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Understanding the Energy-Water-Climate Nexus:
Implications for Policy

Presentations Available Below

Wednesday, September 13, 2006
3:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m., 485 Russell Senate Office Building

The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to a Congressional briefing on the connections between water use in the energy sector, energy use in the water sector and climate change. Some Members are taking action already—the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005 (H.R. 4818) provided $500,000 for a Report to Congress on the interdependency of energy and water, focusing on the threat to national energy production resulting from limited water supplies.  The continued security and economic health of the United States depends on a sustainable supply of both energy and water.  These two critical resources are inextricably linked; the production of energy requires large volumes of water while the treatment and distribution of water is equally dependent upon readily available, low-cost energy.  Also reciprocally linked are climatic conditions, particularly in the West where rivers and groundwater are fed by snowpack melt. The timing and amount of snowpack melt are critical to water availability for crop irrigation and power production, which account for 80 percent of US water withdrawals.

On average, in the United States two gallons of water are evaporated for every kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity produced by hydroelectric and thermoelectric stations. Many regions of the country indirectly use as much water turning on the lights and running electric appliances each day in homes as is used directly, e.g., in taking showers, washers, drinking water and watering lawns.  In 2000, irrigated agriculture and thermoelectric generation withdrawals of fresh water were approximately equal.  Electricity production requires about 136 billion gallons of freshwater per day, accounting for over 40 percent of all daily freshwater withdrawals in the nation.  In 2000, the United States used 123 billion kWh to supply water and treat wastewater, just under four percent of total electricity sales. This briefing will explore the connections between water use in the energy sector, water efficiency, and climate change as well as some of the concerns for public policy. The panelists are:

  • Nate Gentry, Professional Staff Member, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources

  • Dr. Allan Hoffman, Senior Analyst, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy    Presentation

  • John Gasper, Strategic Area Manager, Environmental Policy Analysis and Planning, Argonne National Laboratory    Presentation

  • Dr. Peter Gleick, President and co-founder, Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security    Presentation

The aforementioned Report to Congress is being conducted by 12 DOE national laboratories that have joined in an effort to raise awareness within DOE and other agencies and associations on issues future energy production may face from growing limitations on water resource availability. In addition, a National Energy-Water Roadmap Program was initiated in 2005 by Congressional request. The Roadmap will assess the effectiveness of existing programs within the Department of Energy and other Federal agencies in addressing energy and water-related issues, and assist the DOE in defining the direction of research, development, demonstration and commercialization (RDD&C) efforts on energy-water issues.


This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required. Please feel free to forward this notice.  For more information, please contact Fred Beck at fbeck@eesi.org or 202.662.1892.

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