Water enters the Highland Canal near Verdi from the Truckee River and then runs next to Interstate 80 until it hits the Chalk Bluff Water Treatment Plant. This canal was made back in the late 1800s and provides drinking water to the city of Reno.
There have been several different projects completed on the canal that have significantly increased the water flow through it and to the treatment plant over the last 10 to 15 years. Increasing the water flow leads to Truckee Meadows Water Authorityโs real goal: reducing its power bill.
โWe replaced a large section of the canal with reinforced concrete box culvert where it paralleled the railroad tracks,โ said director of system planning and engineering Scott Estes. โAnd where it goes around Mogulโthe subdivision thereโthatโs been a big liability or possible liability for us for years, and we built about 7,000 feet of 69-inch siphon pipe that bypasses that entire area and carries the water underneath.โ
The construction done on the Highland Canal is expected to save TMWA about $45,500 a year on their power bill. TMWA also received rebates from NV Energyโs Sure Bet Incentive Program for the work done on this canal. They received $82,556 back in 2012 from this program and received an additional check on April 16 for $32,329. What these savings really came down to is reducing the amount of pumping needed to get water to the treatment plant.
โThe capacity of that [original] canal was about 55 million gallons per day,โ Estes said. โWe rebuilt almost the entire thing now, and weโve almost doubled the capacity to about 95 million gallons per day. Thatโs pretty much equal to the capacity of the treatment plant, so where we used to have to pump in the summertime up from the river, now we can meet 100 percent of the plantโs capacity just by gravity flow through the canal.โ
This is part of a larger plan TMWA has to reduce their power bill, which is their largest operating cost. It was around $7 million a year back around 2006 and 2007 and is now down to about $4 million a year, according to Estes.
The original canal was dug by hand, giving it dirt walls and floor. Making the canal larger and reinforcing it with concrete were the most important of the improvements, but that improvement isnโt the only reason TMWA was able to reduce its power bill, according to Estes.
โItโs a combination of many things,โ Estes said. โOne of the big things is that we have a great group of operators. They operate our distribution system and the treatment plants from the treatment plant locations, and these guys take energy management real seriously. Theyโve done a great job. They really watch the pumping equipment out in the system pumping the tanks, so weโre trying to operate mostly in off-peak times so weโre not hit with additional charges on the electric side.โ
