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FINAL REPORT Evaluation of Seawater Desalination Projects ...

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EVALUATION OF SEAWATER DESALINATION PROJECTS<br />

PROPOSED FOR THE MONTEREY PENINSULA<br />

organisms entrained and impinged are species that are widely distributed by ocean currents in<br />

Monterey Bay and along the Pacific coast. The risk <strong>of</strong> localized population effects is reduced<br />

by the broad extent and movement <strong>of</strong> these species. The larvae <strong>of</strong> species that are entrained<br />

have very high mortality rates and the percentage <strong>of</strong> these larvae is small. The report<br />

concludes that existing and proposed modernization operations impacts have been and will<br />

continue to be undetectable.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The proposed water intake for the MBRSDP is from two sources: (1) direct pumping from<br />

the Moss Landing Harbor via the existing National Refractories intake, and /or (2) the heated<br />

power plant cooling water from the MLPP. The availability and potential impacts <strong>of</strong><br />

operating the National Refractories outfall are uncertain because <strong>of</strong> damage to the outfall.<br />

The results <strong>of</strong> the field studies at the MLPP indicate that cooling water system operations<br />

will not result in any adverse impacts on the populations <strong>of</strong> fish and invertebrates inhabiting<br />

Moss Landing Harbor, Elkhorn Slough, and Monterey Bay.<br />

7.3 Sand City <strong>Desalination</strong> Project (SCDP)<br />

Schedule<br />

This project currently has no activity and there are no scheduled activities.<br />

Environmental Impacts or Environmental Documentation<br />

The Board Review Draft EIR for the MPWMD Water Supply Project (December 2003)<br />

provides a significant amount <strong>of</strong> information on the project and its impacts. The Sand City<br />

<strong>Desalination</strong> Project is described in the Board Review Draft EIR and in the report titled<br />

“Sand City <strong>Desalination</strong> Project Feasibility Study” (April 16, 2004). The project is sized at<br />

8,400 ac-ft per year (7.5 mgd) <strong>of</strong> treated water to comply with State Water Resources Control<br />

Board Order WR 95-10 under current community water demand. To meet this objective, the<br />

project would include either an array <strong>of</strong> horizontal directionally drilled (HDD) or radial<br />

collector wells for seawater collection (feedwater source) located along the coastal<br />

beachfront <strong>of</strong> Sand City, and a brine disposal system using either HDD wells along the coast<br />

in former Ford Ord or a pipeline to the Monterey Regional Water Pollution Control Agency’s<br />

wastewater treatment plant facility north <strong>of</strong> Marina (regional outfall).<br />

Figures showing the proposed seawater collection system layouts for HDD wells and radial<br />

collector wells are included in the feasibility study. For a project using HDD collector wells,<br />

the collector wells would consist <strong>of</strong> relatively shallow angled (typically, 15 degrees from<br />

horizontal) blank well casing extending from the surface entry point, beneath the sand dunes<br />

and 200 feet (~70m) west <strong>of</strong> the mean tide line. West <strong>of</strong> this point, (i.e., seaward <strong>of</strong> the<br />

shoreline) the wells would consist <strong>of</strong> near-horizontal perforated screen, at a minimum depth<br />

below the sea floor <strong>of</strong> 15 to 30 feet (~5 to 10 m) in the <strong>of</strong>fshore portion <strong>of</strong> the aquifer<br />

Monterey Peninsula Water Management District 7-14

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