Will Baja California ever build a desalination plant?
POST 6- NEWS
The news talks about the intention of officials in Baja California about building a large, desalination plant in a beach town near Tijuana. In 2016, state officials finalized a plan only to shelve it four years later, citing its high cost. The energy-intensive technology works by removing impurities from seawater.
Roberto Salmón also helped to oversee U.S.-Mexico treaties on borders and rivers as Mexico’s representative to the International Boundary and Water Commission between 2009 and 2020. He said a desalination plant would help Tijuana considerably. “But discussions had been going on ever since I came into the commission,” Salmón said, “and there is no plant yet.”
A single aqueduct that crosses the state, including a rugged 4,000 feet (1,219 meters) mountain pass, brings Colorado River water into Tijuana. “It’s a one-source city,” Salmón said. Officials and companies have similarly talked about using treated recycled wastewater to boost the city’s water supply for years, but the city has little to show for it.
My opinion:
I believe that water is one of the most precious resources on the planet and, according to the UN, its scarcity already affects more than 40% of the world's population. A fact that has set off the alarms and that drives the search for solutions. One of them, and not exactly new, is desalination, which consists of removing minerals (mainly salt) from seawater through physical and chemical processes. This would help provide the population with alkaline water for agricultural and human consumption.
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