California celebrates new surface water treatment facility

Nov. 22, 2023
The Regional Surface Water Supply Project treats surface water from the Tuolumne to produce 15 MGS of drinking water for the cities of Ceres and Turlock.

California’s State Water Resources Control Board celebrated the completion of the Regional Surface Water Supply Project, a facility that treats surface water from the Tuolumne River to produce 15 million gallons per day of drinking water for the cities of Ceres and Turlock, reducing the reliance on groundwater for about 121,000 people.

“This project is an example of how we can reduce stress on groundwater basins in the Central Valley by diversifying the sources available to meet drinking water needs,” said Dorene D’Adamo, vice chair of the State Water Board. “We at the board are proud to support projects that further the goals of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act by helping to bring our groundwater basins into balance.”

The board funded nearly $213 million of the project’s total cost of $230 million. This funding was drawn from a low-interest, $185 million loan from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund and a nearly $28 million grant from the Groundwater Sustainability Funding Programs (Prop 68). The SRF low-interest loan saved the Water Authority at least $100 million it would have incurred through municipal bond financing.

“This is a major project that the board’s financial assistance put within reach for us,” said Christopher Fisher, General Manager for the authority. “Thanks to that support, we have been able to diversify our water sources and boost our region’s resilience while allowing our basin to recharge.”

Through collaborative partnership between the authority and the Turlock Irrigation District, the project diverts surface water from the Tuolumne River through an existing infiltration gallery, then pumps it through a new transmission pipeline to the new treatment plant. The raw water is treated at the plant and distributed to the regional partners.

As of today, the plant begins providing drinking water to residents in Turlock and Ceres comprised of both groundwater and surface water. Of the 15 million gallons of drinking water the plant can produce, 5 million is allocated to Ceres and 10 million is allocated to Turlock; this is the same amount of water that will no longer be drawn from the San Joaquin Valley groundwater basin to meet drinking water needs. The project is designed to facilitate future expansions, which could eventually generate up to 45 million gallons of water per day.

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