To the City Planners of Hidalgo County, TX, Our name is Team Ramrod. We are an efficient, dedicated and goal oriented team comprised of three engineers, two Chemical and one Biochemical, all having received diplomas from the Colorado School of Mines. Recently we were assigned the task of designing a cost and energy efficient manner with which to provide the residents of your community with clean, usable, even drinkable water. Prior to commencing the project, we have some questions and concerns we wish to address with you so that we may better be able to serve you and your residents in designing this project. You have expressed interest in exploring the possibilities of using brackish water from several geothermal wells located within 10 miles of the city, as well as exploring the idea of using Texas Gulf seawater as resources for this project. As a team, we agree these sources of water show great potential in helping us design a solution to this problem. Currently, we are exploring the feasibility of efficiently transporting water from these sources to Hidalgo County and using water treatment plants to provide clean and useable water for the residents. With the consideration of feasibility as well as practicality, we have several topics pertinent to the design of this project that must be addressed. …show more content…
This is extremely important because if the design is not economically feasible there really exists no way by which that design can be made concrete. Next, we have several points relating to the water needs of the community. These include but are not limited
The need for water in all of society is of the upmost importance in order for humankind to survive. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) states that the Earth’s surface is made up of about 70% water and only 3.5% of the water is fresh water suitable to consume (Perlman, 2013). In order to have the resource of water that society needs, companies such as the Trinity River Authority (TRA) are formed in different communities around the globe. Water supply and reclamation companies range in size and structure from public to privately owned and run.
In order to address the issue of clean water availability, the objectives must address multiple levels of the social-ecological model simultaneously. Three overarching objectives will be addressed. 1) The current public water system must increase in capacity. The current public water system is small and up to 40% of households do not have access to the public water system (2). 2) Due to the rural nature of the population, expansion of the current system should begin
Thesis/Central Idea: Accessibility to clean water is a global issue that can greatly reduced through water filtration, chlorination, and collection grids.
Imagine life without water, what affects do you think will come? Water is not only an important source of nature but a necessity to living life through human society. Our group believe in the importance of water and realize that without Central Arkansas Water the future for our area would lack in a necessity in daily living. We wanted to know more about the complications CAW experiences, the current improvements to the system, and the future plans that will lead Central Arkansas to a new level of water enterprise. In the water sector of Infrastructure there are many important sub-sector to the transportation of water, but water treatment is the most important in our Central Arkansas area.
Fresh water is a valuable resource in Texas and it is anticipated that over the next fifty years supply will cease to meet demand. The current state water plan has many inadequacies and is not considered to be very sustainable, cost-effective, or environmentally-sound. Basically for an estimated fifty three billion dollars, the plan proposes to build twenty six new reservoir sites and a series of long-haul water pipelines which would have environmentally damaging impacts (Hardberger). The state water plan does not account for some items that many environmentalists believe to be critical and mistakenly assumes that we will continue to use water in the same way for the next fifty years (Hardberger). The 2012 Texas State Water Plan should be
The states of Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio are mainly known for their auto industries, but automobiles aren’t the only thing these states specialize in. For starters, Michigan has a growing industry in technology. Technology just happened to be one of the top five industries fueling Michigan’s economy. This industry is supported by their unrivaled epic center for research and development. The research and development center is where work is directed towards the innovation, introduction, and improvement of products and processes. When dealing with technology, water technology is a necessity because it aids greatly in Michigan’s ever improving agricultural industry. The agricultural industry brings in $101billion to Michigan’s economy which
The most prominent geologic feature of the upper Texas coast is the Galveston Bay, covering to the extent of within 600 square miles, it's one of the most urbanized and industrialized areas. Just like any other chill evening in the Galveston Bay, TX everything was calm as air, but on March 22, 2014 after a dramatic collision between a ship and an oil barge. Opproximatley more than 150,000 gallons of fuel oil so heavy it wont evaporate as easy and it'll also be difficult to clean up. It quickly leaked into the Houston Ship Channel, and started to expand on / upon nearby marshes. This chaotic spill unleashed, as much as 168,000 gallons of bunker fuel, a thick, cheap fuel that powers big ships. In the past their has / had been many calls to ban banker fuel. Furthermore, within days of the spill, the disperse of the bunker fuel was evident. Oil was detected not too far in the Gulf of Mexico 12 miles offshore on a crisp Sunday, March 23, and
Since the discovery that desalination could provide humans in California with clean potable water from the ocean could be very effective, it
Established in 1888, the Brown’s Valley Irrigation District is one of YCWA’s eight local water districts. We obtain water under contract from YCWA and then provide that water for agricultural purposes in an area of Yuba County that spans nearly 87 square miles, with approximately 1,500 installed connections. YCWA provides this essential water supply by actively controlling and storing water at New Bullards Bar Reservoir, which enables us to convey it to
Developing and implementing strategies that can secure adequate water for both people and the environment is one of the most important missions of the water management districts in Florida. To fulfill their missions, the water management districts develop water supply plans to help provide adequate and sustainable water supplies to meet future needs while protecting the environment. One of the more important tools used in the planning process is a regional groundwater model.
The Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County have devised a system to provide wastewater management and have implanted ways to recycle a lot of this water. The three treatments are
The rich habitats of the Gulf of Mexico help make it one of the most ecologically and economically productive bodies of the water in the work. The meeting of land and sea along more than 16,000 miles of coastline from Texas to Florida creates a wealth of ecosystems (National Geographic Society, 2010). The dynamic mixing of saltwater and freshwater and the daily infusions of sediments from rivers nourish areas that provide habitat for wildlife and protection from pollution and storms (National Geographic Society, 2010).
Central idea: Access and availability to fresh water are essential to the survival of the human race. Fresh
Each summer, semitropical fish appear in New England salt ponds. They are carried northward by the Gulf Stream. The Gulf Stream is a warm ocean current. It flows like a river through the cold Atlantic. It originates in the Caribbean. It winds through the Florida straits. It meanders northward along the eastern coast of the United States. Off the shore of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, the Gulfstream and its warming influence farther from the coast. Semitropical fish are swept into the Gulf Stream from their breeding ground. The breeding ground is south of Cape Hatteras. The fish are carried northward. The strong current carries them. The current is often 20 degrees warmer than adjacent waters. Some of these fish are trapped in eddies. Eddies
Every day Americans depend on public water systems to treat and deliver over 44 billion gallons of water to homes daily (“Importance of Clean Water”). However, Americans