Project to Cut Storm Water Runoff Problems
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Government
Clean Rivers Project Aims to Dramatically Reduce Combined Sewage Overflows into D. C.'s Waterways, Improving Water Quality while Also Promoting Resilience to Climate Change
As a prelude to theState of the Union addresson 20 January, the Obama administration promoted its efforts on climate change and on infrastructure projects.The administration announced on 16 Januaryseveral measuresto increase investments in drinking water and wastewater systems and in other infrastructure projects.
Among these, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) launched aWater Infrastructure and Resiliency Finance Centerto help local and state governments gain access to federal loan and grant programs and to promote public-private collaborations to address water infrastructure needs. The U.S. Department of Agriculture also announced a Rural Opportunity Investment Initiative to identify investment opportunities in water, energy, and other infrastructure projects.
In addition, administration and local officials recently highlighted D. C.'s $2.6 billionClean Rivers Project. The effort aims for a 96% reduction of combined sewage overflows into the city's waterways to improve water quality while also promoting resilience to climate change, they said.
Clean Rivers Project
Combined sewage overflows occur during heavy rain events when sewage and storm water—which travel through the same pipes—spill over into the nearest water body. In Washington, D. C., those water bodies are the Anacostia and Potomac rivers and Rock Creek.
The project broke ground in 2011. It involves building at least 15 miles of underground tunnels about 100-110 feet beneath the city to store the sewage and runoff in pipes until it can be conveyed to a water treatment plant. Construction of the longest underground segment, the 13 mile long Anacostia River Tunnel, began in 2014. That portion of the project is expected to be completed in 2018. Tunnel-boring machines equal in length to about 150 yards and that are more than 20 feet in diameter are digging primarily through a seam of sediment and heavy clay.
The effort is benefiting from some innovative financing.DC Water, which oversees the project, issued "century bonds" with a 100-year final maturity to match the life expectancy of the tunnels.
At a 16 January news event at a project site on the bank of the Anacostia River, Vice President Joe Biden and other officials said the project not only would help to clean the city's water but could also be a driver for economic growth. Biden said the project provides decent-paying jobs and that businesses want to locate in places with good infrastructure and clean water.
"If we are going to lead the world in the 21st century," he commented, "we have to have the most modern infrastructure in the world." Biden said that more than 700 cities across the country have outdated water and sewer systems.
Building in Resiliency
EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy called the Clean Rivers Project "a miracle of modern engineering practices." She added that through projects that modernize the nation's water infrastructure, the agency's new finance center "is going to help communities improve water and wastewater systems and build resilience in the face of a changing climate." McCarthy said the country would need more than $600 billion over the next 20 years to maintain and improve its water infrastructure.
Tommy Wells, director of Washington, D. C.'sDistrict Department of the Environment, stressed that the project is important in part because of changing conditions resulting from climate change. "We have to be sure that we have resilient cities, and the resiliency is tested by the climate change that we have seen withHurricane Sandybut especially with Hurricane Katrina," he told Eos . "Substantial climate change can shut down a city and you can lose billions of dollars not just in restoration of infrastructure but in lost business, lost revenue."
Wells continued, "There is going to be more and more flooding around the country. This project, with [its] miles of tunneling, means that if there is a flash event of rain, which can and will happen again, we will be able to manage at least this river. We will be able to manage up to 98% of the rainfall year round, no matter how much rain comes in. So [the project] helps immensely on managing flood control."
He added, "Frankly, we are going to have to figure out how to slow down if not reverse climate change in order for us to be able to have a resilient city environment."
Source: EOS
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