The Potomac River, its tributaries, reservoirs and the associated groundwater resources are the source of drinking water for the over 6,000,000 people in the Washington Metropolitan area. The Washington Aqueduct, WSSC, Fairfax Water and Loudoun Water directly draw from the Potomac River. The Occoquan River is a downstream tributary to the Potomac River.
The
Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin (ICPRB) coordinates water
supply/withdrawal operations for the Potomac River during times of drought and
recommends releases of stored water from the jointly owned reservoirs. This is
to ensure sharing of the water resources among the large Washington
metropolitan area water companies and to meet minimum environmental flow levels
that were jointly agreed to.
Water
management in the Potomac basins requires preparation for summers and autumns
when river flow is typically lowest and water demand is at its highest. This
seasonality may be made worse by the changing climate and expansion of data centers that require
more cooling in the summer-typically using water which is more cost effective
than air cooling.
The need for water is constant and grows with population, industry and wealth. A community or society becomes unstable if water resources are “used up” –inadequate to meet the needs of the community by growth in demand or reduction in supply- often both. Land use decisions that result in increasing impervious cover impacts our water resources.
Fairfax Water owns and operates the two largest water treatment facilities in Virginia with an average daily water production of 167 million gallons and a combined maximum capacity of 376 million gallons per day. The James J. Corbalis Jr. treatment plant is at the northern tip of Fairfax County and the Frederick P. Griffith Jr. treatment plant is on the northern edge of the Occoquan Reservoir in the southeast part of Fairfax County.
Within Fairfax, Prince William and Loudoun Counties are a number of residents who still obtain their water from private wells or community wells that draw from the groundwater. However, most residents are served by the large pubic water companies and that water comes from two sources: the Potomac River and the Occoquan Reservoir.
The Occoquan
Reservoir is an essential part of our water supply. It is fed by Bull Run and the Occoquan River which receives up to 40 million gallons
a day of the treated discharge of the Upper Occoquan Sewage Authority treatment
plant (UOSA). The UOSA treatment plant is located south of
Centreville and west of Route 123. It discharges all the treated water upstream of the
Occoquan Reservoir so, a significant portion of the flow (especially during dry
periods) into the reservoir is recycled sewer water. This treated wastewater is from
areas supplied by the Corbalis plant or lake Manassas so you do not end up with
constantly recycling and concentrating the same impurities, but it also makes
the water in the Occoquan Reservoir dependent on the Potomac River.
Generally, groundwater in the regional Culpeper Basin is renewed each year through precipitation. The water stored in the watershed has always been able to provide adequate base flow to the rivers and streams in droughts because historically the withdrawal of water was within the average recharge rate. However, the nearby US Geological Survey groundwater monitoring well in the Occoquan watershed is no longer stable. The water level has been slowly falling since before the last drought- despite a series of wet years.
The Potomac River and the Occoquan Reservoir are the main supply of water for Fairfax Water which also supplies Prince William Service Authority, Loudoun Water and American Water. Public water supply in Prince William County is a mix of water from the Occoquan Reservoir, the Potomac River, groundwater and Lake Manassas. Public water supply in Loudoun County is a mix of groundwater, Goose Creek, and the Potomac River. The groundwater is an essential part of that mix.
Never forget
our water supplies are connected to each other and the land. How we treat the land will impact our water supplies. As the climate changes, our region is predicted to grow wetter with more intense storms and also have more severe droughts. More water storage (additional reservoirs) and better management of our water supplies and land are required to ensure there will be enough water for our region into the future.
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