September-October 2007

Preaching Pump and Energy Efficiency

Southern California Edison’s free pump-testing program has always been about helping its agricultural and industrial customers thrive, but now it’s also about the intimate relationship between water and energy efficiency.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Lyn Corum

Comments


When the electricity bills hit $1 million annually 10 years ago, Merritt built a reservoir and went on a super off-peak electricity rate, reducing his bills to $600,000. His contractor used SCE’s pump test analysis to determine the best location for the reservoir by determining how close the pump and pipeline needed to be to it. By filling the reservoir at night and using that water during the day to irrigate about 10% of his acreage, he was able to avoid operating seven pumps during peak periods after going on the time-of-use tariff and using time management load controllers. Moreover, he was able to irrigate during super off-peak hours when rates are cheaper.

More recently, in consultation with SCE, the farm switched to a TOU-PA-7 rate, which, Merritt says, created flexibility and allowed the farm to irrigate around the clock, including peak periods, although it increased electricity bills. This tariff was created to encourage farmers not to switch to natural gas– or diesel-fueled engines. However, it is no longer being offered and customers currently on it will have to switch over to another tariff at some point in the future.

Merritt admitted his options to manage costs are limited at this point. Given that his farms are in separate locations, he buys water from several agencies and these costs vary. On some of his ranch land, the water costs $35 per acre-foot, while water rates at another of the ranches may be $50 per acre-foot. By studying the test history of his pumps he can manage costs by turning off his less-efficient, higher-energy-consuming pumps when it’s extremely hot. His other options may be to plant less or drill more wells.

Solving Pumping Problems
Jim Lloyd-Butler has been growing lemons and avocados for 24 years on a small ranch, near Oxnard, CA, about 7 miles from the ocean. He has 600 acres under cultivation and irrigates his lemons, on average, once every three weeks. During the summer months he irrigates his avocados once a week.

The farm has rights to water from the Santa Clara River and the United Water Conservation District. Lloyd-Butler spent about $26,000 last year on electricity. He calculates his total cost of production is $3,000 per acre-foot for avocados, and a little less for lemons.

Lloyd-Butler says he tries to have SCE test his four turbine pumps annually. Right now, he says, a pump is being pulled to take videos of the well. The pump has been pumping sand, which is not good for the pump or for the water containing the sand. The video pictures of the hole will tell whether the orifices in the casing that lines the well are plugged. If some are plugged, there are fewer orifices through which water can be drawn by the pump, making it work harder, cutting its efficiency, and costing more to operate.

Bob Ereth, with Layne Christensen in Fontana, CA, is the pump contractor who video logged the well to determine the integrity of the well casing. He says there are multiple problems. The purpose of gravel pack around the casing is to filter out sand and other particles. Gravel in the pack normally falls due to consolidation. A hole may form if the gravel on top doesn’t descend with the lower pack, allowing the sand to get into the water stream.

In this case, the gravel pack has to be redeveloped. A new casing may have to be installed inside the old casing, and then the gravel pack between the two casings has to be installed. Ereth says the right size of gravel is needed to create a properly designed filter pack. This is determined by a sieve analysis.

Ereth says it will take about four weeks to determine the correct size of the gravel pack, install it and a new casing, then test the pump and well, and determine if it is producing gallons per minute at its normal level.

Another common problem seen, Ereth says, is when water drawdown decreases, indicating the well needs to be cleaned. Here, the perforations in the well casing plug up due to biofouling and mineral deposits.

Lloyd Butler had another problem that surfaced when a pump tester from an independent service company found two holes—one the size of a $0.50 piece—in a column pipe. If that hole hadn’t been found, the water would have eventually squirted out into the casing. The force of water against the casing would have eventually ruined the well. Drilling a new well now would cost close to $200,000, he added.

Advertisement

The Competition for Water
Ed Lorenzi manages one of nine farms owned by Sun Pacific, a large citrus grower. His 2,700-acre farm is located in Lindsey in the northern tip of SCE’s service territory in the San Joaquin Valley. The Naval and Valencia oranges, tangelos, and murcots he grows are drip-irrigated with micro sprinklers—one per tree, he says. Pumps supply water to the fields.

SCE has been testing his five- to six-dozen pumps since the mid-1980s. He pays $725,000 annually for electricity. When efficiency goes down, he says, water distribution is affected. Too much water increases costs. You can judge by the lower pressure if there is a problem, he explains. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Water Efficiency Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Water Efficiency email newsletter!