Generating Efficiencies and Savings
To increase the system’s capacity – to keep pace with Orange County’s water demands, protect its groundwater basin and maintain its water independence – the project tapped OC San’s remaining reclaimable wastewater not already being supplied to the system. The source: OC San’s Treatment Plant No. 2, located more than 3 miles from the GWRS.
Using the new source meant new conveyance facilities and upgrades to OC San’s facilities were necessary. The work included a new secondary effluent pump station and two secondary effluent flow equalization tanks, plus modifications to Plant No. 2’s headworks, to separate reclaimable from non-reclaimable flow.
Also required were improvements to the GWRS’ Advanced Water Treatment Facility (AWTF). The AWTF purifies the treated wastewater from OC San using microfiltration (MF), reverse osmosis (RO) and ultraviolet light (UV) plus hydrogen peroxide. Modifications to the process were needed to account for the higher total dissolved solids and increased ammonia and alkalinity in the influent coming from Treatment Plant No. 2, compared to what the AWTF had been treating prior to the final expansion. 
Implementing the new facilities and modifications, Black & Veatch created efficiencies and savings through solutions including: 
RO Booster Pumps
- Integrated interstage boosting to address flux imbalances in the RO array 
- Retrofitted all 21 of the system’s 5 mgd RO units 
- Maintained the RO system’s 85% recovery rate 
- The boosters control fouling, extend time between membrane cleanings, and improve overall system performance 
- Expected to save more than $10 million over the life of the equipment 
MF Membrane Design
- Pilot tested polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) hollow-fiber membranes 
- Prepared three 30% designs of microfiltration (MF) expansion, each with a different PVDF product and full life-cycle analysis 
- Supported procurement of the best-fit design to handle high-fouling influent potential 
- The use of more chemically tolerant PVDF MF membranes reduces frequency of backwashes and extends membrane life, resulting in operational cost savings 
- Resulted in a $8 million credit change order during construction 
Influent Blending
- Included dedicated feed pipelines, flow control features, system control logic 
- Optimizing the flowrate from three sources of effluent maximized production and minimized operational costs 
Interplant Pipeline
- Repurposed a 66-inch diameter pipeline originally built in 1957 to bring effluent from Plant No. 2 to the GWRS 
- Slip-lined the pipeline and optimized its design to ensure the structural integrity of the force main system yet minimize the wall thickness, realizing an annual energy saving of approximately $200,000 
- The solution reduced environmental impacts during construction, mitigated construction time and local impacts, and created energy savings by using a larger-diameter force main 
Plant No. 2 Pumping System
- Relocated to maximize gravity flow and minimize the amount of flow needing to be pumped 
- Overcame hydraulic and site constraint challenges by integrating diversion structures and control weir structures for flow management under numerous operating scenarios 
Grants, Other Funding
Water from the GWRS makes up a large part of OCWD’s water supply portfolio – approximately 35% of its total water demands. The system has produced more than 400 billion gallons of near-distilled quality water since it first became operational in 2008. Its success has grown public trust in the potential and benefits of advanced water purification technologies, inspiring water reuse projects around the world.
The Final Expansion project fortified the system’s reliability and resilience plus the affordability of OCWD’s water supply by further reducing its need to import water from the State Water Project and the Colorado River. It supports better water quality in the Orange County Groundwater Basin, strengthening the basin’s protection from seawater intrusion, and it has further reduced OC San’s discharge of treated wastewater into the Pacific Ocean, improving its water quality.
Black & Veatch has worked on the GWRS throughout much of its history, providing planning, design and construction services to OCWD and OC San.