The Israeli desalination giant that is already responsible for the brunt of
Israel’s salty-to-fresh water transformation is now taking on San Diego, in the
biggest desalination project to hit the western hemisphere.
IDE Americas
Inc., a subsidiary of Israel’s IDE Technologies Ltd, will be designing a
204,412-cubic-meter seawater desalination plant for the San Diego region, the
company announced on Sunday. The $922 million plan, called Carlsbad Desalination
Project, is being administered by Poseidon Resources (Channelside) LP, a
subsidiary of Poseidon Water LLC, and will be carried out in partnership with
the San Diego County Water Authority.
Kiewit Shea Desalination, a joint
venture between subsidiaries of companies Kiewit Corp. and J.F. Shea
Construction Inc., will be providing the engineering, procurement and
construction (EPC) of the facility as well as the 10-mile (16- km.) pipeline
required to deliver the treated water per day produced there, according to
Poseidon Resources. Meanwhile, IDE Americas Inc. will design the processing
plant, and will also be responsible for operation and maintenance (O&M) of
the plant under a 30- year contract.
For the design contract, IDE will be
receiving $150m., while the O&M agreement will bring the company $500m.
Construction of the plant will begin this year and is slated to begin bringing
high-quality drinking water to the San Diego area by 2016, a statement from IDE
Technologies said. The hope is that the new desalination plant will help San
Diego County Water Authority alleviate its water shortage and achieve its goal
of supplying 7 percent of the region’s water through desalination by 2020 –
“creating a new map of the American water market,” the statement
added.
“The Carlsbad Desalination Project is a significant milestone for
us, California and the US at large, as we believe it will set the stage for the
future of desalination in America,” said Avshalom Felber, CEO of IDE
Technologies Ltd. “For decades, we’ve successfully completed similar projects in
countries all over the world, and we’re excited to be a part of what will be the
largest desalination plant in the US.”
Based in the Sharon Industrial
Park in Kadima, near Netanya, IDE has built and operates some of the world’s
largest desalination plants, currently providing a cumulative capacity of over
2.3 million cubic meters a day around the world, according to the
firm.
The company has worked in 400 plants in 40 countries over four
decades thus far – including Israel’s own Ashkelon and Hadera desalination
plants, as well as the future Sorek facility.
“The Carlsbad project that
we’re about to embark upon will accelerate both the visibility of desalination
in North America and the ability of potential clients, both public and private,
to understand how creative project delivery, creative finance and innovative
process design allow these types of projects to happen,” said Mark Lambert, CEO
of IDE Americas. “The movement in the US toward desalination has been a long
time coming, and we’re ready to lead the charge.”
While there are many
industrial desalination projects already throughout North and South America,
there are very few such plants for the mainstream populations of these two
continents, Felber told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. “This is a developing
market as far as desalination is concerned,” he said. Because this is the first
major mainstream desalination project in the region, IDE can by default end up
in the “unique position as the leading desalination company in the whole area,”
Felber explained.
Although IDE has a huge amount of experience in
building and operating desalination facilities, until now it has been difficult
to enter the American market, and this project gives the company the opportunity
to show that it is able to operate according to American standards, Felber said.
When vying for the project, IDE was competing with companies from France and
Spain as well as one local American firm. The San Diego Water Authorityhas
already signed on 20 municipalities within its bounds that have committed to
receiving the desalinated water when it comes online, Felber noted.
After
completing this project, he stressed that IDE would like to expand its
involvement in the emergent American desalination market, looking specifically
to regions like Florida, Texas and other parts of California.
“It’s no
news that we and other Israeli [desalination] companies are well-known,” Felber
said. “The real global news is entering the American market, which is really
hard to penetrate.”