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Published byGordon Cooper Modified over 9 years ago
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DESALINATION THREAT TO THE GULF
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What is desalination and brine? 1.Seawater is pumped into the plant and pre-treated to meet water quality requirements. 2.The pre-treated water enters the Desalination unit and is divided into a highly pure product (drinking water) and waste water, commonly called brine. 3.This by-product of the desalination process is concentrated salt water containing a mixture of chemicals used during plant operation and is pumped back into the sea. Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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DESALINATION PLANTS IN THE ARABIAN GULF Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Arabian Gulf countries are the main producers of desalinated seawater worldwide: Saudi Arabia - 25% U.A.E. - 23% Kuwait - 6% Others - 46% Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Some Facts of Desalination in the Arabian Gulf Seawater desalinated daily from the Arabian Gulf – 12 Million Cubic metres Seawater desalinated annually from the Arabian Gulf – 4.38 Billion Cubic metres Seawater desalinated daily from the UAE – 6 Million Cubic metres Number of Bottles (1.5 litres capacity) of Water desalinated daily in the UAE – 4 Billion Desalination Plants in the Arabian Gulf - 120 Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Anti-scalants - 64.9 tons Copper - 300 kgs Chlorine - 23.7 tons Daily discharge loads into the Arabian Gulf from desalination plants in the region: Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Environmental impact of effluents SalinityReduces vitality and biodiversity at higher values TemperatureCan have local impact on biodiversity; minor concern in arid regions. ChlorineVery toxic for many organisms in the mixing zone. Anti-scalantsPoor or moderate degradability + high total loads = accumulation, chronic effects and unknown side-effects CopperLow acute toxicity for most species; high danger of accumulation and long term effects; bio-accumulation. Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Third World Climate Cost Huge “Developing countries will need as much as $100 billion/ year until 2050 to adapt to climate change, an amount that would nearly double current foreign aid flows from developed nations” – World Bank Prof. Hersh Chadha OPM (Harvard) ARPS
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Q & A Session hersh@eim.ae ww.hershchadha.com
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