Cutting Water Use by Power Plants
Posted by Edward G. Lanza on 19 Jul 2007 | Tagged as: Electric, Water, Energy
UPI via Political Gateway:
Two U.S. Department of Energy laboratories are joining forces in an effort to reduce electric producers’ demands for fresh water.
The National Energy Technology Laboratory and the Sandia National Laboratory signed an agreement designed to advance the research, development, demonstration and commercial deployment of technologies that reduce fresh water demands related to fossil energy generation.
Energy Department officials said thermoelectric power plants using coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear sources require significant amounts of water for cooling and are a major competitor for water resources. A 2000 study found electric power plants were the second largest U.S. user of fresh water, withdrawing 136 billion gallons of fresh water daily. Only agriculture used more water.