Getting serious with Waterblogged.info: desalination
Just like we promised: A compendium of links to online resources about desalination that will be regularly updated. No, really. That’s the whole point. Most recent update: 5/11/08.
Basic and/or general information
- In April 2008, The (U.S.) National Research Council released an important report about the current state of desalination in the U.S. You can go here to read it online or download the PDF. You can also read or download the executive summary, and there is even a podcast summary.
- Two nicely produced and fairly current white papers produced by the World Wildlife Fund: This one, 53 pages of well-organized basic information, is a June 2007 global assessment that begins by asking if desalination is an option or a distraction from conservation-based solutions. The WWF concludes it’s both, if more the latter than the former. This one, entitled Rich Countries, Poor Water, provides 32-pages of information about the looming fresh water crises in wealthy developed countries which are exhausting and contaminating their water supplies, degrading the water ecosystem, failing to coordinate water management which is causing water related conflicts.
- A 90-minute Google video of a talk by Kevin Price of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation on desalination. After watching this you will be able to join Waterblogged.info as a senior fellow. Elevator summary: We’re in trouble and desalination is not the sole solution, but part of a comprehensive plan that includes conservation, reuse, transfers, etc. (powerpoint here price.ppt)
- The World’s Water 2006-2007: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources This is an abridged sample version of the Pacific Institute’s biennial report written by
- A concise summary article on desalination, perfect for you kids out there doing that last-minute assignment for science class that’s due tomorrow! Careful, no plagiarizing! The teacher will catch you, because, believe it or not, teachers know more than you.
- Written by an employee of a company that has everything to gain with widespread adoption of desalination, it’s nonetheless an excellent overview of the complexities of large-scale desalination plants. Plus way cool graphics!
- From WaterWebster, a comprehensive site about water, but kinda unscrupulous. Lots of links to information about desalination to be sure, but the site uses frames to create the erroneous impression that the linked sites are associated with WaterWebster. Beware dead links as well.
- An up-to-date narrated photo tour of the Tampa Bay desal plant, narrated by journalist and water expert Cynthia Barnett. We’re including this in the Tampa Bay section below, but it’s a fantastic introduction to the technological complexities involved in desalination.
- A comprehensive overview of desalination from the California Coastal Commission.
- A brief—very brief, maybe too brief—history of desalination, included here because of its links to nice and concise definitions of the state-of-the-art desal processes, such as multi-stage flash, multiple effect, membrane-based, etc. (You can read more about those in the paper from the California Coastal Commission above.)
Pro Desalination
- A generally positive assessment of desalination
Con Desalination
- Public Citizen’s views on the drawbacks of desalination
- Live Science on why desalination doesn’t work (yet)
- Pros and cons of desalination from the Pacific Institute
- Comment on World Wildlife Fund’s negative assessment of desalination report from Grist.org
The Tampa Bay Experience
- A brief and benign history of the Tampa Bay desalination plant which is to be fully operational in 2008. No, really, this time it’s gonna work! This isn’t 2003, you know! We know so much more now! We’re gonna nail it! This is a good summary of why industrial-scale desalination is a big, big technological problem.
- A three-page business model for the Tampa Bay project. Undated, it appears quite current given the details.
- Specs for the Tampa Bay desalination plant with an updated timeline that includes the projected 2008 fully operational phase. This is for water-tech geeks who want to know just how big those turbines are.
- An up-to-date narrated photo tour of the Tampa Bay desal plant, narrated by journalist and water expert Cynthia Barnett. A fantastic introduction to the complexities involved in desalination.
Desal in California and the Southwest
- Taking a break from petty crime, fires, and traffic accidents, San Francisco’s ABC affiliate, KGO offers A Look at the Desalination Process, an informative video update on the state-of-the-art of desalination efforts in water-challenged California.
- Detailed article about San Diego’s plans to build a desal plant.
- Go Bruins! A UCLA alumni magazine article about desal from a Southern Cal business perspective. Quite good.
- Great Wired feature article about the twists and turns of a desalination effort in the Southwest
The Business of Desalination
The line between desalination as a topic and business is hard to draw. Desalination—in the U.S. at any rate—is big business. The articles linked in this section are from a business perspective, i.e., the imminent water crisis is an opportunity.
- Linked above in the basic information section, this article was authored by an employee of a company that has everything to gain with widespread adoption of desalination, it’s nonetheless an excellent overview of the complexities of large-scale desalination plants.
- Plus way cool graphics! The company’s site is as good a gateway as any into the world of big water business. Become a water baron! The folks at this newsletter site–called Whiskey & Gunpowder for no readily discernible reason–want to help you get rich by investing in the big water plays to come! Why they want to help you get rich rather than hogging all the opportunities is as puzzling as their name.
- This guy makes a strong case for immediate moves to develop and deploy large-scale desal operations throughout the U.S. It will be good for the country, oh, and just incidentally good for business: “Regardless, one of the safest predictions is that the manufacture and distribution of fresh water will become one of the world’s biggest businesses. And the sooner we get on with it, the better for all of us.”
Low-Tech Desalination Devices
- A nice and positive overview of the Watercone ®, a simple desalination device.
- Waterblogged.info’s less sanguine view of the Watercone: Will the Watercone ® solve the global water crisis and end thirst as we know it?






Hi,
My name is Joseph Puentes and I’m an environmental podcaster (http://H2Opodcast.com). I’d like to offer my volunteer help at starting a WaterBlogged podcast. I am not financially motivated in this offer because I am trying to help get more audio presentations on our precious water resources out to a very needy public. I will help record, edit, tag with your information and upload the audio to archive.org. I’ll then supply you with the direct URL location of the audio so you can post it to your blog/website page.
Can I talk to you further about this?
joseph
====================
Joseph Puentes
http://h2opodcast.com (Environment Podcast)
http://h2opodcast.blogspot.com/ (Blog for above)
http://PleaseListenToYourMom.com (Women’s Peace Podcast)
http://NuestraFamiliaUnida.com (Latin American History Podcast)
http://NuestrosRanchos.com (Jalisco, Zacatecas, and Aguascalientes Genealogy)