Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water...

17
Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board

Transcript of Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water...

Page 1: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough?

Dr. Dan Hardin

Director, Water Resource Planning

Texas Water Development Board

Page 2: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

How we plan?

Page 3: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Highlights of theState Water Plan

Page 4: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

How many Texans will there be?

Page 5: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Projected Population Growth

Page 6: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

How much water will we require? Projected Demand

Page 7: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

How much water do we have? Projected Supply

Page 8: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Water Supply Needs

Page 9: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

How to Get More Water? Volume from Water Management Strategies

Page 10: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Unique Reservoir Sites

Page 11: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

State Water Management Strategies

Page 12: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

What will it cost to get enough water?

Total capital costs : $30.98 billion

Page 13: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

• Businesses and workers: $9.1 billion in 2010, $98.4 billion in 2060

• Lost local and state taxes: $466 million in 2010, $5.4 billion in 2060

• About 85 percent of the state’s population will not have enough water by 2060 in drought of record

What will it cost if we do nothing?

Page 14: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Highlights of Region C Strategies

• Municipal Conservation and Reuse (over 1 million acre-feet per year by 2050)

• Connection of Existing Surface Water Supplies• Toledo Bend Reservoir• New Major Reservoirs

- Marvin Nichols

- Lake Fastrill- Lower Bois d’Arc - Ralph Hall

• Total Capital Cost of All Recommended Water Management Strategies = $ 13.2 Billion

Page 15: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Highlights of Region H Strategies

Conservation Transfer of Lake Livingston water via Luce

Bayou (up to 1.2 million acre-feet per year) Two new reservoirs:

- Allens Creek- Little River (off-channel)

Brazos River Authority system operations City of Houston wastewater reuse

Total Capital Cost of All Recommended Water Management Strategies = $5.5 Billion

Page 16: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Highlights of Region K Strategies

• Lower Colorado-San Antonio Water System (LCRA-SAWS) Water Project

• New water pipelines to Hays County

• Municipal and agricultural water conservation, wastewater reuse, and desalination (up to 368 thousand acre-feet per year

Total Capital Cost of All Recommended Water Management Strategies = $ 358.17 Million

Page 17: Water for Texas: Do We Have Enough? Dr. Dan Hardin Director, Water Resource Planning Texas Water Development Board.

Highlights of Region L Strategies

• Lower Colorado-San Antonio Water System (LCRA-SAWS) Water Project

• Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer strategies• Edwards Aquifer strategies• Conservation

• Total Capital Cost of All Recommended Water Management Strategies = $5.2 Billion