Sustainable freshwater supply in New Caledonia through solar desalination
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An article from the Dutch Water Sector.
Dutch organization Elemental Water Makers and partners have established an energy-efficient desalination solution that provides a clean and reliable freshwater supply to two New Caledonia municipalities, La Foa and Taanlo. With this green desalination solution, municipalities now have a chemical-free water treatment process that requires 70% less electricity and produces 44 cubic meters of fresh water per day.
New Caledonia, a French territory made up of dozens of islands in the South Pacific, is known for its palm-lined beaches and a lagoon rich in marine life. Despite being surrounded by water, the availability of water resources is an increasing problem in New Caledonia and one of the top priorities of the country's water sharing policy.
The supply, distribution and management of water are the responsibility of the municipal authorities of New Caledonia, which may choose to keep this service to consumers under the control of the local government, or decide to call on a specialized company to provide they enter into a contract in which the task of delegating water is delegated. providing the service. The municipalities of La Foa and Taanlo chose the latter and, after a tender procedure, relied on Elemental Water Makers (EWM), a Dutch organization, and their local partners to set up a clean water supply using efficient solar desalination.
Off-grid seawater desalination.
Their request was clear: a proven total solution to convert seawater off-grid into clean water on a relatively small scale. As EWM CEO Sid Vollebregt recalls: “The energy efficiency and environmentally friendly approach were important to the municipalities, leading to the overall lowest operating costs.”
These projects were commissioned at the end of 2022. After the municipalities released the official documentation and provided official confirmation, EWM and their partners started the process by confirming the exact setup on site, resulting in a final system design and production. the equipment. While local New Caledonian partners took the lead on the civil works and contributed to local operations and support, EWM provided two off-grid solar seawater desalination solutions to ensure sufficient clean water. “The cooperation with the partners was excellent and the landscape was pristine,” Vollebregt adds.
Minimizing the negative impact on the environment.
EWM's desalination solution has several advantages. By using only solar energy, no fossil fuels are involved in the normally fossil-intensive desalination industry. In addition, EWM's energy-efficient desalination solution uses 70% less electricity and produces 44 cubic meters of fresh water per day. The entire water treatment process has been redesigned so that no chemicals are required to operate and maintain the unit. And finally, the salt concentration in the saltwater stream leaving the process is minimized to avoid negative environmental consequences. This will help municipalities secure their water supplies for generations to come.
As New Caledonia has even more rural municipalities that do not have access to clean water, EWM and their partners expect to repeat their efforts and increase access to fresh water from the sea and the sun alone. According to Vollebregt, “the entire Pacific region is facing similar challenges, and it is useful to have completed projects that can be presented in the portfolio. Elemental believes that all Small Island Developing States (SIDS), which are at the forefront of climate change, will need to better adapt to declining rainfall, and we trust that using only the sea and the sun will lead to an expansion of their order book.”