On the environmental impacts of seawater desalination

On the 9th of February 2010, Ms. Sabine Lattemann from Germany successfully presented and defended her PhD thesis and was awarded with a Doctoral degree. Her promoters were Professor Gary Amy and Professor Thomas Höpner, while Associate Professor Maria Kennedy, PhD, was her daily supervisor.

The dissertation was carried out in a sandwich construction between UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education and the Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment at the University of Oldenburg in Germany. The research reported in the dissertation was sponsored in part by the European Commission, Sixth Framework Programme, MEDINA project.

Cover Thesis Latteman

Seawater desalination is a rapidly growing coastal-based industry. The combined production capacity of all seawater desalination plants worldwide has increased by 30% over the last two years: from 28 million cubic meters per day in 2007—which is the equivalent of the average discharge of the River Seine at Paris—to more than 36 million cubic meters per day in 2009.

Seawater desalination is an energy-intensive process. It also consumes considerable amounts of natural resources in the form of chemicals and materials, and may have negative effects on the marine environment due to the discharges of concentrate waste waters and residual chemicals into the sea.

The growing number of desalination plants worldwide and the increasing size of single facilities emphasises the need for greener desalination technologies and more sustainable desalination projects. Two complementing approaches are the development and implementation of best available technology (BAT) standards and best practice guidelines for environmental impact assessment (EIA) studies.

While BAT is a technology-based approach, which favors state of the art technologies that reduce resource consumption and waste emissions, EIA aims at minimising impacts at a site- and project-specific level through environmental monitoring, evaluation of impacts, and mitigation where necessary. The dissertation contains a comprehensive evaluation and synthesis of the potential environmental impacts of desalination plants, with emphasis on the marine environment and aspects of energy use, followed by the development of strategies for impact mitigation.

A concept for BAT for seawater desalination technologies is proposed, in combination with a methodological approach for the EIA of desalination projects. The scope of the EIA studies are outlined, including environmental monitoring, toxicity and hydrodynamic modeling studies, and the usefulness of multi-criteria analysis as a decision support tool for EIAs is explored and used to compare different intake and pretreatment options for seawater reverse osmosis plants.

Date published: 28 February 2010