The Resilience Value of Recycled Water for Los Angeles
Nicholas Chow, Gregory Pierce, Benjamin Bass, Naomi Goldenson, Adam Barsch, David Kong, Alex Hall, J.R. DeShazo | November 13th, 2024
In 2019, the City of Los Angeles (City) announced the development of the Operation NEXT Water Supply Program (Operation NEXT or Program) (City of Los Angeles, 2019), an advanced water recycling project aimed at expanding the use of purified recycled water. The current approach for Operation NEXT (now Pure Water Los Angeles) encompasses several distinct water infrastructure components. One is the construction and operation of an advanced water treatment purification facility at the Hyperion Wastewater Treatment Plant, the largest wastewater treatment facility west of the Mississippi. This project, in partnership with Los Angeles Sanitation & Environment comprises the Hyperion 2035 Program (Hyperion 2035) (LADWP, 2024; LASAN, 2024). Once constructed, potable recycled water flows from this facility will further diversify the City’s water supply portfolio, adding up to 257,636 acre-feet of supply each year once it is fully operational. A second component of Operation NEXT is a conveyance system that will transport this purified recycled water to groundwater basins or further treatment facilities, where it will be stored or blended with other water supplies. Currently, the construction and operation of Operation NEXT is still being estimated, and costs range between $6.4 billion and $24.0 billion USD as of 2020.
Keywords
infrastructure, planning and management, recycled water, urban water conservation, wastewater