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3. Old Dominion University Lake Gaston Project Field Trip November 1, 2014 Thomas M. Leahy, P.E. Director of Public Utilities. North Carolina & Virginia. Discharge 15 inches/yr No structural water shortages except in the coastal plain
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3 Old Dominion University Lake Gaston Project Field Trip November 1, 2014 Thomas M. Leahy, P.E. Director of Public Utilities
North Carolina & Virginia • Discharge 15 inches/yr • No structural water shortages except in the coastal plain • In the coastal plain, topography and wetlands preclude new reservoirs • Coastal plain aquifers are over-stressed • SE Virginia is a major metropolitan region in the coastal plain – much of water is interbasin transfer
The City of Virginia Beach, VA • Virginia Beach is the largest City in the state, but it had no water supply • Dependent upon Norfolk for surplus supply • Surplus was in adequate since 1976 • The City restricted water often, including five consecutive years: 1992-97 • In 1982, Virginia Beach decided to pursue the Lake Gaston Water Transfer
The Lake Gaston Water Transfer60 MGD from the Roanoke River Basin
The Lake Gaston Water Transfer76 mile, 60-inch Diameter Pipeline
The Lake Gaston Water Transfer:Roanoke River Basin to Virginia Beach • Average flow in Roanoke River – 8,000 cfs • Lowest monthly and yearly flow (regulated by upstream dams)– 2,000 cfs • 60 mgd (93 cfs) is 4.7% of drought flows • Transfer does not reduce minimum daily flows which are regulated by mandated releases from downstream dams • Transfer does increase the duration of low flows during drought periods
Permits for Water Projects • Federal Permits • Corps of Engineers: Rivers and Harbors Act and Clean Water Act • Federal Energy Regulatory Commission • Coastal Zone Management Act (NOAA) • State Permits • DEQ: Clean Water Act 401 Certification • DEQ: VA Water Protection Permit (instream flow) • DEQ: NPDES/VPDES • Local Permits (Zoning, CUP, Local Consent)
National Environmental Policy Act - NEPA • Any agency with approval jurisdiction must conduct public interest/environmental review • If the Environmental Assessment (EA) results in a FONSI – then approval may issue • If the project might harm the human or natural environment, a more detailed Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) including an analysis of need and alternatives will be prepared • If the EIS concludes that the project is not needed, there is a better alternative, or has unacceptable impacts, the agency can reject or modify the applicant’s proposal
VA Beach Evaluation of Alternatives • New reservoirs: Would not pass the environmental reviews – wetlands, irreversible habitat losses, etc • Particularly in the Coastal Plain • Regional Groundwater Aquifer: could not provide sufficient quantities long-term • Seawater Desalting: Too expensive (at that time) • Wastewater Reuse: Not feasible (at that time) • Alternatives to the Gaston pipeline were the subject of extensive regulatory and legal debate • History supports regulatory decisions at that time, but if project were attempted today, desalting and/or potable reuse would be more viable
Lake Gaston Project Permits and Environmental Studies • Corps of Engineers, FERC, NOAA • 1983 – 1995: Three EA’s, two EIS’, one CZMA Review (similar to EIS) • Three District Court rulings, two Appellate Court rulings, two refusals by Supreme Court to grant an appeal • Every study and every ruling upheld the need for the project and that the project was the best overall alternative – but took 15 years
But the times, they are a’changing • Gaston Water: $2.25 - $3:00/1000 gallons • Seawater Desalination • Carlsbad/San Diego: 50 mgd, $6.00/1000 gallons • Huntington Beach: 50 mgd, $4.40/1000 gallons • Tel Aviv, Israel: 165 mgd, $2.00/1000 gallons • Potable Wastewater Reuse - OCWD • Microfiltration, Reverse Osmosis, UV/H202 • Direct injection into water supply aquifers (30% of total recharge to the aquifer) • 70 mgd, $2.61/1000 gallons
VA Coastal Plain Aquifer Cross-Section McFarland & Bruce, 2006
Groundwater Withdrawals From Deep Aquifers May Be Causing Most (or all) of Land Subsidence