. Enjoyed your article.
While I do understand the need for wastewater treatment and re-use, I am curious about inter-sectoral transfers (from agricuture to cities).
Is there a shortage of bulk water for the water utility to treat and deliver?
I don't know the exact figure for agricultural water use in Orange County, but I would imagine that that agriculture uses around 80% of the bulk water in the county. Are we way past the point of trying to set up water markets, or as David Zetland at Aguanomics suggests, annual water auctions (because of annual variability in natural supply, etc)?
Has the battle between agriculture and cities ended, with cities left stuck with expensive re-use and alternative methods of managing supply and demand.
I ask this because, as you and everyone else in the sector knows, household water has a much, much higher per-unit value. You'd think economics would kick in at some point.

Purvi
July 24, 2017

Nice article.Thank you to give information