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Ethanol's Water Demands Call for Scrutiny, Not Alarm
CHAMPAIGN, IL (AP) - A red flag went up when city officials in Champaign and
Urbana heard that an ethanol plant proposed nearby would use about 2 million
gallons of water per day, most likely from the aquifer that also supplies both
cities.
"There was concern about impacting a pretty valuable resource," said
Matt Wempe, a city planner for Urbana. "It should raise red flags."
The proposal for a 100 million gallon-per-year ethanol plant is just one
of many that have popped up in the past several months across Illinois, which
already
has seven operating plants and is the nation's No. 2 ethanol producer.
High oil prices and support from Washington have inspired such interest in
the corn-based gasoline additive that the Illinois Corn Growers Association
now says
at least 30 plants are in various stages of planning across the state.
All will use a lot of water.
It takes about three gallons of water to produce each gallon of ethanol,
according to the Renewable Fuels Association. So a plant that produces 100
million gallons
of ethanol each year will go through 300 million gallons of water for processing
the product and cooling equipment.
While water scientists in Illinois and Iowa, the nation's top ethanol maker,
say they're concerned about the impact of that much demand, they're not sending
out alarms yet.
"On a statewide scale, it's not a huge amount of water," says Allen
H. Wehrmann, director of the Center for Groundwater Science at the Illinois State
Water Survey. "Illinois is a fairly water-rich state, so I don't think
this is going to drain us."
The demand for water by the two dozen operating ethanol plants in Iowa has
not damaged water sources or supplies, said Monte Shaw, executive director
of the
Iowa Renewable Fuels Association. Improving technology means new plants use
as much as 80 percent less water than plants built just five years ago, and
most
plants recycle their water so it has more than one use, he said.
Still, the draw on Midwest water supplies is a concern.
"It's an issue that is certainly at the forefront of our minds," said
Paul VanDorpe, a scientist at the Iowa Geological Survey in Iowa City. But
he does not perceive as much concern among the public, he said.
The possibility of a new ethanol plant is one reason the city of Aberdeen,
SD, decided to seek new water sources, perhaps from deeper wells, Mayor Mike
Levson
said.
"We felt that for the current demand we had plenty of water to supply them,
but that would begin to run us up to our limit," he said.
Many industries use more than a million gallons of water each day, so ethanol
production is by no means unique in its needs. And while 2 million gallons
per day is a big number, it pales in comparison to the 23 million gallons per
day
used by the cities of Champaign and Urbana or the 500 million gallons per day
that the city of Chicago pumps from Lake Michigan.
The Mahomet Aquifer, along which several plants are proposed, has plenty
of water. Running across the midsection of the state from the Indiana line
to
the Illinois
River, it supplies an estimated 250 million gallons of water per day to municipalities,
industry, farms and homes.
That is a pittance given the estimated 13 trillion gallons of water in the
aquifer, Wehrmann said. It would take more than a century to pump the aquifer
dry even
if no water returned through rainfall and other natural recycling, which amounts
to about 40 million gallons per day, he said.
Even so, there can be a cumulative effect as demand is added.
"When you get down to the local level, there will be impact," Wehrmann
said. "You can't take the water out of the ground without lowering water
to some degree. Other well owners may see water levels fall. In some cases
their pumps may go out of the water, and that may mean lowering a well or pump."
But ethanol proponents say there is more danger of running out of corn that
there is of using too much water, and that will wind up limiting the number
of plants
in a particular area.
"Corn generally comes from a 50-mile radius around an ethanol plant, so
there's only so many plants you can put in and get the corn you need to operate
them," said Phil Shane, marketing director for the Illinois Corn Growers
Association.
As for the plant near Champaign, the city and Urbana lifted their objections
after the company proposing the plant agreed to study the potential impact
on the Mahomet Aquifer before moving ahead. The Champaign County Board
voted to
allow ethanol plants as a special use in heavy industry zones.
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