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Award-Winning
ASU, UA Student Water Projects Show Expertise, Initiative
ASU Students Develop and Plan to Market
Atmospheric Water Generator
An Arizona State University team of students has won several entrepreneurial
competitions for its water resource product; they now hope to reap
rewards by marketing it in Africa.
It is an interdisciplinary team made up of engineering and business
graduate students and a religious studies graduate student. The
six students, Lionel Metchop, Vahid Dejwakh, Ronald Gahimbare, Usaju
Lemiso, Nnditsheni Madavha and Chris Ndungutse, all members of the
ASU African Students Association, developed an atmospheric water
generator.
The students organized a company in September called Watel Solutions
— they combined “water” and “electricity”
to come up with Watel — to market the product and entered
the ASU Technology Entrepreneurship Challenge.
Sponsored by Intel Corp., the competition invited students with
business proposals based on emerging technologies developed through
research at ASU. Watel Solutions beat out eight other teams from
ASU’s Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering and the W. P. Carey
School of Business for first place and a $20,000 award.
Working with engineers at Alter-Air Corp. in Tempe, the students
developed the Watel40, an atmospheric water generator, based on
a modification of existing technology that produces drinking water
from humidity in the air. Humid air circulating through a coil cooled
by a refrigerant cause the moisture to condensate. Stored in a tank
the water is then treated to kill any harmful bacteria by being
pumped through a charcoal filter and an ultraviolet light chamber.
What sets Watel40 apart from other such devices is its energy efficiency;
it is able to produce up to 40 gallons of water using a single kilowatt
of energy.
UA Students’ Water Harvesting Project
Intended as Part of a Broader Effort
University of Arizona students are encouraging water conservation
at the university by building a water harvesting project to demonstrate
its water-saving potential. The innovative project makes the case
that water harvesting techniques offer potential savings for the
overall water budget of the university and the city of Tucson.
PARASOL, a student organization stressing sustainability, initiated
the water harvesting project and worked with James Riley, associate
professor of the Department of Soil, Water and Environmental Science
in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
PARASOL President Emilie Brill-Duisberg says the project does not
break any new technological ground but relies on standard water
harvesting techniques. She adds, “What is innovative about
[the project] is the level of collaboration it took to get it done.
We had students, faculty and staff all working together ... dealing
with part of the physical campus. That was very unique.”
Work on the project led the students to take on a broader rainwater
harvesting study. Brill-Duisberg, who majors in anthropology and
environmental science, says, “We are mapping the water harvesting
potential across the entire UA campus. We see it as a continuation.
Whatever map we produce will be a good reference tool for anyone
who wants to complete further water harvesting projects.”
Brill-Duisberg’s work on the project earned her a national
award: the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in
Higher Education awarded her the Student Sustainability Leadership
Award. AASHE presents only one such award each year.
The work was partially supported by Section 104B funds from the
Water Resources Research Act, funded by the U.S. Geological Survey,
and awarded by the UA Water Resources Research Center.
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NM Plans Major Adjudication Proceedings
Over 20 years after Arizona commenced its adjudication proceedings, its
neighboring state, New Mexico, is taking steps to begin adjudicating water
claims on the Middle Rio Grande.
The amount of river water that the city of Albuquerque, thousands of farmers
and six pueblos each use as it flows through Middle Rio Grande Valley
is unknown, although total depletions are about 405,000 acre feet per
year. Drought and population growth add to the urgency to settle water
claims on the Middle Rio Grande. Concerns about endangered species and
water deliveries to Texas further urge action.
Most water rights in New Mexico have not been adjudicated. The need to
adjudicate has become especially apparent in the Middle Rio Grand Valley
where rapid population growth is straining water supplies, and water right
disputes threaten to lead to legal actions. Thousands of water rights
in the area cannot be enforced until they are adjudicated by the courts.
Indian water rights along the Middle Rio Grand are the oldest and most
senior rights, held by six pueblos: Isleta, Santa Domingo, Cochiti, San
Felipe, Santa Ana and Sandia. Settling these claims is key to quantifying
all the other rights in the Middle Rio Grande. The Middle Rio Grande Conservancy
District is the other dominant right holder in the area providing water
to thousands of farmers and other users.
