Skip to main content
Product image not found

WITHDRAWAL & CONSUMPTION THERMOELECTRIC

$19.00
Available

Product Details

Product Number
401450
Series
SIR-2014-5184
Scale
NO SCALE
Alternate ID
SIR2014-5184
ISBN
978-1-4113-3851-7
Authors
MELISSA A HARRIS
Version Date
01/01/2014
Countries
USA
Media
Paper
Format
Bound

Additional Details

Description
Abstract

Estimates of water use at thermoelectric plants were developed by the U.S. Geological Survey based on linked heat and water budgets, and complement reported thermoelectric water withdrawals and consumption. The heat- and water-budget models produced withdrawal and consumption estimates, including thermodynamically plausible ranges of minimum and maximum withdrawal and consumption, for 1,290 water-using plants in the United States for 2010. Total estimated withdrawal for 2010 was about 129 billion gallons per day (Bgal/d), and total estimated consumption was about 3.5 Bgal/d. In contrast, total withdrawal reported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration (EIA), was about 24 percent higher than the modeled estimates, and total EIA-reported consumption was about 8 percent lower. Most thermoelectric generation in 2010 was not associated with thermodynamically plausible EIA-reported values of both withdrawal and consumption.

An analysis of 2005 and 2010 EIA-reported water use indicated that withdrawal and consumption declined 18 percent and 34 percent, respectively. Alternative water types (types other than freshwater) accounted for approximately 25 percent of all withdrawals in 2010, most of which occurred at plants with once-through cooling systems using saline and brackish tidal waters. Differences among withdrawal and consumption coefficients based on EIA-reported water use for 2005 and 2010 and heat-budget model results for 2010 reveal opportunities for improving consistency and accuracy of reporting of water-use information at the plant scale.

Print Date
2014
Height In Inches
11.000
Width In Inches
0.080
Length In Inches
8.500
Two Sided
Yes
Pieces
1
Languages
English
Related Items
MAPS AND GRIDS OF HYDROGEOLOGIC, US
National Water Availability and Use Program and National Water-Quality Assessment Program <p> <p> Maps and grids of hydrogeologic information created from standardized water-well drillers’ records of the glaciated United States
STREAMFLOW TRENDS IN THE UNITED STATES
Streamflow trends in the United States...from the National Streamflow Information Program
CAMBRIAN ORDOVICIAN NORTHERN MIDWEST, US
National Water-Quality Assessment Program <p> <p> Water-Quality Assessment of the Cambrian-Ordovician Aquifer System in the Northern Midwest, United States