Recycled Water

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Why Recycle Water?

Although roughly 75% of Earth is covered by water, only about 1% of that is freshwater available for serving the water needs of more than 8 billion people in the world today.

usgs fresh water on earth

Because of drought and pollution, that 1% is dwindling. To make matters worse, the world population continues to grow, further increasing the demand for water. In Southern California, more than 66% of our water supply is imported from outside the region.

To ensure that we have enough water to meet our present and future needs, we need to conserve water and expand our use of recycled water in the region. In essence, by expanding the use of recycled water, we are actually helping to conserve our drinking water supplies and to decrease our reliance on imported water.

There’s also an added big bonus. Recycled water is good for the environment. Without recycling, secondary treated wastewater would be discharged directly into our oceans.  By recycling, less water is discharged, improving the environmental condition of our coastal waters.

West Basin Recycled Water

West Basin is diversifying the water supply portfolio designed to shift our future water supplies to more locally-controlled and reliable sources of water. Nothing is more reliable and sustainable for the planet than recycled water. West Basin’s water recycling program produces five types of customer tailored waters to specifically meet our customers’ needs.

Five Types of Recycled Water Fact Sheet

  1. Irrigation: Wastewater that has been filtered twice and disinfected a third time for industrial and irrigation use.
  2. Cooling Tower: Wastewater that has been processed to remove ammonia for industrial cooling tower use.
  3. Seawater Barrier and Groundwater Replenishment: Wastewater filtered by microfiltration and reverse osmosis membranes and disinfected for use in maintaining a barrier against seawater intrusion and augmenting local well water supplies.
  4. Low-Pressure Boiler Feed: Wastewater filtered by microfiltration and reverse osmosis membranes for use as low pressure boiler feed water.
  5. High-Pressure Boiler Feed: Wastewater filtered by microfiltration membranes and passed through reverse osmosis membranes twice for use as feed water for high pressure boilers.

Recycled Water Treatment Process

The rising population has outgrown nature’s ability to meet the ever-increasing demand for fresh water. With modern technological advancements and extensive research, however, West Basin has learned how to mimic this natural process of cleaning water and do it at a much faster rate. Water recycling employs the same principle as the hydrologic cycle but with much more efficiency that results in a much purer end product. At West Basin’s Edward C. Little Water Recycling Facility, we perform advanced water treatments that exceed state and federal drinking water standards. Microfiltration and reverse osmosis are the most advanced phases of water treatment, and the final product is as pure as the bottled water you buy at your local supermarket.

Primary Treatment (Phase 1)
Microfiltration (Phase 2)
Reverse Osmosis (Phase 3)