Three bills are before the New Mexico Legislature that would help get
the adjudication process off the ground. One bill would establish a “pre-adjudication
bureau” to do some preliminary work before the actual adjudication.
Another bill would appropriate $7 million to conduct a hydrographic survey
needed for the process; the third bill sets aside $30 million for adjudication
proceedings.
Meanwhile Arizona’s adjudication, in process now for over 20 years,
is being criticized that it is not working. At a fall University of Arizona
College of Law water conference, Joseph M. Feller, Arizona State University
law professor, delivered a paper titled. “The Adjudication That
Ate Arizona Water Law.”
In other New Mexico water news, Governor Bill Richardson declared 2007
as the “Year of Water.” His $100-million package of water
initiatives sets an ambitious water agenda unique among arid, drought-weary
western states.
Water Bills Proposed for Legislative Session
A number of water-related bills are making the rounds in the Arizona Legislature.
House Bill 2693 essentially allows cities and counties outside Active
Management Areas to require a determination by Arizona Department of Water
Resources that a proposed subdivision has an adequate water supply before
approval. Senate Bill 1575 contains the same provisions as HB 2693 except
with an amendment that a unanimous vote by the county board of supervisors
is required to adopt local water adequacy requirements.
Similar legislation seeking to empower rural areas to enforce adequate
water supplies have been introduced in the Legislature over the past four
years without success.
HB2692 creates a Water Supply Development fund to provide financial assistance
to rural water providers to develop resources and infrastructure. Funds
would be limited to water providers located within a county or municipality
that has adopted adequate water supply requirements for new subdivisions.
Enactment of the loan fund bill is contingent upon enactment of the adequacy
bill.
Other water-related bills heard in committee include: HB2494, establishing
a grant fund to encourage water conservation projects in schools and HB2496,
encouraging partnerships between utilities and schools for supporting
water-or-energy conservation programs.
Water bills not heard in committee include: HB2534, requiring cities to
meet a 25 percent water use reduction by 2020; HB2582, requiring new homes
larger than 2,500 sq. ft. to include water harvesting equipment; and SB1113,
requiring new homes to have low-water use yards.
Californians Go to the Beach
There’s nothing like a day at the beach. A peaceful snooze
in the sunshine on white sands, some sandcastle building, a little
swim through the raw sewage, rocked by warm waves of concentrated
fecal bacteria...
The above was the lead to a Jan. 28 Los Angeles Times editorial
critical of health officials for not providing adequate notification
about beach conditions. |
Options Discussed to Protect Upper Verde River
Lively discussion continues in the Prescott area over ideas for increasing
recharge into the Big Chino aquifer as a strategy to protect the flow
of the Upper Verde River. American Rivers, a conservation organization,
listed the Verde River as the 10th most endangered U.S. river last year
due to plans for a 30-mile pipeline to draw groundwater from the Big Chino
aquifer to deliver to rapidly-developing Prescott and Prescott Valley.
Studies indicate that the aquifer provides about 80 percent of the base
flow into the upper Verde River.
Pumping plans are proceeding, with Prescott having purchased a Big Chino
ranch and hired consultants to design a pipeline. As much as 8,700 acre-feet
could be pumped from the Big Chino aquifer to deliver to the Little Chino
aquifer.
To protect the flow of the river, the Upper Verde River Watershed Protection
Coalition was formed, made up of Yavapai County and the municipalities
of Prescott, Prescott Valley, Chino Valley and Dewey-Humboldt.
Proposals that the coalition are considering for supplementing Upper Verde
groundwater include buying and protecting land areas recharging into the
aquifer, water conservation projects, recharging the two aquifers with
wastewater, reducing or removing vegetation in areas overgrown due to
a policy of wildfire suppression, constructing flood detention structures
and monitoring groundwater use.
Some have questioned the stated intent of the coalition, to protect the
flows of the Upper Verde River, saying it should be doing more to reduce
demand for Big Chino groundwater.
The coalition seeks a total of $200,000 from its members to use during
the first year to analyze the project.
Other responses to the pipeline include a threat of a law suit by the
Center for Biological Diversity to halt the project. Also proposed is
that council write up a mitigation plan as part of an environmental impact
study and request an “incidental taking” permit from the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service. An applicant would then be allowed to create
habitat conservation plans to reduce the project’s impact on wildlife.

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