Santa Paula, Calif., to Build New Water Recycling Facility

July 14, 2008
Santa Paula Water, LLC, awarded the contract for the facility in May 2008

Santa Paula Water, LLC, a company formed by Pacific Environmental Resources Corp. (PERC) and Alinda Capital Partners, LLC, has been selected by the city of Santa Paula, Calif., to design, build, operate and finance a new, state-of-the-art 3.4 million gal per day (mgd) water recycling facility, readily expandable to 4.2 mgd to replace its existing wastewater treatment plant built in 1939.

Santa Paula Water was awarded the contract in May 2008, and engineering of the new facility commenced immediately. Construction will begin by July 15, 2008, and operations will commence by Dec. 15, 2010. PERC will operate the new facility under a 30-year concession with Santa Paula Water. This will be the first facility of its type to be built under California’s new regulations encouraging private investment to solve public infrastructure needs.

Santa Paula Mayor Bob Gonzales said, “The city of Santa Paula is very pleased to partner with PERC Water on our new water recycling facility. PERC Water is providing the city with a state-of-the-art treatment plant that will serve our residents for many years to come. The city looks forward to working with PERC in the years ahead.”

Brian Cullen, president of PERC, believes the city of Santa Paula’s decision to accept PERC’s offer “came down to two things: the certainty of Alinda’s project financing and the fact that PERC had a superior technical offering. The offer does not require a commitment for capital on the part of the city and is essentially a pay-for-service arrangement.”

The new facility will utilize advanced treatment process technologies—incorporating membrane bioreactors (MBR), aerobic sludge digestion and ultraviolet (UV) disinfection—that will produce an effluent that meets or exceeds all current environmental wastewater quality standards mandated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the California Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB) Title 22 Class A+. The advantage of the PERC ASP MBR design is the efficient use of land, utilizing a fraction of the land required by a conventionally designed facility—in Santa Paula’s case a land savings of 5 acres—while providing a physical environment that adds tremendous value to the surrounding community. The facility, the exterior of which will resemble a golf course clubhouse, will be completely enclosed for maximum odor control.

“This project is groundbreaking from a financial point of view,” said Chris Beale, managing partner of Alinda. “The private sector will put up all the capital and take the risk of compliance with environmental regulations. It will provide ratepayers with a low-cost solution, and it relieves the city of financial risk. We expect this model to be followed by other communities that see the future in converting wastewater liability to a clean water asset.”

The city has reserved the right to acquire the facility during the life of the concession and, if it not acquired sooner, the facility will be transferred to the city at the end of the concession period.

In a community effort, the facility will have a dedicated area known as the Recycling Educational Center. There the citizens of Santa Paula and students of local schools can tour the facility to learn how water is treated to recycling levels and how water recycling facilities operate.

The Santa Paula facility will be PERC’s largest facility designed, built, operated and financed in California for a municipality. It will also be the first PERC ASP MBR and Koch Industries’ first, and largest, U.S. facility to utilize the Puron Membrane System.

Source: Pacific Environmental Resources Corp. and Alinda Capital Partners, LLC

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